I’ve watched a little pro and college hoops and for the life of me I can’t understand traveling or contact fouls. It all appears to be subjective to me. But then I am usually pretty bored after 13 seconds into the “game”.
@HappyDog & @Grace ‘Touching’ happens all the time without getting charged as a foul. She is seeing that. So she thinks he’s avoiding answering.
So while touching the opposing player technically speaking is a foul, most refs only count it as a personal foul if in their opinion it is egregious. Things like charging into another player intentionally; or blocking (pushing – with your body – another player out of your way); tripping or holding or pushing or elbowing; etc. There are also a very few things that don’t involve touching, and there are also ‘technical fouls’ and team fouls.
Too many personal fouls (you ‘fouled out’) and you are sent to the bench, if possible. This basically resets each quarter.Some refs are tighter on such distinctions, some are looser. Most also vary their decisions on what to call based on the player. So if a player is known to be very aggressive, many refs let him get away with more because of the ‘let them play’ principle. People are there to watch the guys play, and with some aggressive players you’d be calling a foul every few seconds.
And then you get the rare vindictive ref who calls a foul on a player for something they would accept from anybody else. Or maybe to get that player off the court.All of these rules vary: are you talking about the NBA, WNBA, College, High School, Street, Harlem Globetrotters, etc?
Actually, Arlo is correct. A foul is committed any time one player touches a player on the opposing team.
I have no idea where the “rugby scrum” form of play came from, but the blatant “fouling” which occurs on today’s basketball courts would have EVERYBODY EJECTED from the game in the first 10 minutes!
What occurs on today’s courts has about the same relevance to “basketball” as professional wrestling has to “real” wrestling! They are both pitiful jokes designed for ONE THING, and one thing only – to “entertain” cretins with single-digit I.Q.s.
whahoppened almost 6 years ago
I thought it was when the shoes come off in the locker room.
tudza Premium Member almost 6 years ago
It’s like pass interference.
andyboda almost 6 years ago
Can’t wait for Arlo to try and explain the “Jordan Rules” to Janis.
jarvisloop almost 6 years ago
I stopped following college and pro basketball after it lost the concept of no contact and began to look like playground/street basketball.
If I want to see a gang fight, I’ll watch hockey.
Tyge almost 6 years ago
Roundball. Meh.
assrdood almost 6 years ago
The only time I pay attention to basketball is March, and then only the final four. Unless my Alma Mater is involved – which is almost never.
bachinsure almost 6 years ago
It’s true. Lots of handchecking. Bumping. Palming the ball. Taking two steps. But I ramble……
Plods with ...™ almost 6 years ago
There’s no handsies in basketball!
CarolinaGirl almost 6 years ago
That “no touching” rule is only when you’re playing Duke.
HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member almost 6 years ago
What did Janis not understand about Arlo’s explanation?
nosirrom almost 6 years ago
What this country needs is a Tackle Basketball League.
Grace Premium Member almost 6 years ago
I don’t get this. I have no sports portion of my brain. Help?
edge2edge almost 6 years ago
I’ve watched a little pro and college hoops and for the life of me I can’t understand traveling or contact fouls. It all appears to be subjective to me. But then I am usually pretty bored after 13 seconds into the “game”.
JastMe almost 6 years ago
@HappyDog & @Grace ‘Touching’ happens all the time without getting charged as a foul. She is seeing that. So she thinks he’s avoiding answering.
So while touching the opposing player technically speaking is a foul, most refs only count it as a personal foul if in their opinion it is egregious. Things like charging into another player intentionally; or blocking (pushing – with your body – another player out of your way); tripping or holding or pushing or elbowing; etc. There are also a very few things that don’t involve touching, and there are also ‘technical fouls’ and team fouls.
Too many personal fouls (you ‘fouled out’) and you are sent to the bench, if possible. This basically resets each quarter.Some refs are tighter on such distinctions, some are looser. Most also vary their decisions on what to call based on the player. So if a player is known to be very aggressive, many refs let him get away with more because of the ‘let them play’ principle. People are there to watch the guys play, and with some aggressive players you’d be calling a foul every few seconds.
And then you get the rare vindictive ref who calls a foul on a player for something they would accept from anybody else. Or maybe to get that player off the court.All of these rules vary: are you talking about the NBA, WNBA, College, High School, Street, Harlem Globetrotters, etc?
cuzinron47 almost 6 years ago
Judging by that explanation, he hasn’t been watching the same games I have, pro and college.
scaeva Premium Member almost 6 years ago
I stopped watching basketball when it became a full contact sport.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] almost 6 years ago
Its when one player sneaks in a knuckle duster & short punches to the opponent’s kidney.
DDrazen almost 6 years ago
Maybe it’s one of those Schroedinger’s Cat things: it depends on how observable it is.
wellis1947 Premium Member almost 6 years ago
Actually, Arlo is correct. A foul is committed any time one player touches a player on the opposing team.
I have no idea where the “rugby scrum” form of play came from, but the blatant “fouling” which occurs on today’s basketball courts would have EVERYBODY EJECTED from the game in the first 10 minutes!
What occurs on today’s courts has about the same relevance to “basketball” as professional wrestling has to “real” wrestling! They are both pitiful jokes designed for ONE THING, and one thing only – to “entertain” cretins with single-digit I.Q.s.