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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:04pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pantherdreams View Post
Just for the sake of clarification in the OP. The player attempting to be a shooter does jump straight up and down. THe player diving after the ball does make contact with the legs of the player trying to land as he dives for the loose ball, effectively undercutting him.

If a player were just jumping for pass or for fun at midcourt and a diving player took them out I would have a foul. So I feel you have to have something on B2. Just not sure if its a shooting foul or not.
Was he an airborne shooter?
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:13pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam View Post
Was he an airborne shooter?
Thats what I'm trying to establish . . .seems opinion is mixed.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:20pm
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Originally Posted by Pantherdreams View Post
Thats what I'm trying to establish . . .seems opinion is mixed.
You've read the relevant rules and the arguments here -- what is your opinion / decision?
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:20pm
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Originally Posted by Pantherdreams View Post
Thats what I'm trying to establish . . .seems opinion is mixed.
Not an airborne shooter for two reasons.

First, he left the ball without the ball. Had he released a try before jumping, the answer would be the same.

Second, and most importantly, he never released a try. An airborne shooter must be someone who has either released a try, or still has the ball and is attempting to do so. Your player is simply someone who had the ball stolen who then proceeded to jump into the air.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:29pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pantherdreams View Post
As he gathers and starts to elevate B2 reaches in and strips the ball on the way up

Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam View Post
Not an airborne shooter for two reasons.

First, he left the ball [edit: floor] without the ball. Had he released a try before jumping, the answer would be the same.
I misread the OP. I agree that there can be no airborne shooter if he leaves the floor without the ball.

I don't mean to hijack the thread with the following question, but would it change your ruling if A1 was stripped by B1 after becoming airborne, subsequently to have his legs taken out from under him while still airborne by B2 who is diving for the loose ball? That's what the play I was making the argument for A1 being an airborne shooter.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:41pm
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Originally Posted by griblets View Post
I misread the OP. I agree that there can be no airborne shooter if he leaves the floor without the ball.

I don't mean to hijack the thread with the following question, but would it change your ruling if A1 was stripped by B1 after becoming airborne, subsequently to have his legs taken out from under him while still airborne by B2 who is diving for the loose ball? That's what the play I was making the argument for A1 being an airborne shooter.
I misread the OP in the same way.

But I don't think it changes the ruling. Once the ball is out of his hands the try has ended and the ensuing foul is common regardless of the airborne status of the player. They are going after a loose ball and it's essentially the same as if the defender went through the legs of a player trying to catch a pass.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:42pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam View Post
Not an airborne shooter for two reasons.

First, he left the ball without the ball. Had he released a try before jumping, the answer would be the same.

Second, and most importantly, he never released a try. An airborne shooter must be someone who has either released a try, or still has the ball and is attempting to do so. Your player is simply someone who had the ball stolen who then proceeded to jump into the air.
I think you're right that if A1 is in contact with the floor when he's stripped he can't become an airborne shooter. He ceases to be in the act of shooting once he no longer has the ball and is still touching the floor.

However, if he left the floor before the strip, wouldn't he then be an airborne shooter? Or, is a strip sufficiently different from a block that he hasn't released the ball on a try?
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 02:20pm
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Originally Posted by Eastshire View Post
I think you're right that if A1 is in contact with the floor when he's stripped he can't become an airborne shooter. He ceases to be in the act of shooting once he no longer has the ball and is still touching the floor.

However, if he left the floor before the strip, wouldn't he then be an airborne shooter? Or, is a strip sufficiently different from a block that he hasn't released the ball on a try?
It may be a quirk in the rules, but it's clear that an airborne player must be either attempting to release a try or have already released the try in order to be considered an airborne shooter. Even if he had gone airborne prior to having the ball stolen, the fact that he lost the ball prior to releasing a try means he isn't an airborne shooter any longer.

Not any different really, than a shooter who changes his mind and passes the ball.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 12:24pm
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It sounds as if it has been determined that the player began as a shooter and then when the ball was stripped (and it was clear it wasn't going in the hoop) the player became a non-shooter.

Given that, it would be a common foul.

Now, same scenario however ball is hit out of shooter's hand but still goes towards the hoop (meaning it has a chance to go in the hoop). Does that make our player an airborne shooter still when he gets his legs clipped and thus 2 FT's would be awarded if the ball does not enter the hoop?
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 01:18pm
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4-1-1: "An airborne shooter is a player who has released the ball on a try for a goal or has tapped the ball and has not returned to the floor."

4-23-5b: "Guarding a moving opponent without the ball: The guard must give the opponent the time and/or distance to avoid contact."

By my reading, A1 is not an airborne shooter, as he did not release the ball on a try for goal; the ball was stripped by B2 before A1 was able to release the ball on a try.

However, all Team B players must give A1 time and/or distance to avoid contact. If A1 is caused to fall by a Team B player (as opposed to a Team A player who might dive in an attempt to secure the loose ball), that player is guilty of a common foul.

Also note that since the ball was never in flight on a try for goal, Team A will continue to have team control until a Team B player secures control of the ball or the ball becomes dead. Any common foul committed by a Team A player until that time will be a team-control foul.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 01:20pm
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I do not see how someone can launch themselves into anyone either. It sounds like an incidental contact at best. Players fall over each other all the time in loose balls and that is what it sounds like.

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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 02:44pm
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I have been convinced that this could not be a shooting foul. I believe I was reading too much into it. The answer is usually very simple.

Quote:
Originally Posted by La Rikardo View Post
4-1-1: "An airborne shooter is a player who has released the ball on a try for a goal or has tapped the ball and has not returned to the floor."
While A1 was attempting a try, he never was an airborne shooter since he never released for try. Ensuing foul by B2 on airborne player (not shooter) A1 would be common foul.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam View Post
I...the fact that he lost the ball prior to releasing a try means he isn't an airborne shooter any longer.
Based on 4-1-1, A1 never became an airborne shooter.


I appreciate the discussion. Thanks to all who have contributed.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 03:15pm
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Use some common sense, call this a common foul.
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Old Fri Jan 23, 2015, 04:29pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by griblets View Post
I have been convinced that this could not be a shooting foul. I believe I was reading too much into it. The answer is usually very simple.



While A1 was attempting a try, he never was an airborne shooter since he never released for try. Ensuing foul by B2 on airborne player (not shooter) A1 would be common foul.




Based on 4-1-1, A1 never became an airborne shooter.


I appreciate the discussion. Thanks to all who have contributed.
I think you're right with regard to the OP.

If, however, a player leaves the floor in an apparent attempt to shoot and gets stripped of the ball before he releases the try, then I think he was an airborne shooter briefly. Not that it matters, though. If he'd been fouled before the ball was stripped, this discussion wouldn't have happened.
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Old Sat Jan 24, 2015, 04:23am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Adam View Post
I think you're right with regard to the OP.

If, however, a player leaves the floor in an apparent attempt to shoot and gets stripped of the ball before he releases the try, then I think he was an airborne shooter briefly. Not that it matters, though. If he'd been fouled before the ball was stripped, this discussion wouldn't have happened.
Nope, he was an airborne player in the act of shooting, but he never became an "airborne shooter" per the basketball definition provided at the beginning of rule 4.
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