A player may dribble a second time if he lost control of the ball because of: A field goal attempt at his basket, provided the ball touches the backboard or basket ring An opponent touching the ball A pass or fumble which touches his backboard, basket ring or is touched by another player. Ball is awarded to the opposing team on the sideline nearest the spot of the violation but no nearer the baseline than the foul line extended.
Section III—Thrower-in A thrower-in shall not 1 carry the ball onto the court; 2 fail to release the ball within 5 seconds; 3 touch it on the court before it has touched another player; 4 leave the designated throw-in spot which is one step to his left or right; 5 throw the ball so that it enters the basket before touching anyone on the court; 6 step on the court over the boundary line before the ball is released; 7 throw the ball out-of-bounds without it being touched by a player in the game; 8 exit the playing surface to gain an advantage on a throw-in; 9 hand the ball to a player on the court.
EXCEPTION: After a field goal or free throw as a result of a personal foul or the start of a period, the thrower-in may run the end line or pass to a teammate behind the end line. The ball is awarded to the opposing team at the original spot of the throw-in. Kicking the ball or striking it with any part of the leg is a violation when it is an intentional act.
The ball accidentally striking the foot, the leg or fist is not a violation. A player may not use any part of his leg to intentionally move or secure the ball. PENALTY: If the violation is by the offense, the ball is awarded to the opposing team on the sideline nearest the spot of the violation but no nearer to the baseline than the free throw line extended.
If the violation is by the defense while the ball is in play, the offensive team retains possession of the ball on the sideline nearest the spot of the violation but no nearer the baseline than the foul line extended. If the violation occurs during a throw-in, the opposing team retains possession at the spot of the original throw-in with all privileges, if any, Section V—Jump Ball A player shall not violate the jump ball rule Rule 6—Section VII.
If the violation or foul occurs prior to the ball being legally tapped, neither the game clock or shot clock shall be started. In a above, if there is a violation by each team, or if the official makes a bad toss, the toss shall be repeated with the same jumpers. Allowance may be made for a player who, having been in this area for less than three seconds, is in the act of shooting at the end of the third second.
Under these conditions, the 3-second count is discontinued while his continuous motion is toward the basket. If that continuous motion ceases, the previous 3-second count is continued. This is also true if it is imminent the offensive player will exit this area. No violation can occur if the ball is batted away by an opponent. The ball is awarded to the opposing team on the sideline at the free throw line extended. Any defensive player, who is positioned in the foot lane or the area extending 4 feet past the lane endline, must be actively guarding an opponent within three seconds.
Any defensive player may play any offensive player. The defenders may double-team any player. The defensive three-second count is suspended when: 1 a player is in the act of shooting, 2 there is a loss of team control, 3 the defender is actively guarding an opponent, 4 the defender completely clears the foot lane or 5 it is imminent the defender will become legal.
If the defender is guarding the player with the ball, he may be located in the foot lane. If another defender actively guards the player with the ball, the original defender must actively guard an opponent or exit the foot lane.
Start your Independent Premium subscription today. More about California punch. Already subscribed? Log in. Forgotten your password? Want an ad-free experience? Having officiated more than 5, basketball games at all levels from elementary school to Division III college games, I find there are still important rules that coaches, players and fans do not know and cause them to get upset.
When an offensive player or players continually get offensive rebounds and shoot putbacks while staying in the three-second free throw lane area, some want a three-second call, but the rule states that the three-second count is off every time a shot is taken.
The call is correct because when a team either has team or player control, then the three-second rule is in effect. Team control is when the ball is being held or dribbled by a player, or the ball is being passed to teammates in the frontcourt. The player with the ball is responsible for any forward contact with the defensive player who has established LGP Legal Guarding Position , which is having both feet on the ground and facing the offensive player.
After establishing LGP the defender may move sideways and backwards and any contact is on the offensive player with the ball, which is a player-control foul. Once the shooter with the ball is airborne and the defender has established LGP, the defender may not move sideways, this is a block, but the defender may turn their back for protection and it is still a player-control foul.
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