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NCAA basketball rules question
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Why do refs never call an intentional foul at the end of games. It's obvious that a losing team is intentionally committing a foul in order to stop the clock, which is the following violation (Rule 4, Section 26, article 6): Quote:
And if I'm reading the intentional foul penalty rule correctly (Rule10, Section 23, art. 2b), then the penalty should be two shots and the ball. Quote:
Am I misreading the rules, or is the NCAA just ignoring this stuff so that the games will have a chance to end interestingly? |
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I guess it depends on how you interpret the NFL's rule: Quote:
Imminent loss of yardage becomes the key term (I'm checking the ncaa rules) |
dola, while checking for intentional grounding, I came across this little tidbit about crowd noise... it seems teams don't have to take it (Rule 3-3 on timeouts):
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all could find while looking for spiking in college rules:
VIII.With seconds remaining in a half and the ball declared ready for play, Team Aquickly lines up and the ball is legally snapped to quarterback A12, who throws the ball forward directly to the ground. Team A’s formation was not legal at the snap. When the ball becomes dead, two seconds show on the game clock. RULING: Illegal formation. Penalty— Five yards from the previous spot. The clock starts on the next snap. |
typically, you don't push/hold the player... You always see them trying to slap the ball away to stop the clock.
-- formerly certified basketball referee. |
dola, you also get 2 free throws when it is a team foul above 10.
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I think the key is the player is still making a direct play on the ball. In most of the end of the game cases, the defensive players are taught to attempt to make the steal and then if you don't make the steal to foul all in the same motion . I have seen the intentional foul called when they actually hold a player or if the foul is committed against a player without the ball. |
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cough.. post #6 :) |
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I disagree. Very often you see guys just go after the other player - not the ball. -- formerly a guy who watched a bunch of basketball :) |
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Wrong. A rule change was made to specifically allow QBs to spike the ball to stop the clock quite a few years ago. Prior to that, you would see QBs throw an uncatchable ball over the WR's head to the sideline to stop the clock. Spiking would have been grounding prior to the rule change, but the incomplete sideline pass wouldn't because a receiver was in the area. |
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Remember the rule Art. 6. Intentional personal foul. An intentional foul shall be a personal foul that, on the basis of an official’s observation of the act, is not a legitimate attempt to directly play the ball or a player As long as you can convince the official that you are making an attempt, you won't see the intentional foul called. |
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and at those times you make the crossed arms... and I have done that. |
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