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Everyone should go back and read definitions 4-16 (Dunking) and 4-41 (Shooting, Try, Tap) as they relate to the airborne shooter rule (Rule 4-1).
An airborne shooter is "a player who has released the ball on a try for a goal or has tapped the ball and has not returned to the floor." (emphasis added) In order for a player to be an airborne shooter they have to have released the ball on a TRY. So what is a "try" and what is the "act of shooting"? Rule 4-41... ART. 1 . . . The act of shooting begins simultaneously with the start of the try or tap and ends when the ball is clearly in flight, and includes the airborne shooter. ART. 2 . . . A try for field goal is an attempt by a player to score two or three points by throwing the ball into a team’s own basket. A player is trying for goal when the player has the ball and in the official’s judgment is throwing or attempting to throw for goal. It is not essential that the ball leave the player’s hand as a foul could prevent release of the ball. ART. 3 . . . The try starts when the player begins the motion which habitually precedes the release of the ball. (emphasis added) A dunk is not a try -- it is a dunk. Have at it :) |
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If a player was fouled while dunking would you not award FTs? :eek: BTW the ball DOES get released by a player when dunking. |
I have a new question
If a player with very long arms has one foot on the end line and touches the ball while it is on the rim, is it out of bounds or basket interference?
We can discuss this question for ten more pages, or we can let this thread die an ugly death. I vote for door number two. I hate seeing a thread I'm responsible for showing up as sarcastic subtext in Bob's posts in other threads. It has to stop! |
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Peace |
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SMH - I have been forced to pull out Charlie!!!!
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