The Official Forum

The Official Forum (https://forum.officiating.com/)
-   Basketball (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/)
-   -   team control foul (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/80758-team-control-foul.html)

timeout Mon Sep 19, 2011 10:47pm

team control foul
 
Having a little brain fart.
I know a player control foul is a non-shooting foul. (in the bonus)
Is a team control foul a shooting foul? (in the bonus)
Thanks

JRutledge Mon Sep 19, 2011 10:50pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by timeout (Post 788479)
Having a little brain fart.
I know a player control foul is a non-shooting foul. (in the bonus)
Is a team control foul a shooting foul? (in the bonus)
Thanks

You do not shoot FTs for either type of foul.

Peace

timeout Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:07pm

thank you

bainsey Tue Sep 20, 2011 08:07am

Think of it this way: When you have player control, you also always have team control. There are never free throws for a team control foul.

tref Tue Sep 20, 2011 08:44am

To simplify it even more, if the offense fouls there are no FTs involved. And now thats true if the status of the ball is in or out of bounds.

BayStateRef Tue Sep 20, 2011 09:48am

Quote:

Originally Posted by tref (Post 788506)
To simplify it even more, if the offense fouls there are no FTs involved. And now thats true if the status of the ball is in or out of bounds.

I would not encourage anyone to think of it this way. Think only in terms of team control and player control. If the "offense" commits a foul while trying to get an offensive rebound (and the bonus is in effect), do we award free throws?

tref Tue Sep 20, 2011 09:58am

Quote:

Originally Posted by BayStateRef (Post 788524)
If the "offense" commits a foul while trying to get an offensive rebound (and the bonus is in effect), do we award free throws?

Has team control been re-established yet? :D

I understand what you're saying, its seems many of us get hung up on t/c & p/c in regards to awarding FTs. Was just looking for an easier way to help us remember. I guess there's no substitute for knowing our definitions

Mark Padgett Tue Sep 20, 2011 11:06am

Quote:

Originally Posted by tref (Post 788506)
To simplify it even more, if the offense fouls there are no FTs involved.

What about intentional personals, flagrant personals and technicals?

tref Tue Sep 20, 2011 11:11am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett (Post 788542)
What about intentional personals, flagrant personals and technicals?

I thought those were a given, see above (last sentence).

Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. Tue Sep 20, 2011 05:22pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by tref (Post 788506)
To simplify it even more, if the offense fouls there are no FTs involved. And now thats true if the status of the ball is in or out of bounds.


I know that you responded to Mark Padgett's post, but that still does not solve your problem because in NFHS and NCAA rules, no where will you find an mentiona of an "offensive foul". The reason being is that there is no such animal in NFHS and NCAA rules. The NBA-WNBA ruleset is a different animal. Therefore, use correct terminology.

MTD, Sr.

Scrapper1 Tue Sep 20, 2011 09:06pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. (Post 788595)
I know that you responded to Mark Padgett's post, but that still does not solve your problem because in NFHS and NCAA rules, no where will you find an mentiona of an "offensive foul".

While this is true, IMHO it's really just a matter of semantics (unlike an "over the back" foul, which actually communicates false information). We could remove the definitions of "player control foul" and "team control foul" and add a definition for "offensive foul", which would include:

1) player control fouls;
2) team control fouls; and
3) common fouls committed by the throw-in team during the period between the start of the throw-in and either team gaining control.

If we did that, NOTHING in the game would change. I am usually ready to agree with anyone who wants to promote proper verbiage in officiating. In this case, I think, the proper verbiage says the same thing as the "slang".

bainsey Wed Sep 21, 2011 09:30am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scrapper1 (Post 788632)
We could remove the definitions of "player control foul" and "team control foul" and add a definition for "offensive foul"....

The flaw here, as BayState pointed out, is that too many people think of a rebounding foul (while there's no team control) by the offensive team as an offensive foul. They'd have a valid point, too, as that team on that end of the floor is still considered to be on offense.

Player/team control determine more rules than just fouls. The more fans that knew about player/team control, the better we'd all be. Stick with control.

tref Wed Sep 21, 2011 09:49am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark T. DeNucci, Sr. (Post 788595)
I know that you responded to Mark Padgett's post, but that still does not solve your problem because in NFHS and NCAA rules, no where will you find an mentiona of an "offensive foul".

Well actually, what I really said was:

Quote:

Originally Posted by tref (Post 788506)
...if the offense fouls there are no FTs involved if there is team control.

Thats not the same as stating that an offensive foul is a type of foul in HS/NCAA :cool:

BTW, why do I hear officials say "offense" when they punch a p/c or t/c up North?

*My edit in red makes the statement true & would be easier for newer officials to remember.

APG Wed Sep 21, 2011 10:11am

Quote:

Originally Posted by bainsey (Post 788692)
The flaw here, as BayState pointed out, is that too many people think of a rebounding foul (while there's no team control) by the offensive team as an offensive foul. They'd have a valid point, too, as that team on that end of the floor is still considered to be on offense.

Player/team control determine more rules than just fouls. The more fans that knew about player/team control, the better we'd all be. Stick with control.

I think most people actually think of rebounding fouls as loose ball fouls...just like in the NBA, and expect free throws regardless of whom gets fouled.

Scrapper1 Wed Sep 21, 2011 08:56pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by bainsey (Post 788692)
The flaw here, as BayState pointed out, is that too many people think of a rebounding foul (while there's no team control) by the offensive team as an offensive foul.

I don't mean to come across as merely contradictory, but I just disagree. I think APG's comment below is actually closer to the truth:

Quote:

Originally Posted by AllPurposeGamer (Post 788696)
I think most people actually think of rebounding fouls as loose ball fouls...just like in the NBA, and expect free throws regardless of whom gets fouled.



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:01am.



Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0 RC1