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Traveling?
Had this happen in a varsity HS girls game a couple of weeks ago. Throw in from the division line into the backcourt. The girl proceeds to head towards the wrong basket all alone ... the entire gym is screaming that she is going the wrong way as always when this happens. When she reaches the basket she stops, is in her shooting motion when she realizes she is at the wrong hoop. She releases the ball in mid shot and short arms it, and it doesn't hit the rim and she catches it again. She never moved her pivot foot and then turns and passes the ball back in the right direction. The opposing coach is screaming for traveling. I had nothing and explained to the coach that even though it looked funny, she did not violate. What do you guys have here?
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Play on.
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I have nothing... 4.44.3 D (a)...since you said she never moved her pivot. Had to be close to a 10 count though I would think.
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Do you guys find yourself calling fewer traveling violations than partners normally? Roughly the same amount? More than your partners? I've found, this season especially, that it seems I call a lot fewer traveling violations than most people I work with. I'm not saying that I don't miss a few, because I'm sure I do, but I'm beginning to think that some people call travels because they "look funny" and coaches/fans constantly want them called even when they're not violations. It seems like guys call traveling a lot when players don't have control of the ball. Usually it happens when a player is running and trying to catch a pass and fumbles the ball while still running. |
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This is true, but the opposite is what is rapidly on the rise, in my opinion. Some calls, and traveling is at the top of the list, are not made because they don't look funny. A move can be a thing of beauty to watch (spin move is probably the prime example) and still be illegal. |
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