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Tumbling/traveling
Looking for some advice on better sorting out when to whistle for traveling and when it's OK regarding a player going to the ground "with" the ball. Had a partner tell me he would have called one a travel Friday night, but then again, this was a guy who called a couple of fouls in the lane from the backcourt FT line when he was trail (2-whistle) and apparently tired of moving.
But he might have been right about the incident I refer to. Loose ball rebound gets tipped several times until A1 sort of dives to corral it at the free throw line extended, near the sideline. I believe he went horizontal to grab it and granted him a TO while he was down, as he was getting converged on by defenders. (Turning over while on the ground was not at issue here.) The catch: He might have first touched the ball by lurching at it with a wild dribble or two before diving after his "fumble" to gain full control. Does that matter? It seems I get a play ever now and then when a youngster finally gets a loose rebound from a wild scrum while on the way to the ground (i.e. not receiving it fully standing up and tumbling, or then putting a knee to the ground). What's the judgment with this? It seems interpreting what's a fumble situation is key. Is it? For me, this has become like one of those bad spelling words where I forget if I'm remembering how to spell it or NOT to spell it. Thanks. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Deadspin: It's not traveling unless Duke says it's traveling | Rich | Basketball | 1 | Mon Feb 23, 2009 09:21pm |
traveling? | footlocker | Basketball | 24 | Tue Jan 01, 2008 07:30pm |
traveling or what? | kkopfman | Basketball | 9 | Thu Jan 13, 2005 03:40pm |
Traveling | Dennis Nicely | Basketball | 8 | Tue Dec 21, 2004 08:58am |
Traveling | dknick78 | Basketball | 16 | Thu Dec 16, 2004 10:52pm |