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It's time for another 5 Play Challenge, featuring 5 plays that all involve traveling situations. This video will show you five traveling plays allowing you to decide what you think before the analyzed answer is shown. As always, our videos are dedicated to educating basketball officials, and this segment is no exception. Every play in this 5 play challenge shows traveling plays in 3 different ways. The first is the actual, real time speed, version with no alterations followed by the actual ruling from the game official. The second is slowed down and zoomed in for a closer look at what happened. The last view breaks down and diagrams the video with annotated markings to show what actually happened with a final, analyzed ruling based on the written rule.
The 5 play challenge is not set up to explain the rule in detail but instead simply references the rules as they are written and applies it to each specific video clip. Every traveling 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 traveling plays. The more plays we see, with explicit explanation, the better we will get at identifying the correct ruling more consistently.
Video #1
- A player catches the ball in the air and lands with feet simultaneously returning to the floor. Traveling was called by the official but was it?
Video #2
- After obtaining the ball in the corner, the player jumps into the air to shoot or pass but changes his mind at the last second and starts a dribble. The official rules a traveling violation.
Video #3
- After a bit of dribbling a player executes a step back move only to have the official rule a traveling violation. Was he correct or was it a legal move?
Video #4
- When a player catches a pass on the post he proceeds by pivoting several times and then jumps and passes the ball to a teammate, however the official rules a traveling violation.
Video #5
- A ball is knocked loose and a player jumps on top of it, sliding on the floor slightly. After obtaining possession, an opponent jumps into the pile and the ball handler flips over causing the official to stop play for a traveling violation. Was this a correct ruling?
Watching video clips is a good way to stay connected to the skill of officiating basketball but true education and learning can more effectively be attained when each video is annotated with diagrams and shading to point out key teaching points. Taking away and remembering specifics on a rule, such as traveling, 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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All rules referenced in this video are taken from the official rules book provided by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS). To find out more about the NFHS, you can visit them at nfhs.org/