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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 07:57am
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Gaining an advantage by Violating?

I had an interesting discussion with a customer concerning a game that he attended. I looked up the rule, but was concerned with the penalty. Here is the sitch:

A1 inbounding spot throw-in at the end-line. B1 closely defending the end-line. A1 steps back about 2 feet to gain some room to throw-in. A1 gets the ball inbounds to A2. B1 goes out of bounds and guards A1 so that A1 is having problems getting inbounds. No violation called.

Best I could find would be a violation on B1 for leaving the court. The penalty seems to be throw-in for A.

It didn't effect this game, but I could think of situations where B might gain an unfair advantage by continuing to violate. (Say they were ahead by 1 with 15 seconds on the clock. Team A wanted to call the play where the A1 throws-in to A2, comes inbounds, A2 passes to A1 and A1 scores. Team B is stopping A1 from getting inbounds. A1 is the best scorer on his/her team. B keeps violating, clock runs down. Penalty is still just another throw-in)

Is there a warning? Or just more throw-ins? Could delay of game be called after the first violation?

Any thoughts?
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 08:16am
Nu1 Nu1 is offline
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Interesting question. At first, I thought it could be a T under 10-3-3...for being off the floor...however that section actually reads... "Delay returning after legally being out of bounds." I would say this doesn't fit because the defensive player wasn't legally OOB.

How about a T under 10-6-6...assuming you thought this action warranted more than a violation? This sections reads... "Delay the game by acts such as:" I think "such as" means the items listed below are not all inclusive. Then again, one might argue that the "game" is not being delayed. Although the offensive player OOB is being delayed from doing what they required to do, and that is enter the court.

Let's see what others think.
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 08:51am
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NCAA rule

Under NCAA rules it possibly could be an indirect technical under Rule 10 Section 4 Art. 16: Deceptively leaving the playing court for an unauthorized reason and returning at a more advantageous position.
A.R. 7. A player steps out of bounds to avoid contact. RULING: This shall not be called an indirect technical foul unless the player leaves the playing court to deceive or gain a more advantageous position in some way. When the player is a dribbler, the ball shall be ruled out of bounds. When the player returns to the playing floor and is the first to touch the ball, a violation has occurred since he/she left the playing court under their own volition.

But I'll leave interpretation of that rule for one of our more seasoned college officals to weigh in on.

I don't have a NFHS rulebook with me but try to find a reference concerning Leaving the court for an unauthorized reason.
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 08:58am
Nu1 Nu1 is offline
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Good NCAA reference, BadNews.
As far as NFHS, leaving the court is a violation. That's the problem. The technical is listed for delaying return after being OOB legally.
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 09:06am
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text book T

Not a problem. It is a technical foul per rule 10-1-10 which states following the team warning for delay in 9-2-11, commit a violation of the throw-in boundary line plane. When the defensive player goes out of bounds to defend the pass by the thrower in, he has violated. 2nd time = T.
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 09:12am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bigwhistle
Not a problem. It is a technical foul per rule 10-1-10 which states following the team warning for delay in 9-2-11, commit a violation of the throw-in boundary line plane. When the defensive player goes out of bounds to defend the pass by the thrower in, he has violated. 2nd time = T.
Yeah, I looked at that one. But the throw-in is complete when the A2 touched the ball. THEN, B1 goes OOB.
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Old Wed Apr 05, 2006, 08:24am
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If there is contact by B1, why not call a foul? The ball is live.

The precedent has been set, in that a defender, with a foot touching the out of bounds line, cannot be considered to have legal guarding position, even if he has roots growing from his feet. It is, by rule, a block.

Also, I believe there is still in the rule book, a provision for a Technical foul for leaving the court, in addition to the violation, in circumstances were it is egreg.....ergre... done deliberately.
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Old Fri Apr 07, 2006, 01:21am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FrankHtown
If there is contact by B1, why not call a foul? The ball is live.

The precedent has been set, in that a defender, with a foot touching the out of bounds line, cannot be considered to have legal guarding position, even if he has roots growing from his feet. It is, by rule, a block.

Also, I believe there is still in the rule book, a provision for a Technical foul for leaving the court, in addition to the violation, in circumstances were it is egreg.....ergre... done deliberately.
This rule only applies to block charge scenarios where "legal guarding position" is required to avoid a defensive foul. It is still possible in this situation to call an offensive foul.

Now, for the original scenario, I'd have to see it. But if there's no contact, I've got nothing. If B is causing contact to prevent A1 from returning to the court, easy foul.
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