|
|||
It is different, but your understanding is wrong. In FED, it's a violation as soon as you go OOB -- there's no "reestablishing" at all.
|
|
|||
Quote:
The Trail would have a clear view of the shove, but he is already in a full jog the other direction so he's in no position to help out. I too would have thought that this would be an easy upgrade after replay, but I must not understand the NCAA interpretation. |
|
|||
Ok, seeing the play, I would say this falls under Adams' criticism.
__________________
A-hole formerly known as BNR |
|
|||
At the high school level, once a player goes out of bounds of their own volition, it is an immediate violation.
__________________
You learn something new everyday ... |
|
|||
How does that apply in the real world? I assume it doesn't mean a player steps on the line trying to go arounds someone, or delierately leaping up to save a ball that is in the air over out-of-bounds territory and leavng the court in the process. Does it just apply to, for example, running noticeably off the court in an effort to gain a deceptive advantage?
|
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Owner/Developer of RefTown.com Commissioner, Portland Basketball Officials Association |
|
|||
Quote:
(numbers added above) it applies to "going out on the player's own volition" so it does NOT apply to your second example. By rule it applies to your first, but in the real word it might not (it certainly would if both feet were out of bounds) your third example would be a T. Other that the "first to touch the ball" addition in NCAA rules, the concept is the same. |
|
|||
Quote:
The closest I can find is 9-4-1. "A player who steps out of bounds under his own volition and then becomes the first player to touch the ball after returning to the playing court has committed a violation." But in this case, he's (Player A1 that goes out of bounds) not the first player to touch the ball. His teammate (A2) is still touching the ball and hasn't released a pass, so A2 is the first person to touch the ball after A1 returns from out of bounds. So how can there be a violation? Is there a case book or AR (whatever the NCAA M version is) for this rule? |
|
|||
10-3-2 says it could also be a technical if it is deceitful.
|
|
|||
Quote:
Art. 1. A player who steps out of bounds under his own volition and then becomes the first player to touch the ball after returning to the playing court has committed a violation. a. A violation has not been committed when a player, who steps out of bounds as permitted by Rule 7-4.6.b, does not receive the pass along the end line from a teammate and is the first to touch the ball after his return to the playing court. |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Not according to the interpretation of the rule. The player receiving the pass would be considered the first to touch it.
__________________
You learn something new everyday ... |
|
|||
Quote:
Replace "first" with "next", if that helps you. Here's a play: A2 goes OOB around a screen and returns. A1 passes the ball to A2, but the ball is tipped by B1. The pass still makes its way to A2. Violation? |
|
|||
Quote:
|
Bookmarks |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Video request Ohio State/Purdue | OKREF | Basketball | 27 | Sun Jan 05, 2014 12:39am |
Ok. State/Purdue video request (Clip Added) | OKREF | Basketball | 9 | Fri Nov 29, 2013 03:49pm |
OK State/ Purdue Continuous Motion | referee99 | Basketball | 1 | Fri Nov 29, 2013 02:58pm |
Michigan State vs Purdue | stiffler3492 | Basketball | 12 | Sat Jan 05, 2013 11:28pm |
Ohio State @ Purdue | bbsbvb83 | Softball | 9 | Tue Apr 17, 2012 12:25pm |