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2 rules questions
While playing a fifth grade tournament yesterday there were two violations called I had never seen before. They were called by certified Illinois high school referees.
The first one occurred on a baseline out of bounds play. My player inbounded the ball and then took three or four steps along the baseline before stepping back into the field of play. He was whistled for not stepping directly onto the court. The second one happened earlier in the day. The same player came to a jump stop and then pivoted. He was whistled for a traveling violation. The explanation I got was that he had already used his pivot on the jump stop. Can someone explain these rules a little better for me and whether or not they should have been violations? |
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2) Depends on "how" he jump stopped (the term is not defined in the book, and is used in three ways): 1) If he gathered the ball in the air, and landed on two feet, then he can pivot. 2) If he gathered the ball in the air, then lands on one foot and jumps off that foot, and then lands on two feet, then ne can NOT pivot 3) If he gathered with one foot on the ground, then jumped off that foot and lands on two feet, then he can NOT pivot. NOte also that sometimes the player tries to use "jump stop 1" but does not land on both feet simultaneously. In this instance the first foot to land is the pivot foot. If the player then moves that foot (thining he had executed a jump stop), it's a travel. |
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Thanks for the reply. With the jump stop he was dribbling and jumped off of one foot into a jumpstop. When after dribbling do the above mentioned rules apply? When is the "gather" if the ball is not passed to him? Can he jump to shoot or pass after number 2?
Also, we have kids learning the euro step, with some games where it is never called a travel and some where it is always called a travel. Where is the best place to find the rules on traveling? If an official has called something in error and continues to call it in error, what is the best time and way to explain your position to the referee? Last edited by Clark0215; Sun Feb 02, 2014 at 10:29am. |
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A couple bucks will get you the rule book from the NFHS. At that level, the euro step is rarely executed legally so an official would be right most of the time calling it a travel. Traveling is a call that an official has to be watching for and if they arent watching for a travel violation, it wont be called. |
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If the official is wrong, take it up with the supervisor / assignor without making it personal (don't say *this* official gets it wrong). |
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Clark:
I like your questions. The simplest way I can explain travelling is, "pivot foot up + pivot foot down = travel." The instant the ball is gathered, if there's one foot on the floor, that's the pivot foot. You can call it "Euro Step" or "Texas Two Step" for all we care, if the pivot foot comes up, then down, it's travelling. As Bob noted, there's disagreement as to what constitutes a "jump stop." If you go strictly with #3 (as I do), you can't pivot once both feet hit the floor. Here's a link to the NFHS Learning Center. As for questioning a official's ruling, it depends. Are you a player, a head coach, assistant coach, or spectator?
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Confidence is a vehicle, not a destination. |
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While you won't find jump stop defined in the book, it appears the NFHS has defined it (legal jump stop) as jumping off one foot and landing with both feet simultaneously.
See 2002-2003 Rules Interps Situation 13. I was thinking there was another interp that used the term but I couldn't find it. |
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What is the best time and way to explain your position to the referee?
I agree that the best way is to ask the ref calmly at half time or after a game, especially in a youth leagues. When I do those games I feel I am partly there to help teach the kids. If I'm asked nicely and a coach just wants to have a conversation so he can learn I will always take time to do this. A great example of this happened to me last season. In the youth league I coordinate we don't allow backcourt defense, team defenses or isolation plays on offense (trying to promote man to man skills). In one game a coach objected so much that he eventually got two T's and was ejected. Later in the season, he started asking us after every game why we called it this way or that way along with some "what if we did this" type questions. He used this information to teach the kids and design plays that fit our rules. They won the lleague championship that year by beating an undefeated team (who always won by 25+ points) because that team was called multiple times for these violations (most of their plays were disguised zones on defense and spreads on offense) and the coach never adapted. |
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Wow, thanks for all the replies.
With the gather, does that occur when two hands are placed onto the ball or the ball is cradled with one hand? When teaching my kids the jump stop so they can then pivot, just make sure they are in the air while gathering? And to clarify, they can leave one or both feet after situation 2 or 3 but cant come down with the foot/feet until they pass or shoot? With the fifth graders I have it seems the two rules that are possibly misunderstood by a few of the refs are when my kids are still sliding their feet and seem to obtain legal guarding position and take contact in the chest while the ballhandler is dribbling, but has not left his feet for a shot. Another violation we got called for two or three times was double dribble after my player mishandled a pass and the ball hit the ground, then he picked it up and started dribbling. Maybe I am the one misunderstanding those rules though? |
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Could be either way. Depends on whether the official feels the first contact was a bat to the ground or an inadvertent drop.
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Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
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