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Nfhs question
If I were to ask a question in regards to a player RECOVERING A TIPPED PASS IN THE BACKCOURT...should I assume the recovered pass hit the backcourt floor first or the tipped pass was caught in the air?
I know from all the discussion here that an interp in 2007-2008 came out stating that a tipped pass in A's frontcourt by B and then CAUGHT by A4 would be a backcourt violation. How are we to determine the ball status when the question simply says "A4 recovers the tipped pass in A's backcourt"? |
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Quite frankly, if it says that, then there is not enough information, solely because of that interpretation that you mentioned. However, if I had to assume that they think their question does provide all the information, then what's more likely: they they wish to quiz you on (a) a challengeable interpretation from years ago, or (b) that the ball did contact the BC before A4 recovered and is this a BC violation and/or when does the BC count re-start. I think (b) is the answer. |
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...and no where in the question does it state that "B CAUSED THE BALL TO ENTER THE BC". |
In general "recovers" <> "catches"
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btw...2 responses 2 different answers. |
I think the statement "A recovers in the backcourt" means the ball already had backcourt status prior to A touching in the ball in the backcourt.
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Since we are asking "hypothetical" questions here..
Is there enough information in the following question to answer it correctily...and if you think so, what would you answer? A1 rebounds a missed try, chins the ball with elbows sticking out. A1 pivots and contacts B1 in the head with their elbow. A. No call A1 is making a basketball move B. Team Control foul on A1 C. Intentional foul on A1 D. Flagrant foul on A1 IOW...using the NFHS on-line clinic which states that contact caused by a player with the ball and elbows extended, PIVOTING, can be either a common foul or incidental contact. (Not excessively swinging elbows, just pivoting) ...and using Rule 9-13 |
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To call a flagrant foul requires intent to injure, etc. None of that is mentioned here. An intentional foul is a foul to stop the clock, prevent opponent's obvious advantageous position, or cause excessive contact. The only one could be excessive contact, but should be used carefully. If there's a POE that says this is excessive, it is excessive. It's adding a category for that foul though. It certainly isn't a normal basketball move to invade an opponent's space with your elbow and make contact. |
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From the POES: Examples of illegal contact above the shoulders and resulting penalties: 1) contact with a stationary elbow may be incidental or a common foul. 2) An elbow in movement but not excessive should be an intentional foul. 3) A moving elbow that is excessive and be either an intentional foul or a flagrant personal foul. Of those, only the second applies to your play. So, that leaves options A (if the contact is legal because "it's a basketball move") and C (if the contact isn't) |
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Am I wrong in interpreting it that way? Does it matter that it is above the shoulders? (It almost sounds as though it does...except in the clinic I saw, it had ABOVE SHOULDERS as a tilte with a statement saying it could be incidental or a common foul (PC)...maybe I'm misreading the clinic slide. I usually call a PC foul in the question I posted....or could be incidental...all of this hinges on the "stationary elbow" definition IMO. |
I found the Clinic Slide which I had ran a copy of:
CONTACT ABOVE THE SHOULDERS __________________________________________________ ____________ a. A player shall not swing his/her arms(s) or elbow(s) even without contacting an opponent. b. Examples of illegal contact above the shoulders and resulting penalties: 1. Contact with a stationary elbow may be incidental or a common foul. An elbow is stationary when a player pivots but does not swing the elbows (when the elbow moves with the hip) 2. An elbow in movement (when the elbows move faster than the hip) but not excessive should be an intentional foul. 3. A moving elbow that is excessive can be either an intentional foul or flagrant personal foul. |
When Is Stationary Not Stationary ???
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Pivoting involves moving the arms and elbows. That creates a greater danger to an opponent. This is vastly different from an elbow extended away from the body while screening. |
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...rockyroad, can you help me with this...surely you have taken the online clinic and have seen this slide.?. |
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