Sonny wrote:Answer under both NCAA & Federation Rules.
During a loose ball, A1 pushes B1. Play on, slow whistle. Play is eventually blown dead by the refs to award the ball to Team B. Before the next restart, B1 violently cross checks A1 in the helmet... not once but twice.
Ruling & restart location?
The loose-ball stuff is a red herring, since it confers possession to Team B and nothing else. We do
not have simultaneous fouls, since the foul by Team A was live-ball and the fouls by Team B were dead-ball. Thus, all we have is the two dead-ball cross-checks on B1.
There are a number of ways to go here, depending on what you see and how you judge the incidents. But the most obvious is that B1 is ejected for fighting:
NCAA 5-13 wrote:Fighting is defined as a player, substitute, nonplaying member of a squad, coach or anyone officially connected with a team deliberately striking or attempting to strike anyone in a malicious manner, or leaving the bench or coaches area during an altercation.
NFHS Rule 5-11 wrote:ART. 1 . . . A player, substitute, coach, nonplaying member of a team or anyone officially connected with the team shall be ejected for:
a. Deliberately striking or attempting to strike anyone or leaving the bench
area during an altercation.
So, B1 is out of the game with a 3:00 NR penalty to be served by the in-home. Team A is awarded possession in Zone 3. B1 will serve a suspension (NCAA) or may serve a suspension (NFHS; depends on association rules).
Although B1 had two cross checks, it may make the most sense to treat it all as one incident. You could call it a dead-ball USC plus fighting if you felt the need to up the penalty time involved.
And, of course, under NFHS rules, if you didn't call it fighting but called it two USCs, the guy is still gone. But I'm going to call it fighting or flagrant misconduct and get that guy out of there.