Talk:Technical foul
A fact from Technical foul appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 22 July 2004. The text of the entry was as follows:
|
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||
|
Untitled
[edit]Questionable circumstances related to intentional and technical fouls at the end of two games on March 1st and 4th of 2006.
- 1. Duke vs. Florida State. With time remaining in the game and Duke
behind, Duke commits an intentional foul just prior to the Florida State home crowd rushing the floor in apparent celebration. A technical foul was called on the Florida State crowd. Duke shoots two (2) technical foul shots first followed by Florida State shooting two (2)foul shots as the result of the intentional foul.
Opinion based on the rules of basketball:
Duke was never awarded posession of the ball following their foul shots as a result of a technical foul. Florida State should have shot their penalty shots first because the Duke intentional foul occured first. Duke should have shot their technical foul shots next followed by posession of the ball. This may have changed the result of the game as did the proper sequence of events in the game below.
- 2. George Washington vs. Charlotte. Similar intentional foul/technical foul
calls as Duke vs. Florida State (above). GW was behind and intentionally fouled Charlotte with time remaining in the game. A techical foul was called on a Charlotte player for the flagrant swinging of his elbows resulting in contact with a GW player. Charlotte shot two (2) foul shots first as a result of the intentional foul followed by GW shooting two (2) technical fouls shots PLUS retention of the ball which resulted in a game winning basket.
Is there a different penalty given for a bench (crowd) technical foul vs. a player technical foul?
In the instance of a crowd technical, the call in NCAA would be an indirect technical foul while the player technical foul that you are probably speaking of is a direct technical foul (though a player can be charged with an indirect but that is beside the point right now). Now in your question about the administration of the fouls in the first instance, it was indeed done correctly. For indirect technical fouls, the enforcement is two shots and then you administer the ball from the point of interruption instead of awarding the ball to the offended team. So in this instance the POI (point of interruption) would be the intentional foul which in of itself is two shots and ball at the out of bounds spot closest to the foul.
In your second instance, the reason GW got the ball back was because the flagrant swinging elbows is considered a flagrant technical foul which means the ball is awarded to offended team.
So for future situations remember this, for indirect/direct technical fouls, the penalty is two shots and then go to the POI. For all other technical fouls (flagrant, intentional), it's two shots and ball at halfcourt. Of course, this only applies to NCAA.
--AllPurposeGamer 07:56, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
History of the "T"
[edit]Does anyone have information as to when and by whom the technical foul was invented? Who was the first person to be hit with a "T"? Who was the first ref to issue one? 71.142.73.145 (talk) 02:47, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
I believe technical fouls have always existed. The NBA's rule book doesn't give a general rule for what the distinction between the "technical" and "personal" fouls except to say that a personal foul is illegal contact between players on the court while the ball is in play. All other violations of the rules are technical fouls. The most common technical foul is for unsportsmanlike conduct, but there are several other ways you and/or your team can get a "T." There are even a couple of (fairly rare) cases where you can get a T through no fault of your own. Damaging the backboard during the game, even unintentionally, is a technical foul. Also, players get a "T" along with each personal foul under a seldom-used rule which allows players with six personal fouls to re-enter the game if their team runs out of players: If you come back into the game and commit a seventh (or higher number-th) foul, your team gets hit with a technical foul on top of the personal foul. Timothy Horrigan (talk) 00:17, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
When was the rule changed from three technical fouls to two before a coach or player could be ejected? ---24.255.167.197 (talk) 05:23, 25 November 2009 (UTC)
- AFAIK, the NBA has always ejected on the second T (though an ejection on the first one is also possible). The colleges and high schools changed the rule to ejection on the second T I believe in the late '80s, but I don't know the exact year. Actually, a coach can pick up a third T if the first one or two T's are "indirect," i.e., called on bench personnel but indirectly also given to the coach. AFAIK, the NBA and FIBA make no such distinction. 69.42.13.45 (talk) 09:38, 20 February 2012 (UTC)
Technical fouls
[edit]How many technical fouls were committed at home versus away? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.245.165.84 (talk) 22:27, 9 November 2008 (UTC)