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After a dead ball, when a player takes the ball out of bound along the baseline, he cannot move side to side. I know this is a violation. Is he allowed to move backward, away from the endline? I seem to recall either reading that this was okay, or hearing it at a clinic?
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John,
During any designated spot throw-in, (as opposed to a throw-in after a made or awarded basket or free throw) the thrower has a 3-foot wide spot from which to throw. As noted by Mick he may go as far back as possible. He must keep one foot on or over the 3-foot wide area prior to releasing the ball. So, you MAY see some "side to side" movement that won't be whistled. The thrower is not land-locked to where his feet are touching the floor... dk |
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Just a pet peeve:
Should the thrower move from the three foot wide spot, the correct mechanic for the violation is whistle/stc/point to the spot/direction. Too often, officials use the travelling signal instead of pointing to the spot and this only serves to further confuse players, coaches, and fans who already do not understand most of the rules. When they see an official signal travelling, they wrongly assume the thrower must maintain a pivot foot during the throw-in, which as we all know, isn't true. |
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[quote]Originally posted by Todd (Mike) Mullen on 12-10-1999 05:52 PM
Too often, officials use the travelling signal instead of pointing to the spot and this only serves to further confuse players, coaches, and fans who already do not understand most of the rules. Traveling signal?? Why would they signal traveling for a throw in violation?? I agree with you, Mike, that WOULD be confusing! |
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[QUOTE=Paul LeBoutillier;892]
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WoW! I've never seen an ten+ year thread dug up before.
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Pope Francis |
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However, I also disagree with you. The signal is confusing because it leads others to believe that the traveling rules are in place during a throw-in. Some coaches (and fans, and even some officials) then believe that when a player moves both feet, he should be whistled for a violation. |
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If you mean FIBA, then you are wrong: we don't use any traveling signal for leaving the throw-in spot.
Ciao |
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Wow...I think I had just gotten my driver's license when this thread was created.
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