Welcome back to the 5 Play Challenge, with five plays involving basketball backcourt violations. We will show five video clips showing a possible backcourt violation in three different ways giving ample opportunity to make a ruling. First, is in real time. Second, is zoomed in and slowed it down. Third, an analysis of what happened is given and the correct ruling revealed. These videos, as always, are dedicated to educating officials on the rules of basketball.
The 5 play challenge is not set up to explain the rule in detail but instead simply references rules as they are written and guidelines to help appropriately apply those rules. Every backcourt video we show in this segment is clipped from actual footage of high school basketball games, involving high school athletes. The goal is to provide as much possible information to assist the way we see these types of plays in the future. The more plays we see, with detailed explanation, the better we will get at identifying the correct ruling more consistently.
Video #1
- Defender deflects the ball away from the dribbler and into the backcourt. So why does the officials call a backcourt violation? Watch and find out.
Video #2
- After a shot there is a scramble for the ball and the offensive player batted the ball into the backcourt. Should this be a backcourt violation?
Video #3
- A pass is hit by a defender and as the ball heads toward the backcourt, the player who passed it grabs it while standing on the division line. Take a look for yourself and decide.
Video #4
- Dribbler brings the ball up the court, passes over the the division line but then comes back into the backcourt. No whistle on the play. Were the officials correct?
Video #5
- Ball is passed to a teammate with the ball landing in the backcourt, but after the bounce it is caught in the frontcourt. Violation or not?
Watching video clips is a good way to hone your basketball officiating skills and retain your learning for future use. We believe the most effective way to assist in building a correct understanding of rules and how to apply them is by watching videos with annotation, diagrams and shading to highlight key teaching points. Taking away and remembering specifics on a rule is easier when visual aids are used to present in a way that is easy to listen to and understand.
The Officials Institute, and the 5 Play Challenge segment, creates videos in a fun and interesting way to test your ability to properly recognize specific plays, but don't leave you guessing about whether there was a foul, violation or not. Even though we cannot officiate in slow motion or freeze frames, by watching and reviewing video video in this fashion, we are able to "retrain our brain" so we can start seeing plays more accurately when we do see them in real time and increase our ability to get the call right.
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29 сен 2024