"The current rules must be enforced to allow the freedom of movement so important to our game and that officials be consistent in administering these rules."
This is good news for a motion offense w/ great shooters and good ball handlers...![]()
Note that the top of the box is marked by the lines for the outside defenders during a free throw. The other image has the line in a different location.
Also, the width corresponds to marks on the floor, not shown in the other graphic.
Here is a pic to show where the lower defensive box is located in the NBA (below the FT line). It appears that the NCAA is thinking of the same box.
No rule changes involved, as it relates to your points. Basically, an insistence by the powers that be that the existing rules be enforced. The box related to the restricted circle is new, however.Seems to me the rule with the largest potential impact is the one banning continuous leaning. A number of centers & PFs are going to have their usefulness rating downgraded significantly.
The ownership of a spot on the floor is probably second. You can't push someone out of the place they own, whether by hooking, or pushing your butt into them or running into them (except for the screening exception), or extend your arms into the space over their head or your feet into the space under them. Major change.
And I majorly applaud the protection of the shooter while in the air. Do the refs have the option to call a flagrant on an undercut?
You had already posted while I was looking , and found the same graphic
The language on the page I found refers to the FT circle as the upper boundary. Also, considering the purposes of the illustrative graphics shown, I do not see any real difference between the width of the LDB in the first and second graphics, other than the hash marks are not shown explicitly in the first one. The proportion looks right. My 2 cents.