Betting Talk

cbb rule changes

jakenhljakenhl Senior Member
edited September 2015 in Sports Betting
Should be interesting in the start of the season to see how accurate sides and totals will be. Teams have had a whole off-season to adjust and incorporate the 30 seconds shot clock into their offense and defense. Obviously this will be an advantage for some teams and a disadvantage to others. It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

The following rule changes were proposed by the NCAA Men's Rules Committee for the 2015-16 season,[1][2] and officially approved by the NCAA Men's Playing Rules Oversight Panel:[3]
Reducing the shot clock from 35 to 30 seconds (same as the women's game).
Providing offensive players the same verticality protections as defensive players.
Extending the restricted-area arc from 3 feet to 4 feet from the basket.
Reducing the number of team timeouts from 5 to 4, with a limit of no more than 3 timeouts in the second half.
Ending the practice of coaches calling timeouts from the bench in live-ball situations.
Tightening the 10-second backcourt rule, under which the offensive team has 10 seconds to advance the ball from the backcourt to the frontcourt. The following situations, all of which resulted in a reset of the 10-second count under previous rules, no longer reset the count: The defense deflects the ball out of bounds.
A held ball situation in the offensive backcourt in which the possession arrow favors the offense.
A technical foul against the offensive team during possession in its own backcourt.

Eliminating the five-second "closely-guarded" rule while the ball is being dribbled.
Allowing for technical fouls to be called on players who are determined to have faked a foul while reviewing for a flagrant foul.
Allow video replay of shot-clock violations throughout the game. Previously, this type of review was limited to only the final 2:00 of the game and in overtime.
"Class B" technical fouls, such as hanging on the rim and delay of game, now result in one free throw by the non-violating team instead of the previous two.
Requiring that a timeout taken 30 seconds or less before a scheduled media timeout break (which are at 16:00, 12:00, 8:00, and 4:00 of each half) become the media timeout. This particular change had been made in NCAA women's basketball effective with the 2013–14 season.
Stricter enforcement of resumption of play after timeouts, and reducing from 20 seconds to 15 seconds the time allowed to replace a disqualified (fouled out) player. Teams will receive a delay-of-game warning after the first violation, and a Class B technical foul for each subsequent violation.
Dunking will be allowed during team warmups and halftime.
An experimental rule allowing players six personal fouls instead of five will be used in all national postseason tournaments except for the NCAA Tournament.

Comments

  • StevieYStevieY Senior Handicapper
    edited September 2015
    "Tightening the 10-second backcourt rule, under which the offensive team has 10 seconds to advance the ball from the backcourt to the frontcourt. The following situations, all of which resulted in a reset of the 10-second count under previous rules, no longer reset the count: The defense deflects the ball out of bounds.
    A held ball situation in the offensive backcourt in which the possession arrow favors the offense.
    A technical foul against the offensive team during possession in its own backcourt."

    They forgot the worst one. Calling timeout shouldn't give you 10 more seconds.
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