In the second half Mario Chalmers made a basket but was called for an offensive foul, but the basket that he made counted. I don't know of any rule that counts the basket after a charge was committed. Here's the play by play from 2 different sites.
Sportline.com
6:39 TX Defensive Rebound by Damion James
6:16 TX Lost ball turnover on D.J. Augustin, Stolen by Darnell Jackson
6:05 KS Offensive foul on Mario Chalmers
6:05 KS Offensive Foul turnover on Mario Chalmers
6:05 KS Mario Chalmers made Floating Jump Shot
Espn.com
6:50 Damion James Defensive Rebound. 60-63
6:04 Mario Chalmers made Two Point Jumper. 60-65
6:04 Foul on Mario Chalmers 60-65
2007-03-11
16:49:57
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6 answers
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asked by
haichu1
2
in
Sports
➔ Basketball
No they didnt call the play back and take away the points. I kept waiting for the score to change back, but it never did.
2007-03-11
16:58:48 ·
update #1
I've never seen a basket count after an offensive foul. Is there a source for that rule and was that the call made?
2007-03-11
17:04:07 ·
update #2
From my understanding of this is that there should be a charge if the basket was missed, because that will cause the defender to not be able to get the rebound. It doesn't specify that the basket counts. Thanks for the rule book though.
A.R. 6. (Men) B1 is standing behind the backboard before A1 jumps for a layup. The
forward momentum of A1 causes contact with B1. RULING: B1 is entitled to the position
provided that there was no movement into such position by B1 after A1 leaped
from the floor. When the ball goes through the basket before the contact occurs, the
contact shall be ignored unless B1 has been placed at a disadvantage by being unableto rebound when the shot is missed or unable to put the ball in play without delay,
when the try is successful. When the contact occurs before the ball becomes dead, a
charging foul has been committed by A1. When B1 moves into the path of A1 after A1
has left the floor, the foul shall be on B1.
2007-03-11
18:16:00 ·
update #3
Note that it specifies that continuation is for defensive fouls only.
Section 12. Continuous Motion
Art. 1. Continuous motion applies to a try for field goal or free throw, but shall have no significance unless there is a foul by the defense during the interval that begins when the habitual throwing movement starts a try or with the touching on a tap and ends when the ball is clearly in flight.
2007-03-11
18:19:05 ·
update #4