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So I have team control maintained throughout, no player control in the front court by the offense. And I have the defender causing the ball to go into the back court. So I have a legal play, score the basket. |
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Whether there is player control in the FC, however, is not relevant. |
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In a short conference I would have said, the defender deflected the ball into the back court. |
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"So I have team control maintained throughout, no player control in the front court by the offense..." is what you wrote. The reason, based on your new details, would be that the offense was not the last to touch when the ball had front court status. Player control in the front court is completely irrelevant. |
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The reason I don't have a backcourt is the defender gave the ball back court status. I apologize for not being clear on that. |
Just to be clear, if we're talking about the original video in this thread, and if the defender did not touch it, then the ball gains frontcourt status as it hits the backboard:
4-4-5: A ball which touches the front faces or edges of the backboard is treated the same as touching the floor inbounds; 4-13-1: A team’s frontcourt consists of that part of the court between its end line and the nearer edge of the division line, including its basket and the inbounds part of the backboard. So with 9-9-2 (below) it should be judged that the play was a backcourt violation, unless of course the throw is considered to be a shot which nullifies the first requirement in 9-9-2: ART. 2 . . . While in player and team control in its backcourt, a player shall not cause the ball to go from backcourt to frontcourt and return to backcourt, without the ball touching a player in the frontcourt, such that he/she or a teammate is the first to touch it in the backcourt. |
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