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Old Sun Apr 25, 2010, 09:26pm
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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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Old Sun Apr 25, 2010, 09:46pm
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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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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 06:53am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stampede2525 View Post
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?
1. Yes, during ANY throw in.

2. Yes, but ONLY after a made basket.
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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 07:32am
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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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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 11:09am
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Originally Posted by mbyron View Post
1. Yes, during ANY throw in.

2. Yes, but ONLY after a made or awarded basket.
Fixed it for ya'. We all tend to forget that part.
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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 11:10am
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Question

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Originally Posted by ABC Coach View Post
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?
What's FIBA?
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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 11:56am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ABC Coach View Post
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?
As I don't have access to it, I can only ask you, does 17.3.1 specify "during a throw-in pass" or similar language?
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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 12:20pm
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Originally Posted by Snaqwells View Post
As I don't have access to it, I can only ask you, does 17.3.1 specify "during a throw-in pass" or similar language?
17.3.1 A player taking a throw-in shall not:

• 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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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 12:40pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AllPurposeGamer View Post
• Cause the ball to touch out-of-bounds, after it has been released on the throwin.
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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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 12:52pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AllPurposeGamer View Post
17.3.1 A player taking a throw-in shall not:

• 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.
Thanks.
As sseltser notes, the key is "after it has been released on the throwin."
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Old Mon Apr 26, 2010, 07:49pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sseltser View Post
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.
Strictly speaking it's not a dribble. It is merely a bounce. That's because neither the dribbling nor traveling rules operate during a throw-in.
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Old Wed Apr 28, 2010, 05:52am
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Originally Posted by nike22 View Post
why?
Because the rules say so.
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Old Wed Apr 28, 2010, 10:32am
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Originally Posted by Jurassic Referee View Post
Because the rules say so.
Would it also be fair to say that neither dribbling nor travelling can exist without player control?
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Old Wed Apr 28, 2010, 02:06pm
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Originally Posted by bainsey View Post
Would it also be fair to say that neither dribbling nor travelling can exist without player control?
Dribbling a live ball inbounds is one way to have player control - so it is fair to say that.

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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Old Wed Apr 28, 2010, 08:17pm
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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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