Maravich? Heck, anyone who played before today's rules would have been a better player in his day.GUNNERMATE said:That is a carry. Can you imagine what Maravich would have done with todays rules?HoopDreams said:
don't remember which thread we were talking about whether Paris's high dribble was a carry (it wasn't), but how about this...
When I was in high school, in our games, it was called 2 or 3 times a game. Traveling was called a little more often, as I remember. Most players rarely did either one. First time I noticed a player getting away with carrying a ball in the NBA was Magic Johnson. Many players of his day, 6-9 and taller, had difficulty dribbling and especially changing hands on the dribble. I went to the public library, where they had a copy of the NBA rule book. I could find no rule at that time in the NBA against carrying the ball, or palming. I don't know if there is a rule against palming now.HoopDreams said:
a ton of players carry the ball, but it's so rarely called in college that I'm surprised when it is.
although I think the clip above is technically a carry, I'm not sure I've ever seen a whistle blown for a carry in the nba.
I think it's a carry at the point where he reaches back with the ball up high behind him, before the inside out move. I don't think the inside out part is a carry.HoopDreams said:
don't remember which thread we were talking about whether Paris's high dribble was a carry (it wasn't), but how about this...
Exactly right. The carry occurs when he has the ball behind him. Once the hand gets below the horizontal equator of the ball, it is a carry. During the inside out part, he is placing his hand under the ball while ending his dribble and is part of preparing to shoot his shot, which was an underhanded shot.bluesaxe said:I think it's a carry at the point where he reaches back with the ball up high behind him, before the inside out move. I don't think the inside out part is a carry.HoopDreams said:
don't remember which thread we were talking about whether Paris's high dribble was a carry (it wasn't), but how about this...
SFCityBear said:Exactly right. The carry occurs when he has the ball behind him. Once the hand gets below the horizontal equator of the ball, it is a carry. During the inside out part, he is placing his hand under the ball while ending his dribble and is part of preparing to shoot his shot, which was an underhanded shot.bluesaxe said:I think it's a carry at the point where he reaches back with the ball up high behind him, before the inside out move. I don't think the inside out part is a carry.HoopDreams said:
don't remember which thread we were talking about whether Paris's high dribble was a carry (it wasn't), but how about this...
Here's the NBA rule, and it's why I don't think the Jah Morant video is a carry:SFCityBear said:When I was in high school, in our games, it was called 2 or 3 times a game. Traveling was called a little more often, as I remember. Most players rarely did either one. First time I noticed a player getting away with carrying a ball in the NBA was Magic Johnson. Many players of his day, 6-9 and taller, had difficulty dribbling and especially changing hands on the dribble. I went to the public library, where they had a copy of the NBA rule book. I could find no rule at that time in the NBA against carrying the ball, or palming. I don't know if there is a rule against palming now.HoopDreams said:
a ton of players carry the ball, but it's so rarely called in college that I'm surprised when it is.
although I think the clip above is technically a carry, I'm not sure I've ever seen a whistle blown for a carry in the nba.
Rule 10(II)(d).Quote:
[ol]A player who is dribbling may not put any part of his hand under the ball and (1) carry it from one point to another or (2) bring it to a pause and then continue to dribble again. [/ol]
Quote:
Section 13. Dribble
Art. 1. A dribble is ball movement caused by a player in control who bats, pushes or taps the ball to the playing court once or several times.
Art. 4. The dribble ends when: a. The dribbler catches or carries/palms the ball by allowing it to come to rest in one or both hands;