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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 03:24am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
And I see it, it's ALWAYS impossible to tell, and we must wait to see what happens to tell what it is.
Example: A1 ends his dribble, obviously passes the ball towards A2 by pushing the ball to the floor (bounce pass) - ah, but A2 has not paid attention, and has gone the other direction, and A1 sees that the ball is in jeopardy of being stolen, so he hustles to it and is first to touch the ball. It's either a dbl dribble or travel violation - even tho' the "pushing the ball to the floor" was definitely intended to be a pass.
The difficulty comes from taking 4-15-3 as a complete statement, when it only deals with "starting" a dribble, and for a dribble to be executed, it must include the "end" of a dribble, as described in 4-15-4.
For my own understanding, I think of the fact that every year many people start to swim across the English channel, but only those who reach the other side have actually ended the swim, have actually done it.
So do you think that an official must wait until a player not only starts a new dribble, but ends it as well, to penalize the action as an illegal dribble violation?
That won't be accepted.
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 10:11am
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That is my understanding. I can't, presently, view a dbl dribble call as having much to do with judgement - it is or is not. Is it possible to describe a play that may/may not be called a dbl dribblle violation, based on judgement?
I'm reminded of the old idea that an attempt at goal - shot - had to be defined by whether it hit the goal or not, in order for the shooter to be able to rebound the miss - that goes way back. With the current definitions of when a shot starts, and when it ends, now, a genuine attempt at goal, in the judgement of the official, allows the shooter to rebound a miss, whether or not it hits the goal. (A distinct situation, but the logic has some relevance.)
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 10:41am
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Perhaps, this will be of interest in our discussion:
a)A1, having ended his dribble, holds the ball for a few seconds, and then pushes the ball to the floor, and (A) is or (B) is not first to touch it.
b) A1, having ended his dribble, holds the ball for a few seconds, and then fumbles the ball to the floor, and (A) is or (B) is not first to touch it.
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 11:29am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
That is my understanding. I can't, presently, view a dbl dribble call as having much to do with judgement - it is or is not. Is it possible to describe a play that may/may not be called a dbl dribblle violation, based on judgment?
Remember, in NFHS 9-5 the definition of an illegal dribble begins with the phrase "A player shall not dribble a second time after his/her first dribble has ended..." It doesn't say anything about the second dribble ending as well. Granted there is judgment involved if A1 has a teammate near him/her who may be receiving a bounce pass but that's generally a Stevie Wonder-type play: we'll be able to tell 99% of the time whether it's a pass. The other 1% is what we get paid for.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
a)A1, having ended his dribble, holds the ball for a few seconds, and then pushes the ball to the floor, and (A) is or (B) is not first to touch it.
A = obvious illegal dribble
B = you have to be there and see how the play is developing



Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
b) A1, having ended his dribble, holds the ball for a few seconds, and then fumbles the ball to the floor, and (A) is or (B) is not first to touch it.
Remember, you can fumble-dribble-fumble so both plays are legal. In play A, A1 would not be able to dribble again.
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  #5 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 11:51am
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Dribble Or A Bounce Pass ???

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
A1, having ended his dribble, holds the ball for a few seconds, and then pushes the ball to the floor, and is not first to touch it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JetMetFan View Post
You have to be there and see how the play is developing.
And I'll wait up to seven minutes and fifty-nine seconds to see how this play develops before I decide to sound my whistle for a "double dribble" violation here. This is a very open ended situation. A lot can happen here: ball touches teammate, ball touches opponent, ball goes out of bounds, team control foul, defensive foul, player excessively swinging elbows, players fighting, coach screaming at officials, and being charged with a technical foul, player getting hurt, player displaces eye glasses that fall onto the court, ball slowly stops bouncing and remains motionless on the floor, a meteorite striking, and destroying, the gymnasium, an earthquake, a terrible flood, locusts, etc.
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Last edited by BillyMac; Sat Jul 27, 2013 at 11:59am.
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  #6 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 08:09pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac View Post
And I'll wait up to seven minutes and fifty-nine seconds to see how this play develops before I decide to sound my whistle for a "double dribble" violation here. This is a very open ended situation. A lot can happen here: ball touches opponent.......

A1 has used his dribble. He fakes a pass, gives a head fake, then puts the ball on the floor and tries to drive baseline. After the ball hits the floor B1 knocks it out of bounds.

You're going to give it back to A?
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 08:46pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
A1 has used his dribble. He fakes a pass, gives a head fake, then puts the ball on the floor and tries to drive baseline. After the ball hits the floor B1 knocks it out of bounds.

You're going to give it back to A?
I am.
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 09:15pm
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Originally Posted by Adam View Post
I am.
You're penalizing the defense for playing good defense by ignoring a violation.
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 10:44pm
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Crystal Basketball ???

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Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
You're going to give it back to A?
Until I learn how to read a player's mind, yes I am.
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Last edited by BillyMac; Sat Jul 27, 2013 at 10:51pm.
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Old Sat Jul 27, 2013, 11:15pm
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Quote: "Remember, you can fumble-dribble-fumble so both plays are legal. In play A, A1 would not be able to dribble again."
I've always understood the "fumble - dribble - fumble" concept to be:
1st fumble - in attempting to catch/control the ball upon receiving it, as in receiving a pass -
2nd fumble - in attempting to end the dribble -
and not after having ended the dribble, successfully, and then fumbling the ball. My understanding of that fumble, and then being 1st to touch the ball, is that would be considered a 2nd, dbl dribble, violation. Indeed, the "Simplified and Illustrated Manual" seems to support that understanding, in the illustration of 4-15-4.
If, after successfully ending a dribble by controlling the ball, a player is allowed to fumble the ball to the floor and recover it, how many times is that allowable?
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Old Sun Jul 28, 2013, 11:01am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by just another ref View Post
A1 has used his dribble. He fakes a pass, gives a head fake, then puts the ball on the floor and tries to drive baseline. After the ball hits the floor B1 knocks it out of bounds.

You're going to give it back to A?
Nope. Given the description A1 is dribbling again, which would be illegal. It happened in front of me this past week at a camp, I called the illegal dribble and we went along our merry way. To borrow from one of my clinicians, the illegal dribble is the elephant in this play. The defender making contact with the ball after it hits the floor is the ant.


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Originally Posted by Adam View Post
No, I'm penalizing the defense for kicking the ball out of bounds.
Where does it say B1 kicked the ball out of bounds?
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Last edited by JetMetFan; Sun Jul 28, 2013 at 11:04am.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old Sun Jul 28, 2013, 11:15am
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Originally Posted by JetMetFan View Post
Nope. Given the description A1 is dribbling again, which would be illegal. It happened in front of me this past week at a camp, I called the illegal dribble and we went along our merry way. To borrow from one of my clinicians, the illegal dribble is the elephant in this play. The defender making contact with the ball after it hits the floor is the ant.




Where does it say B1 kicked the ball out of bounds?
I don't think that was the point. Kicked out of bounds, knocked out of bounds. Either way, the illegal dribble occurred first.
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  #13 (permalink)  
Old Sun Jul 28, 2013, 11:49am
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Still Not Convinced ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by JetMetFan View Post
Given the description A1 is dribbling again, which would be illegal.
Because the description includes the phrase "tries to drive baseline", which, at least to me, shows intent to start a new dribble. Now take out that phrase, how do you know that the player is not starting a bounce pass, maybe an ugly bounce pass, but, nevertheless, a bounce pass? Let the ball come back off the floor and touch A1's hand, then you'll be 100% sure that it's an illegal "double" dribble. Other than that, most officials don't call fouls, or violations, when they are not 100% sure that a foul, or a violation, occurred.

A veteran basketball official, Confucius, once told me, "When in doubt, don't be".
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Last edited by BillyMac; Sun Jul 28, 2013 at 11:54am.
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