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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 03:45pm
PP PP is offline
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2 violations

Team A commits an "illegal kicking violation" , Trail official blows the whistle. At the exact same time the Lead official blows the whistle and calls three second violation on Team B. The two officials meet and determine that the violations occured at the same time. Referee rules a double violation, jump ball. The team with the alternating possession arrow gets the ball out of bounds. Are the officials correct?
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 03:47pm
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No.

Decide which one happened first.
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 03:52pm
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Double Violation ???

Is there such a thing as a a double violation? Wait? Should I look this up in my rulebook, and casebook, first, or can I just ask the question? I sure hope that my question doesn't get me in trouble.
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  #4 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 03:55pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PP View Post
Team A commits an "illegal kicking violation" , Trail official blows the whistle. At the exact same time the Lead official blows the whistle and calls three second violation on Team B. The two officials meet and determine that the violations occured at the same time. Referee rules a double violation, jump ball. The team with the alternating possession arrow gets the ball out of bounds. Are the officials correct?
Sigh.

There.

Is.

No.

Such.

Thing.

As.

Two.

Unrelated.

Events.

Happening.

Simultaneously.
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  #5 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 03:58pm
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I'd go with the kicking violation unless it was obvious the 3 second violation was first.
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  #6 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:01pm
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Huh?

Quote:
Originally Posted by md longhorn View Post
sigh.

There.

Is.

No.

Such.

Thing. . . .
4
-
19
-
10
?
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  #7 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:05pm
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The rule book defines simultaneous violations. The considered advice of esteemed forum members is not to call them except during free throws. Pick one.
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:13pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Freddy View Post
4-19-10?
In the case of simultaneous fouls, you can have a foul on a shooter that is clearly after some other foul, but is still considered simultaneous because the act of shooting is not an instantaneous action, and has duration.

WRT the OP - and other instantaneous violations, I stick by my original answer. One of them happened first. Figure out which one it was.
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  #9 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:15pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
Sigh.

There. Is. No. Such. Thing. As. Two. Unrelated. Events. Happening. Simultaneously.
Why not?

That being said, figure out make a decision as to which happened first and go with it.
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  #10 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:16pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maven View Post
The rule book defines simultaneous violations. The considered advice of esteemed forum members is not to call them except during free throws. Pick one.
Reference (other that during FTs) please.
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  #11 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:19pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bob jenkins View Post
reference (other that during fts) please.
6-4-3. C
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:26pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by badnewsref View Post
why not?

That being said, figure out make a decision as to which happened first and go with it.
+1
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:33pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
Why not?
So many ways to answer this....

I guess the simplest is that if two events are unrelated, then if you determine the time they occurred with infinite precision, it is completely impossible for them to have occurred at exactly the same moment in time. This was proven by Einstein in 1905.

If you introduce greater distances than those available during a basketball game, where the speed of light matters, you introduce new definitions of simultaneity as well as concepts like actual time, local time, and aethereal time... and if you introduce objects moving at much greater speed, you introduce apparent time - any of those require a broader definitions of "simultaneous".

But for the purposes of this... can we just say, "because Einstein said so" and move on?
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  #14 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:37pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
So many ways to answer this....

I guess the simplest is that if two events are unrelated, then if you determine the time they occurred with infinite precision, it is completely impossible for them to have occurred at exactly the same moment in time. This was proven by Einstein in 1905.

If you introduce greater distances than those available during a basketball game, where the speed of light matters, you introduce new definitions of simultaneity as well as concepts like actual time, local time, and aethereal time... and if you introduce objects moving at much greater speed, you introduce apparent time - any of those require a broader definitions of "simultaneous".

But for the purposes of this... can we just say, "because Einstein said so" and move on?

The NFHS rule book disagrees with Newton and says an AP throw in occurs when there ia a simultaneous violation.
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  #15 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2013, 04:45pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
So many ways to answer this....

I guess the simplest is that if two events are unrelated, then if you determine the time they occurred with infinite precision, it is completely impossible for them to have occurred at exactly the same moment in time. This was proven by Einstein in 1905.

If you introduce greater distances than those available during a basketball game, where the speed of light matters, you introduce new definitions of simultaneity as well as concepts like actual time, local time, and aethereal time... and if you introduce objects moving at much greater speed, you introduce apparent time - any of those require a broader definitions of "simultaneous".

But for the purposes of this... can we just say, "because Einstein said so" and move on?
I prefer Tuesday Morning Quarterback (Gregg Easterbrook) who says the the human eye/brain cannot distinguish such infintesimal increments of time. So in real world application separate events can happen simultaneously.
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