FIBA Rules Explained: Ball Returned To Backcourt

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 40

  • @oumarsy3485
    @oumarsy3485 3 года назад +3

    Your vidéos help a lot sir!

  • @mindaugasbalsys8301
    @mindaugasbalsys8301 3 года назад +1

    Thanks referee University for this great job.

  • @oumarsy3485
    @oumarsy3485 3 года назад +1

    Thank You !

  • @leoang1617
    @leoang1617 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you sir!

  • @TomatoTomato911
    @TomatoTomato911 3 года назад +3

    so its different from nba where you can throw-in the ball from front court to a teammate at the backcourt?

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  3 года назад +1

      Yup, FIBA has frontcourt and backcourt status with inbounding. NCAA and NBA (I believe) do not so you can inbound into your backcourt.

    • @TomatoTomato911
      @TomatoTomato911 3 года назад

      @@refereeuniversity what about nfhs?

    • @lukeblungi3105
      @lukeblungi3105 Год назад

      @@TomatoTomato911 same as ncaa and nba, in fact there is no team control on throw in for nfhs

    • @TomatoTomato911
      @TomatoTomato911 Год назад

      @@refereeuniversity i forgot how ball is establish front court or back. does the ball and player have to cross the line to establish front court or just the ball or must the ball touch the floor of the front court? can player stay at backcourt while the ball bounces between front and backcourt?

    • @ianokay
      @ianokay 10 месяцев назад

      Is this actually true? For NFHS rules the ball is in team control and live during a throw-in@@lukeblungi3105
      4-12 ART. 6 . . . Neither team control nor player control exists during a dead ball
      6 ART. 2 . . . The ball becomes live when:
      b. On a throw-in, it is at the disposal of the thrower.
      4-4 ART. 7 . . . A ball is at the disposal of a player when it is:
      d. Available to a player after [...] the official begins the throw-in count.
      4-12 ART. 1 . . . A player is in control of the ball when he/she is holding or dribbling a live ball
      4-12 ART. 2 . . . A team is in control of the ball:
      a. When a player of the team is in control.

  • @goulioofficial3037
    @goulioofficial3037 6 месяцев назад +1

    At the start of 2 Quarter player A1 pass the ball to teammate A2.A2 catch the ball in the air and lands on the backcourt. it is backcourt violation ? Your videos are amazing and you are very helpful.thank you

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the support! For it to be a backcourt violation, it depends on where A2 took off and where A1 is when they passed the ball. If A1 has frontcourt status and throws the ball to A2. A2 jumps from the backcourt, catches the ball in the air, and lands in the front court... Back Court Violation. Hope that helps!

  • @junfengzhang6928
    @junfengzhang6928 3 года назад +1

    In the last play (Westbrook), it is legal in NFHS rule; it is the throw-in exception. There is no front court status for a throw in. Is it different in FIBA?

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  3 года назад +1

      You are correct! In FIBA: "This restriction applies to all situations in a team's frontcourt, including throw-ins." So throw-ins in the front court count as front court status!

    • @junfengzhang6928
      @junfengzhang6928 3 года назад

      @@refereeuniversity Good to know! Thank you.

    • @ianokay
      @ianokay 10 месяцев назад

      So in all leagues, a throw-in is a live ball (in player control), in team control, and has both the status of OOB and either FC/BC depending on where the throwing player is standing? And throw-in straddling the midcourt line is BC because one foot in BC? However NCAA (4-3 Art. 8) and NFHS (9-9 Art. 3), but not NBA or FIBA, have (bizarre) exceptions that FC to BC violations are allowed on throw-in if airborn when FC? @@refereeuniversity

  • @eosp06lund29
    @eosp06lund29 Год назад

    We had a situation where we trapped a player just before the half court line. The ballhandler then pivoting across the half court line with the pivot foot in the backcourt. So that is not a violation as he never had both feets in the front court?

    • @kelvinrojas215
      @kelvinrojas215 Год назад

      I want to know this as well

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  Год назад +1

      No violation due to front court status not being attained. Great question! Also, an FYI the backcourt count is still going though!

  • @ianokay
    @ianokay 10 месяцев назад

    What video were you referencing in this with the two coaches/refs standing on the midline?

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  9 месяцев назад

      You will have to be more specific since I am unsure of the question, my apologies

  • @oumarsy3485
    @oumarsy3485 3 года назад

    Could You please make a video about correctable errors?

  • @valkorumQ
    @valkorumQ 2 года назад

    Can you please confirm this one for me. If front court position has been established and then pass to a player who is coming from the back court, but one foot is in the air and the other foot is in the front court. My understanding is that this is still fine as they have established front court position by the one foot in the front court.
    Your example at the beginning of this the player catches the ball while in the air and is absolutely a violation. But in my scenario they have actually a foot on the ground in the front court - but the second foot is still in the air.
    I hope this is clear :)
    My understanding is my scenario is not a violation

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  2 года назад

      Perfectly legal, great question!

    • @ianokay
      @ianokay 10 месяцев назад

      So a player without the ball doesn't need the "three points" of contact, both feet+ball, (as they don't have the ball) so they don't even need both feet to be FC?@@refereeuniversity

  • @mcflurrd
    @mcflurrd Год назад

    if both of my feet on the frontcourt while dribbling the ball on backcourt, can my feet go back to the backcourt? so ball and 2 feet go back to the backcourt

  • @TomatoTomato911
    @TomatoTomato911 3 года назад

    so if the dribbler has both feet on the frontcourt but dribbles with his back/side facing front and the ball bounces on the backcourt or line would it be a backcourt violation even though the ball never crossed the line or touches the frontcourt? must the ball touch the front court floor or just crosses the line in air?

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  3 года назад

      You need to attain front court status (Ball and two feet), so if they never attain front court status, then they can dribble the ball in the back court with both feet in front court: No violation but back court count still occurs. Does that clarify it?

  • @gabt2751
    @gabt2751 3 года назад

    Thanks for the amazing video. One question about a particular situation:
    A player of Team A is shooting a free-throw; after touching the rim the ball gets to Team A backcourt and one player of Team A catch it. No violations because on the rebound (also on free-throw) no one is in possession of the ball; Am i right?

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  3 года назад +1

      Thanks! You are completely right, no violation because team control was gone off the free throw :)

    • @shahrokh75
      @shahrokh75 2 года назад

      I do not agree. According to FIBA rules this has nothing to do with Team control. In stead it gets decided by the principle of last touch, first touch. The Grey team no.8 is the last player, who touches the ball in their frontcourt and his teammate no. 4 is the first player who touches the ball in their backcourt. PLEASE CHECK FIBA INTERPRETATION ex. 30-15

    • @lukeblungi3105
      @lukeblungi3105 Год назад

      "A team which is *in control of a live ball in its frontcourt* may not cause the ball to be illegally returned to its backcourt" FIBA Rules, Article 30.2

  • @MS-ho9wq
    @MS-ho9wq Год назад

    Westbrook even made that 3 lol 😂😂

  • @ianokay
    @ianokay 10 месяцев назад

    "touching his frontcourt with both feet while holding" strikes me as odd. You're saying I can be standing on one foot, get passed the ball from backcourt, then pass it back to a teammate in back court, and it's legal? Talk about unintuitive

    • @refereeuniversity
      @refereeuniversity  9 месяцев назад +1

      yup that would be legal. Until all three points reach the front court

    • @ianokay
      @ianokay 9 месяцев назад

      Do I have to have never had both feet in the FC prior to the pass?@@refereeuniversity