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Maybe we can agree on this
A stationary player who is in the act of guarding requires LGP. Do you agree with that statement?
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Gwinnett Umpires Association Multicounty Softball Association Multicounty Basketball Officials Association |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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(Also, I just skimmed on the way here, so if this is not at all relevant, please disregard. ![]()
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I can't remember the last time I wasn't at least kind-of tired. |
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Lgp
LGP is a status that applies to both stationary and moving players who are in the act of guarding. The LGP rules states that to obtain LGP a player must have both feet on the court. This applies to a stationary player. If you are a stationary player facing your opponent with one foot in and one foot out of bounds and contact occurs it should be called a block because the stationary player did not have LGP. Out of bounds is not considered being on the court. LGP does apply to a stationary player in some scenarios.
I believe some are getting hung up on what about the player who has their back to an opponent and the opponent crashes into their back. LGP does not apply here because you only need LGP if you are guarding someone. Also, it doesn't apply because the player is entitled to the spot on the floor as long as they got there legally. Consider this scenario. B1 is guarding A1. A1 passes to A2 who drives up the court near the side line. B1 switches to guarding A2. When he pivots one foot is in and one is out. It is at this time that he is facing A2. He is not moving. A step later a crash occurs. Did B1 have LGP? No. Was B1 a stationary player? Yes. What's your call? I have a block because B1 never had LGP.
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Gwinnett Umpires Association Multicounty Softball Association Multicounty Basketball Officials Association Last edited by rwest; Tue Nov 13, 2012 at 05:08pm. Reason: I got B1 and A2 confused! |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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LGP has nothing to do with a stationary defender. If A2 takes his arm and shoves B1, then I have a player control foul. The defender can't make a legal basketball play from his location, but opponents cannot whack him just because he has a foot on the boundary line. |
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You have to have LGP to start a five second count, and during a five second you could be stationary, so it would apply to a stationary defender. You have to be within 6 feet and be in a legal guarding position.
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I am commenting simply on a defender. A player can be a defender an stand sideways without moving, never obtaining LGP, and still has a right to not get fouled by an opponent. However, he lacks certain other rights. You have named one of them--closely guarded. The defender cannot cause the closely guarded count to be enacted. This defender also does not have the right to be moving laterally or obliquely at the time of contact. Both of those are additional rights that a defender earns after obtaining LGP. |
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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