santa sangria
RefChat Addict
Roberto Carlos IIRC
That would mean 99% of the population who are either left or right handed are disableda disability that affects the amount of force they can use in particular arm.
ERM... I think there is an identifiable advantage in the case of the OP.... Looooong throwFFS it's a means of getting the ball back in play........unless there's an identifiable advantage.....play on...stop sweating the small stuff!
@Peter Grove is our man... Anything on this particular subject??Reff'ing or teaching spin is 4 decades outdated at least and not supported in the LOTG. Thank goodness this went away LONG ago. It was ridiculous and nit-picky. Just get the ball in play. It is very simple now and rightly so. Simple - face field, two feet on ground behind or touching line, behind and over head. SPIN MEANS NOTHING. Wish I had the old LOTG or interpretations from back in the 80's but I was a teen then and not the student of the game I am now. Maybe one of our resident archivists on here?
ERM using the proper technique........That would mean 99% of the population who are either left or right handed are disabled
ERM... I think there is an identifiable advantage in the case of the OP.... Looooong throw
Reff'ing or teaching spin is 4 decades outdated at least and not supported in the LOTG. Thank goodness this went away LONG ago. It was ridiculous and nit-picky. Just get the ball in play. It is very simple now and rightly so. Simple - face field, two feet on ground behind or touching line, behind and over head. SPIN MEANS NOTHING. Wish I had the old LOTG or interpretations from back in the 80's but I was a teen then and not the student of the game I am now. Maybe one of our resident archivists on here?
This.only one team manager over those I have had the misfortune to ref - have said to me they practice the throw... most squander the possession! - when will coaches learn a throw in is a free pass!!
... the ‘one handed’ foul throw (ball thrown with one hand and guided with the other) is not permitted."
In not aware of anything to that effect. For many, many decades (around 6 as far as I can tell) up till 1997, the wording remained unchanged and went as follows:When? The 70s? Under older language of the Laws, the idea of equal force was more present (I don't recall the exact language am too lazy to look it up), and excessive sideways spin was taught as infraction.
I believe some interpreted that to mean that equal force should be used but it certainly wasn't explicit. As I mentioned in my previous post, I have never come across any teaching regarding spin (excessive or otherwise) though it sounds as if that may have been taught in the US.The thrower shall use both hands and shall deliver the ball from behind and over his head.