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Dribbling During Inbounds Plays
Under NFHS rules, is a player inbounding a pass after a made basket allowed to dribble the ball out of bounds before he passes it to another player inbounds? Also, is the inbounding player allowed to throw a bounce pass out of bounds to a teammate who comes from inbounds to out-of-bounds to receive it?
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Yes in both cases.
9.2.2 SITUATION D: A1 dribbles the ball on floor on the out-of-bounds area before making a throw-in. RULING: Legal, a player may bounce the ball on the out-of-bounds area prior to making a throw-in. |
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2. Yes, but ONLY after a made basket.
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Cheers, mb |
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just curious
I'm not trying to confuse things here, but I just want to be sure that I'm understanding things clearly. I understand that according to NFHS rules, what has been posted so far is correct. Under FIBA rules, I don't think the proposed situations would be allowed (according to Art. 17.3.1), because the ball would be touching the out-of-bounds area. Am I properly seeing the difference between the NFHS and FIBA rules?
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Fixed it for ya'. We all tend to forget that part.
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Yom HaShoah |
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Yom HaShoah |
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• Take more than five (5) seconds to release the ball. • Step into the playing court while having the ball in his hand(s). • Cause the ball to touch out-of-bounds, after it has been released on the throwin. • Touch the ball on the playing court before it has touched another player. • Cause the ball to enter the basket directly. • Move a total distance from the designated throw-in place, laterally in one or in both directions, to exceed a total of one (1) metre before or while releasing the ball. He is, however, permitted to move directly backwards from the line as far as circumstances allow. |
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The NFHS wording is similar, but the point is that the ball can touch out-of-bounds on a dribble, provided the dribble is not part of the throw-in-pass. Same thing applies to a pass to a teammate who is also out-of-bounds after a made (or awarded) goal - it is not a throw-in-pass, therefore, it is not subject to the restriction that prohibits the ball from touching out-of-bounds.
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As sseltser notes, the key is "after it has been released on the throwin."
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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Travelling can not occur* without holding the ball and holding the ball is one way to have player control - so it is fair to say that. *with one exception. |
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I think the point was that bouncing the ball on the floor by the thrower during the throw-in does not meet the definition of a dribble.
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I swear, Gus, you'd argue with a possum. It'd be easier than arguing with you, Woodrow. Lonesome Dove |
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