Thank you for your sharing. I am curious to know if the video was officially released by FIBA or if it was just a fan-edited clip, as I noticed several calls made by the referee in the video were incorrect. 4:28
4:28 is correct. Gains control slightly before his left touches the ground. So left foot becomes pivot. And you can't lift your pivot before dribbling. Travel.
@@CoachFrikki Rules before 2017 While moving: ▬ To start a dribble, the pivot foot may not be lifted before the ball is released from the hand(s). Rules after 2017 A player who catches the ball while he is progressing, or upon completion of a dribble, may take two steps in coming to a stop, passing or shooting the ball: If, after receiving the ball, a player shall release the ball to start his dribble before his second step. The left foot does not control the ball in the video. 012 The steps passed without stopping.There is no pivot foot formation.
@@user-zt2ie3mm8m @CoachFrikki I think it's correct too. We don't know what the ref saw but maybe the 0 step was granted on the step before when his hand touch the ball (although does it count as control?). I think the spirit of the 2017 rule change is more to granted some flexibility on the feet that is already on the ground or near the ground in regards of completion of a drible or catching a pass. Using that rule to get a full 3 steps was not the intent, i believe. But who knows. And player will game the system. In the end, i have no problem that call. I think he has control of the ball and a pivot foot when his left feet is on the ground. I can then start an action a dribble or a pass (or a shot). Looks like he jump from his pivot feet and tried to pass but then change his mind. That would caugh my eye if I was the referee.
A close call. He received the ball mid air just moments before stepping with the right foot, what would count as the first step. Then proceeds with the second step, and continues dribbling. If he received it with the right foot on the floor , or if he shot/passed after the second step, it would've been ok.
He catches the ball with his right foot on the floor, then does a little hop with that foot, so he made it look worse because he rushed; I think the call is ok.
I can only come up with his pivot slid before he stepped with his right foot. Other than that, he goes Left (0) -right (1) -left (2), then steps through with his right.
The Trail doesn't have a very good angle, so it looks like the ball is in his hands sooner than it really was. So, I think the official having decided that, then it would make it a travel because, as @HoopsOfficial stated, he lands on the same left foot he used to jump at the first step.
It's impossible to say from this angle. We don't know if he picked the ball up with his left foot on the ground (travel) or both feet in the air (legal).
@@einargun i have to correct myself. he cought the ball midair, therefore left food is step one (pivot as you said), therefore it is a travel - good call
@@cologneconductor8591 I´m glad you look at these clips with critical eyes. Not all calls are correct in these compilations so you have to look at them from the rule book. Comment as much as you like and keep working on your ref game. Thank you.
@@einargun Thank you for your comment. I also made a similar mistake when I was playing basketball. We did a lot of drills for that. Do you blow the whistle under NBA rules? I feel like Luka and Anthony Edwards(MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES) is often criticized for traveling in international tournaments.
I think FIBA should explain the footsteps. ruclips.net/video/vXrp9y17Lkw/видео.html Following the video, the same footsteps is not travel in 5:33 I think the rule has not been changed.
@@einargun travel; Pivot foot rule 25.2.1., before either foot touches the ground, he shoots or passes the ball. When he lifts his pivot foot, the other foot is on the ground.
@@rogerhuang9760 How do you do a lay up then? Forget de gather/zero step. You end your dribble by putting 2 hands on the ball. The feet on the ground is your pivot foot. You jump to your other foot (which will touch the ground before after your pivot foot quit the ground and before you lay up the ball). Then you lay up the ball. I think what the ref saw was that when the player put 2 hand on the ball he has his left foot on the ground. The other foot is still in the air. The he use is left foot to perform a great pivot and then a clean step-trough. If both feet were on the gournd when it put 2 hand on the ball it would have been clean/perfect.
I agrre with you. I think what the ref saw was that when the player put 2 hand on the ball he has his left foot on the ground. The other foot is still in the air. The he use is left foot to perform a great pivot and then a clean step-trough. If both feet were on the gournd when it put 2 hand on the ball it would have been clean/perfect.
Watching this just tells me that there's travelling on every single play in the NBA.
you are doing a great job, keep doing and educate us ,thankyou
Thank you for the compliment. Glad this is useful. Enjoy :-)
Unsurprisingly, half of the travels got called on USA team
Not only that, some of the players of other nations that 'traveled' are NBA players.
@@ezekielvaldez7222 🤣
After watching a lot of NBA playoff games I needed this video to reconcile myself with real Basketball.
thats NBA made tha USA team almost got the call😂😅😊
I had to remove a lot of USA clips because of copyrights.
Travels will be called! Even if they look like travelling...
Thank you for your sharing. I am curious to know if the video was officially released by FIBA or if it was just a fan-edited clip, as I noticed several calls made by the referee in the video were incorrect. 4:28
4:28 is correct. Gains control slightly before his left touches the ground. So left foot becomes pivot. And you can't lift your pivot before dribbling. Travel.
@@CoachFrikki Rules before 2017 While moving:
▬ To start a dribble, the pivot foot may not be lifted before the ball is released
from the hand(s).
Rules after 2017 A player who catches the ball while he is progressing, or upon completion of a dribble, may take two steps in coming to a stop, passing or shooting the ball:
If, after receiving the ball, a player shall release the ball to start his dribble
before his second step.
The left foot does not control the ball in the video. 012 The steps passed without stopping.There is no pivot foot formation.
@@user-zt2ie3mm8m I stand corrected. Stupid rule though in my opinion though. Do they define "progressing"?
@@user-zt2ie3mm8m @CoachFrikki I think it's correct too. We don't know what the ref saw but maybe the 0 step was granted on the step before when his hand touch the ball (although does it count as control?). I think the spirit of the 2017 rule change is more to granted some flexibility on the feet that is already on the ground or near the ground in regards of completion of a drible or catching a pass. Using that rule to get a full 3 steps was not the intent, i believe. But who knows. And player will game the system.
In the end, i have no problem that call. I think he has control of the ball and a pivot foot when his left feet is on the ground. I can then start an action a dribble or a pass (or a shot). Looks like he jump from his pivot feet and tried to pass but then change his mind. That would caugh my eye if I was the referee.
Could somebody tell me why Anthony Edward got a travel call at 1:59?
I think he held the ball while taking multiple quick steps.
Although he got called again at 4:17 and it looked like he got the ball on the floor as quick as he could. Lol
A close call. He received the ball mid air just moments before stepping with the right foot, what would count as the first step. Then proceeds with the second step, and continues dribbling. If he received it with the right foot on the floor , or if he shot/passed after the second step, it would've been ok.
What 4:03? PIVOT foot established?
He catches the ball with his right foot on the floor, then does a little hop with that foot, so he made it look worse because he rushed; I think the call is ok.
Jus because the ref blows the whistle does not mean its the correct call!!
correct 🙂
Give us portions of this video that you question.
1:30 is clean
I can only come up with his pivot slid before he stepped with his right foot. Other than that, he goes Left (0) -right (1) -left (2), then steps through with his right.
@@fromtheoutside I see what you are saying but to me he doesn't slide the pivot foot, he only lifts it quite close to the ground looking like a slide.
Agree. This is not travel.
His left foot slipped.
It's a one-two hop step. On a hop step, both feet have to come down simultaneously. So travel
How about 3:47 ? any opinions ? Looks like 0-1-2 to me...
Not sure if FIBA has the 0-1-2 step rule.
Lands on the same left foot he used to jump at the first step. Travel.
The Trail doesn't have a very good angle, so it looks like the ball is in his hands sooner than it really was. So, I think the official having decided that, then it would make it a travel because, as @HoopsOfficial stated, he lands on the same left foot he used to jump at the first step.
Correct, same foot is a travel.
It's impossible to say from this angle. We don't know if he picked the ball up with his left foot on the ground (travel) or both feet in the air (legal).
4:01, can someone explain why this is travel?
oh is it because his non pivot foot (left in this case) has to land after the ball is released form his hand?
@@kostasskoulidas6549 He lifts up his pivot foot before drippling the ball. But it is very tight call.
first is a bad call, player ist allowed to do two step to shot or pass the ball. only way to be that a travel is him starting to dribble
I think it´s the right call. Pivot foot is left and he release without drippling or shooting
@@einargun but he passed the ball what is categorized the same way as shooting is
@@einargun i have to correct myself. he cought the ball midair, therefore left food is step one (pivot as you said), therefore it is a travel - good call
@@cologneconductor8591 I´m glad you look at these clips with critical eyes. Not all calls are correct in these compilations so you have to look at them from the rule book. Comment as much as you like and keep working on your ref game. Thank you.
5:51 Luka's Traveling
Left foot is his pivot foot. He must start the dribble before he lifts the left foot.
@@einargun Thank you for your comment.
I also made a similar mistake when I was playing basketball. We did a lot of drills for that.
Do you blow the whistle under NBA rules? I feel like Luka and Anthony Edwards(MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES) is often criticized for traveling in international tournaments.
0:00 Agressivity?
Not sure why she said that. Thank you for watching 🙂
Sana ganyan din tawagan sa NBA
Kaso hindi po eh. Karamihan ng mga natawagan dito sa video ay mga naglalaro pa man din sa NBA.
1:30 that's not travelling
I think FIBA should explain the footsteps.
ruclips.net/video/vXrp9y17Lkw/видео.html
Following the video, the same footsteps is not travel in 5:33
I think the rule has not been changed.
5:32 is clean, kept the pivot and stepped through.
@@einargun travel; Pivot foot rule 25.2.1., before either foot touches the ground, he shoots or passes the ball. When he lifts his pivot foot, the other foot is on the ground.
@@einargun Not every step through is legal.
@@rogerhuang9760 How do you do a lay up then? Forget de gather/zero step. You end your dribble by putting 2 hands on the ball. The feet on the ground is your pivot foot. You jump to your other foot (which will touch the ground before after your pivot foot quit the ground and before you lay up the ball). Then you lay up the ball.
I think what the ref saw was that when the player put 2 hand on the ball he has his left foot on the ground. The other foot is still in the air. The he use is left foot to perform a great pivot and then a clean step-trough. If both feet were on the gournd when it put 2 hand on the ball it would have been clean/perfect.
I agrre with you. I think what the ref saw was that when the player put 2 hand on the ball he has his left foot on the ground. The other foot is still in the air. The he use is left foot to perform a great pivot and then a clean step-trough. If both feet were on the gournd when it put 2 hand on the ball it would have been clean/perfect.
2:12 is not travel
It is traveling. Pivot foot is lifted before the dribbling starts.
r u kidding?
0:49 is legal. 2:12 is travel. The two actions are different.
@@user-zt2ie3mm8m I disagree. both are travel since both jumped to shoot.
@@ezekielvaldez7222 The key point is whether the player is moving before catch the ball.
The rule of travel does not care about the shooting action.