1BearJACKET
Jolly Good Fellow
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Does it ever get called anymore?
It's definitely not traveling. Sort of like the Fosberry Flop it's just a unique way of solving a problem. Looks "strange", but legal and very effective.The "Euro" hop or step is what drives me crazy. Its traveling.
It's definitely not traveling. Sort of like the Fosberry Flop it's just a unique way of solving a problem. Looks "strange", but legal and very effective.
Watch a good euro step in slow motion. It's 2 steps. What makes it so good (and hard to do) is the complete weight shift between the steps combined with the length of the strides.
The traveling that goes uncalled the time is picking up / shuffling pivot feet. Happens constantly.
If the center of your hand went below the "equator" we were called for carrying. That has long since disappeared from being call for over 2 decades.Maybe I just remember wrong, but I seem to recall when I was young that if you put your hand completely under the basketball while dribbling, you were called for carrying. I don't remember the last time I saw carrying actually called and I have seen dribblers with their hand fully supporting the basketball from underneath.
If the center of your hand went below the "equator" we were called for carrying. That has long since disappeared from being call for over 2 decades.
You are correct. In today's game I would never have been called for carrying.I understand that being low on the ball hasn't been called for a very very long time. However what I am talking about is the palm of the hand basically supporting the ball. It seems that as long as the ball doesn't actually stop movement, it isn't called.
Carrying was certainly enforced very strictly many years ago, but the modern rule gives quite a lot of leway.
This is the current NBA rule for carrying (college and FIBA rules are similar):
"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."
Your hand is allowed to be under the ball as long as you do not actively transport the ball or pause your dribble while doing so.
FWIW I actually think the skills are massively increasing these days. The requirements for players to be able to dribble and especially shoot for getting to college and even HS are far above where they were when I was a mere lad. Yea the rules have changed and the side of me that wants them to get off my grass thinks they have way too much leeway today - but that doesn't diminish the skills that kids overall have today.
That doesn't mean I wouldn't like to see Harden called for about 5 walks per game. He gets away with murder. But the level of skill today is way above the dark ages when I played.
That's simply not true by the rules though. You can feel it "should" be the rules, but it isn't.If you put your hand under the ball and take a step then you have carried the ball from one point to another. That should be called as palming/carrying the ball. I bet 50% of all dribbles are palming. Maybe that’s high, but it is rampant.
Harden cheats on his stepbacks so much, but he hides the footwork so well that without replay it's so hard to see. Not sure if I should respect it or revile it.FWIW I actually think the skills are massively increasing these days. The requirements for players to be able to dribble and especially shoot for getting to college and even HS are far above where they were when I was a mere lad. Yea the rules have changed and the side of me that wants them to get off my grass thinks they have way too much leeway today - but that doesn't diminish the skills that kids overall have today.
That doesn't mean I wouldn't like to see Harden called for about 5 walks per game. He gets away with murder. But the level of skill today is way above the dark ages when I played.