NFHS
Basketball Rule Change Helps Keep Players in Game
INDIANAPOLIS, IN (April 24, 2002) � Beginning next season, high school basketball players will not be automatically forced to leave the game for blood or injury if the problem can be corrected by the end of a called time-out. The rule (3-3-5 and 3-3-6), passed by the NFHS Basketball Rules Committee at its annual meeting April 7-9 in Indianapolis, allows for players to remain in the game if that team calls a time-out.
�At crucial points at the end of a game, players with blood or injury may now be able to stay in the game,� Mary Struckhoff, NFHS liaison to the Basketball Rules Committee said. �The rule gives the team the option to call a time-out to rectify the situation and keep a key player in the game.�
In other changes, Rule 9-13 was added to change the penalty for excessively swinging the arms or elbows to a violation. Previously it was penalized by a technical foul, which the committee felt to be too harsh for a violation that had no physical contact. It was also very seldom called and is believed that, if the objective is to reduce the potential toward rough play, a violation call would achieve the desired results and be called more often.
�Referees were reluctant to call a technical foul, which counts as a personal foul, a team foul, where the other team gets two foul shots and the ball, without any physical contact,� Struckhoff said. �I think now it will get called more.�
Rule 9-1 establishes a new penalty for free throw lane-line violations when one player violates followed by a second violation by the opposite team. The committee felt that a second lane violation is often the result of faking by an opponent. This change only penalizes the first infraction. If the violations are simultaneous, the alternating-possession procedure is to be used.
�Defensive players were learning that if they could draw an offensive player into the lane by going in first, the shot would not count and the possession arrow would be used. This change prohibits that from happening,� Struckhoff said.
Struckhoff also noted that this rule only applies to players in marked lane spaces. If a player from outside the lane is in violation, the rule does not apply.
All three of the above rules changes make the NFHS consistent with NCAA rules.
�I was pleased with the committee�s efforts,� NFHS Basketball Rules Committee Chairman Larry Boucher said. �I think we passed some things that are progressive in nature but are for the betterment of the game.�
Rule
Other rules changes approved by the NFHS Basketball Rules Committee are:
� Rule
� Rule 9-7 was changed to delete the requirement for the three-second count to be terminated during an interrupted dribble. Since team control is still in effect, the count should continue. The rule was inconsistent with the rule concerning a loose ball.
� A
change in Rule
The establishment of a new signal
for the violation of excessively swinging arms and/or elbows was added to the
signal chart.
According to the 2001 High School Athletics Participation Survey conducted by the NFHS, basketball is the No. 1 sport for girls and No. 2 sport for boys at the high school level with 452,728 and 539,749 participants, respectively. More high schools sponsor basketball than any other sport, with 17,135 sponsoring schools for boys and 16,756 sponsoring schools for girls.
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Permits
a player who is required to leave the game for blood or injury to remain in
the game if the team calls a time-out and the situation can be corrected by
the resumption of play. Rationale: The current rule can have a
tremendous impact on the game when a key player has blood (which may not even
be their own) and must leave late in the game, without the ability to
immediately return. |
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Added
an exception to the definition of control by a player: �It shall not be
considered player control when, during a jump ball, a jumper catches the ball
prior to the ball touching the floor or a non-jumper.� Rationale: By interpretation, this used to be the only infraction by the jumper,
(of four, |
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Changed the definition to include a simultaneous
personal foul.
�A simultaneous foul (technical or personal) by opponents. . .�� Rationale: There was no definition
of a simultaneous personal foul. |
9-1 Penalty |
Establishes
a new penalty for free throw lane-line violations when one player violates
followed by a second violation by the opposite team.� Rationale: �A second lane-line violation is often the
result of faking.� This change only
penalizes the first infraction. If the violations are simultaneous, the
alternating-possession procedure would still be used. |
9-7 |
Deletes
the requirement for the three-second count to be terminated during an
interrupted dribble.� Rationale:� Team control is still in effect.� Rule was inconsistent with the rule
concerning a �loose ball.� |
9-13 New |
Changes
the penalty for excessively swinging arms or elbow(s) to a violation (from a
technical foul). Rationale: �The
previous rule of a technical foul was very seldom called, as the penalty was
very severe: 2-shots, ball goes to the opponent, player charged with one
technical, which also counts toward that player�s five for disqualification
and the team foul count; all without any contact to the opponent.� If the object is to reduce the potential
toward rough play, a violation call would be an enforceable penalty that
would also likely achieve the desired results.� |
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Deletes
basket interference during a free throw as a technical foul.� Rationale: With the current restrictions on players waiting until the ball hits
the rim on a free throw, it is very difficult to commit basket interference
during a free throw, and if it occurs, it is most often an unintentional act.
Goaltending during a free throw will remain a technical foul, as it is likely
an intentional act. |
Signal Chart |
Adds
a new signal for the violation of excessively swinging arms and/or elbows. Rationale:
Better communication for all concerned; fans, team benches, and scorer�s
table. |