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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 02:01pm
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Originally Posted by CDurham View Post
Okay so catching the ball or dribbling is okay. But if I stop a dribble then try or receive a pass its traveling?
I'm saying if you stopped a dribble, established a pivot foot, you could not jump off of that pivot foot and land on two feet, that would be travelling. In the case of a jump stop since the player is moving, the foot that they jump off of is not considered to be the pivot foot - there is no pivot foot in that case.
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 03:03pm
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Originally Posted by slow whistle View Post
I'm saying if you stopped a dribble, established a pivot foot, you could not jump off of that pivot foot and land on two feet, that would be travelling. In the case of a jump stop since the player is moving, the foot that they jump off of is not considered to be the pivot foot - there is no pivot foot in that case.
So they can go left, right, left? Since their is no pivot foot in that case?
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 03:07pm
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Originally Posted by CDurham View Post
So they can go left, right, left? Since their is no pivot foot in that case?
Nope. In that case the left foot is determined to be the pivot foot as soon as the right foot hit the ground. Therefore, when the left foot hits the ground again it is traveling.

If the ball is gathered or caught with one foot on the ground, that foot is always the pivot foot EXCEPT for the one clearly defined exception which is the jump stop, in which case there isn't a pivot foot.
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 03:13pm
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Originally Posted by jdw3018 View Post
Nope. In that case the left foot is determined to be the pivot foot as soon as the right foot hit the ground. Therefore, when the left foot hits the ground again it is traveling.

If the ball is gathered or caught with one foot on the ground, that foot is always the pivot foot EXCEPT for the one clearly defined exception which is the jump stop, in which case there isn't a pivot foot.
Exactly..this is all laid out in 4-44, you just have to spend some time with it visualizing each different type of play.
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 03:16pm
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Originally Posted by slow whistle View Post
Exactly..this is all laid out in 4-44, you just have to spend some time with it visualizing each different type of play.
Your right. I have a game tonight and that is all I've been doing today is acting out situations
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 03:49pm
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It should also be noted that this whole lands-on-two-feet-no-pivot-foot scenario is only the case if the player still has a foot on the ground when the final dribble returns to his/her hands. If they're already airborne when the dribble is terminated, they can land on either foot first, with that foot being the pivot, or if both feet land at the same time, either may be the pivot. The latter scenario is often followed by the player stepping across with one foot and jumping of the non-pivot foot for a shot.
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Old Wed Feb 10, 2010, 05:30pm
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Originally Posted by shutupneff View Post
It should also be noted that this whole lands-on-two-feet-no-pivot-foot scenario is only the case if the player still has a foot on the ground when the final dribble returns to his/her hands. If they're already airborne when the dribble is terminated, they can land on either foot first, with that foot being the pivot, or if both feet land at the same time, either may be the pivot. The latter scenario is often followed by the player stepping across with one foot and jumping of the non-pivot foot for a shot.
The most common scenario is an airborne player gathering a dribble (or catching a pass) and jumping off the first foot that hits the floor, landing on both simultaneously.
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