Thursday, May 5, 2011

Announcement of Rule Changes

Penalties for Fouls during Throw-ins
Changed in High School Basketball

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                  Contact: Mary Struckhoff
INDIANAPOLIS, IN (May 4, 2011) — Penalties for fouls during throw-ins have been changed in high school basketball, effective with the 2011-12 season. The throw-in revision, as well as several other rules changes and editorial revisions, were approved by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Basketball Rules Committee at its April 11-13 meeting in Indianapolis. All rules changes recommended by the committee were subsequently approved by the NFHS Board of Directors.
Definitions within Rules 4-12-1, 4-12-2 and 4-12-6 were changed to reflect that team control will now exist during a throw-in once the thrower-in has the ball at his or her disposal. The new rule will no longer grant free throws to the defending team in the bonus if the throw-in team commits a foul.
“The advantage was too great because the throw-in team would lose possession and yield free throws under the previous rule,” said Mary Struckhoff, NFHS assistant director and liaison to the Basketball Rules Committee. “It was inconsistent with how this same play was being administered during non-throw-in situations.”
The committee also approved an editorial change to Rule 9-2-10, Penalty 4 to clarify that when an opponent contacts the thrower-in, an intentional foul will be charged to the offender. The defender will not have to have broken the plane to be charged with an intentional foul.
The committee edited Rule 1-3-1 to reflect the current basketball court design, which many high schools already use. The rule now permits at minimum a ¼-inch-wide single line and a line no wider than 2 inches for the center circle.
The committee also added Rule 3-5-3, which provides guidelines for arm compression sleeves. Sleeves may be white, black, beige or a single solid school color, and all sleeves must be the same color for each team member. Also, any manufacturer’s logos must not exceed 2¼ inches square.
In addition to the throw-in change to Rule 9-2-10, the committee approved several other editorial revisions, including reorganizing the definition of an intentional foul, clarifying when an alternating-possession throw-in shall be administered and clarifying penalty administration for when single fouls occur as part of a multiple free-throw situation.
Two other editorial changes to the Basketball Rules Book are ones that the NFHS Board of Directors has approved for use in all NFHS rules books.
The first rule extends the clerical duties of officials beyond the end of the game through the completion of any reports required from actions that occurred while the officials had jurisdiction.
The second authorizes state associations to grant exceptions to NFHS playing rules for participants with disabilities, special needs or extenuating circumstances.
Struckhoff said the committee again discussed requiring the use of a shot clock in high school basketball, as it has done for several years, but the committee did not approve the proposal.
“Even though there’s growing interest in using a shot clock, the general sense from the committee is that the time isn’t right,” Struckhoff said. “Given the current economic climate, it would be difficult for schools to comply with a rule requiring purchasing new equipment and hiring additional table personnel.”
A complete listing of all rules changes approved by the committee is available on the NFHS Web site at https://dsd-exchange-01/owa/redir.aspx?C=30f57bfc50d344ebbac26a7e8c2e28c0&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.nfhs.org. Click on “Athletics & Fine Arts Activities” on the home page, and select “Basketball.”
Basketball is the second-most popular sport for girls and third-most popular for boys at the high school level, according to the 2009-10 High School Athletics Participation Survey conducted by the NFHS, with 439,550 girls and 540,207 boys participating nationwide. The sport ranks first in school sponsorship of girls and boys teams with 17,711 schools sponsoring the sport for girls and 17,969 sponsoring the sport for boys.
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This press release was written by Steven Peek, the spring 2011 intern in the NFHS Publications/Communications Department and a senior at Butler (Indiana) University.

About the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS)
The NFHS, based in Indianapolis, Indiana, is the national leadership organization for high school sports and fine arts activities. Since 1920, the NFHS has led the development of education-based interscholastic sports and fine arts activities that help students succeed in their lives. The NFHS sets direction for the future by building awareness and support, improving the participation experience, establishing consistent standards and Rules for competition, and helping those who oversee high school sports and activities. The NFHS writes playing Rules for 17 sports for boys and girls at the high school level. Through its 50 member state associations and the District of Columbia, the NFHS reaches more than 19,000 high schools and 11 million participants in high school activity programs, including more than 7.5 million in high school sports. As the recognized national authority on interscholastic activity programs, the NFHS conducts national meetings; sanctions interstate events; produces publications for high school coaches, officials and athletic directors; sponsors professional organizations for high school coaches, officials, spirit coaches, speech and debate coaches and music adjudicators; serves as the national source for interscholastic coach training; and serves as a national information resource of interscholastic athletics and activities. For more information, visit the NFHS Web site at https://dsd-exchange-01/owa/redir.aspx?C=30f57bfc50d344ebbac26a7e8c2e28c0&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.nfhs.org%2f.




MEDIA CONTACTS:          Bruce Howard or John Gillis, 317-972-6900
                                         National Federation of State High School Associations
                                         PO Box 690, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Hats Off to Ephrata

When surfing the annals of lancsports.com, I came accross a very uplifting story from the Ephrata Boys' Basketball team.  In a game against Cocalico, an Ephrata player was forced to leave the game due to an ankle injury.

Ephrata's Head Coach, Pat Christino, made the coaching decision of the year and called for Tim Hubach, a player with Down Syndrom, to enter the contest.   Cindy Stauffer, of The Intelligencer Journal, elequently  details the touching story.  http://articles.lancsports.com/local/4/354533

Blue Ridge Cable captured the moment and it is available for you below.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Game Night Reminder

The Indians will host Kennard Dale tonight at 7:00 pm.  Doors open at 6.  Hope to see you there!!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Playoff Update

An addendum worth noting.  The Indians' home playoff game versus Kennard Dale will begin at 7 PM this Friday.  Wear your green and white and come support the team.

Hope to see you there!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Donegal Hosting A Playoff Game

The District 3 Playoff brackets have been released.  The Indians have clinched the 15th seed in AAA after finishing the regular season campaign by winning 9 of 11 games. 

Although the rankings have shifted slightly from the last posting, Donegal will face the 18th seed, Kennard Dale on February 18, 2011.  As the higher seed, Donegal will enjoy a home-court atmosphere during the pig-tail game and look to avenge and early season loss against the Rams.

The teams met early this year in the Northeastern Tipoff Tournament's Consolation Final.  In the first matchup, the Indians led by 5 entering the halftime break.  The Rams forced 19 Donegal turnovers and put on an offensive show in the second half (49 points) en route to a 70-59 victory. 

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Heartbreaker

Those of you involved in the basketball program at Donegal, and all of you loyal blog followers are aware that the team was on the playoff bubble.  In order to qualify for the Lancaster-Lebanon League Playoffs, the Indians would need to have some luck on their side.  Any combination of 2 more wins than Manheim Central would earn Donegal a trip to the LL's.

The Indians have been playing much better, team basketball following back-to-back losses to Manheim Central and Lancaster Catholic.  The team has won three straight games and is looking forward to a potential District 3 playoff game next Friday night.

Unfortunately, last night, Manheim Central beat Northern Lebanon in a close 56-50 game thus dashing the LL dreams for the Indians.

Despite the heartbreaking news, the Indians still have a lot to play for.  Currently, Donegal is the 17th seed in the District 3 AAA playoffs.  If the rankings hold, the Indians will travel to Kennard-Dale high school for a rematch with the York County team.  However, a combination of a Donegal victory and a Kennard-Dale loss, may allow the Indians to host a district playoff game.

That being said, tonight is the last currently scheduled home game for the 2010-2011 Indians.  Come support the team as they host Garden Spot tonight at 8:00 PM.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Lampeter-Strasburg

I regress a few years back.  Coach Butt spoke in practice about adversity and Austin Musser (a freshman or sophomore at the time) gave a blank stare and asked what adversity meant.  Saturday afternoon would provide the senior guard and his teammates with a great example of facing adversity in the game of basketball.

Section leading, Lampeter-Strasburg, entered the Indian Dome Saturday morning looking to end the Indians' league playoff hopes.  The teams met earlier in the season and LS stormed out of the gates to a 14-3 lead.  The Indians clawed back into the game getting within 2 points with 4 seconds left.  An extremely controversial call (check the film) ended the hopes of a Donegal comeback.

Fast forward several weeks and it was immediately evident that hand-checking was an officiating focus and the newest lesson on adversity was about to begin.  LS won the jump ball and began the game by drawing three defensive fouls on the first possession.  After the next LS possession, both senior guards, Austin and Drake Brumfield, found themselves watching the action from the bench with two fouls each.  Soon thereafter, sophomore, Dylan Houseal, joined the seniors with two fouls.  Less than three minutes into the game, LS would shoot free-throws the remainder of the half.  To the credit of the officials, both coaches, and the fans were begging for the chance to watch the teams play.

Aside from the foul situation and two senior guards sidelined, Donegal stormed out to a 9 point first quarter and a 33-25 halftime lead.  The halftime score prompted Big Mike to comment, "66-50 would be nice."  Little did he know, after taking a sizable lead to the locker room, the Indians would never look back en route to a 70-52 victory over the Section 3 leaders.

Jon Heisey (14 pts) hit a three pointer to begin the scoring for the Indians.  He would add two off of a very aggressive drive to the hoop and later knocked down a couple more treys.  In addition to Jon's offensive outburst, Jaime Colon was the game's high scorer with 18 points and Ben Shenandoah chipped in 11. 

The bench scoring was huge for us.  The foul trouble against a high quality opponent may have spelled disaster for Donegal, but the Indians overcame the adversity and shocked the section leaders. 

The Indians will look to keep their playoff hopes alive Monday night as they travel to Northern Lebanon.