Traveling (basketball)
In basketball, traveling is a violation of the rules that occurs when a player holding the ball moves one or both of his feet illegally. Most commonly, a player travels by illegally moving his pivot foot or taking too many steps without dribbling the ball.
Traveling is sometimes also called "walking" or "steps."hh
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[edit] Definition
[edit] NCAA
Section 72. Traveling[1]
Art. 1. Traveling occurs when a player holding the ball moves a foot or both feet in any direction in excess of prescribed limits described in this rule.
Art. 2. A player who catches the ball with both feet on the playing court may pivot, using either foot. When one foot is lifted, the other is the pivot foot.
Art. 3. A player who catches the ball while moving or dribbling may stop and establish a pivot foot as follows:
a. When both feet are off the playing court and the player lands: 1. Simultaneously on both feet, either may be the pivot foot; 2. On one foot followed by the other, the first foot to touch shall be the pivot foot; 3. On one foot, the player may jump off that foot and simultaneously land on both; neither foot can be the pivot foot. b. When one foot is on the playing court: 1. That foot shall be the pivot foot when the other foot touches in a step; 2. The player may jump off that foot and simultaneously land on both; neither foot can then be the pivot foot.
Art. 4. After coming to a stop and establishing the pivot foot:
a. The pivot foot may be lifted, but not returned to the playing court, before the ball is released on a pass or try for goal;64 Rule 4 / definitions b. The pivot foot shall not be lifted before the ball is released to start a dribble.
Art. 5. After coming to a stop when neither foot can be the pivot foot:
a. One or both feet may be lifted, but may not be returned to the playing court, before the ball is released on a pass or try for goal; b. Neither foot shall be lifted, before the ball is released, to start a dribble.
Art. 6. It is traveling when a player falls to the playing court while holding the ball without maintaining a pivot foot.
[edit] NFHS (National Federation of State High School Associations)
The NFHS traveling rule is almost identical to the NCAA rule, with an additional article clarifying restrictions regarding a player holding the ball while on the floor.
[edit] NBA
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For the 2009-10 season, the NBA modified its rule regarding traveling to update antiquated language.[2]
[edit] FIBA
The FIBA rule is almost identical to the NCAA rule with minor differences (e.g. for when a player falls to the floor).
[edit] Penalty
The ball becomes dead and a throw-in is awarded to the opposing team out of bounds nearest the point where the violation took place under NCAA and NFHS rules.[3] Under NBA rules, the ball is awarded to the opposing team at the nearest spot but no close to the baseline than the free throw line extended.[4]
[edit] Examples
- Any action where the pivot foot is lifted and returned to the floor, or dragged along the floor.
- Lifting the pivot foot, taking multiple steps, or shuffling the feet before starting a dribble. See example videos.
- While holding the ball, jumping and returning to the floor without releasing the ball.
- While holding the ball on the floor, attempting to roll over or stand up.
- NCAA and NFHS only: Falling to the floor while holding the ball, even if it was caught while airborne.[5][6][7][8]
[edit] Clarifications
- It is impossible to travel while dribbling.[9] The height of the dribble or number of steps taken per dribble is irrelevant.[10]
- It is impossible to travel during a throw-in.[11] While there are space restrictions for a throw-in, the thrower is not required to maintain a pivot foot or observe any of the other restrictions of the traveling rule. A referee who signals traveling on a throw-in violation is in error.
- A player must have control of the ball to travel. For instance, a player who bobbles a pass may well take several steps legally—the traveling rule is not in effect until he has secured control of the ball.[12]
- A player who dives and catches a loose ball on the floor may legally slide as far as his momentum carries him. This is not a travel.[13][14][15] However, once he stops he may not roll over or attempt to stand.
- Lifting the pivot foot alone does not constitute a travel; a player may pass, shoot, or request a timeout in that position. It is a travel once the foot is returned to the floor, or if a dribble is started.
- A player who attempts a field goal may not be the first to touch the ball if it fails to touch the backboard, basket ring or another player.[16]
[edit] References
- ^ NCAA Rules for Men's and Women's basketball, for seasons 2011-12 and 2012-13
- ^ NBA clarifies update -- not change -- to traveling rule
- ^ 2009-2011 Men's & Women's Basketball Rules Rule 9, Section 15, Article 1. Retrieved July 26, 2010
- ^ NBA Official Rules (2009-2010) Rule 6, Section I, g(1). Retrieved July 26, 2010
- ^ NCAA 2009 Basketball Rules: Rule 4, Section 66, Article 6
- ^ http://phillyref.com/basketball/travelcases.html#nfhs NFHS Basketball Casebook - Section 4.44.5 Situation A
- ^ http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fc/news/lateNews/p/newsid/24352/arti.html FIBA rule changes for 2008
- ^ http://www.phillyref.com/articles/basketball/travel.html#gotchas "Player controls a rebound and falls to the court"
- ^ http://utahareasports.org/uploads/NFHS_BB_Rules_Fundamentals.pdf NFHS Basketball Rules Fundamentals
- ^ http://www.ihoops.com/training-room/officials/officials-guide-secction-15-seven-basketball-rules-myths.htm Seven Basketball Rules Myths
- ^ http://utahareasports.org/uploads/NFHS_BB_Rules_Fundamentals.pdf NFHS Basketball Rules Fundamentals
- ^ http://www.ihoops.com/training-room/officials/officials-guide-secction-15-seven-basketball-rules-myths.htm Seven Basketball Rules Myths
- ^ http://phillyref.com/basketball/travelcases.html#nfhs NFHS Basketball Casebook - Section 4.44.5 Situation B
- ^ http://phillyref.com/basketball/travelcases.html#ncaa NCAA Basketball Approved Ruling 113 (3)
- ^ http://phillyref.com/basketball/travelcases.html#fiba FIBA traveling rule cases
- ^ NBA Official Rules (2009-2010) Rule 10, Section XIII, F. Retrieved July 26, 2010
- "2009 NCAA Men's and Women's Basketball Rules" (PDF). NCAA. http://www.ncaapublications.com/Uploads/PDF/Basketball_Rules_2008-09fb2fc956-7592-4877-993e-dae20a6f90ed.pdf. Retrieved August 2008.
- National Federation of State High School Associations (2009). Basketball Rules Book.
- National Federation of State High School Associations (2009). Basketball Case Book.
- "Official Rules of the NBA 2009-2010" (PDF). http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/pdf/2.0/sect/officiating/Official_NBA_Rule_Rook_09-10.pdf. Retrieved December 13, 2009.
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