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In basketball, a technical foul (also known as a "T" or a "Tech") is any infraction of the rules penalized as a foul which does not involve physical contact during the course of play between players on the court, or is a foul by a non-player. The most common technical foul is for unsportsmanlike conduct. Technical fouls can be assessed against players, bench personnel, or even the entire team. Technical fouls are handled slightly differently under international rules than under the rules used by the various competitions in the United States. First, illegal contact between players on the court is always a personal foul under international rules, whereas in the USA, such contact is (with some exceptions) a technical foul (rather than a personal foul) when the game clock is not running and/or when the ball is dead. Second, in FIBA play, players foul out after five total fouls, both technical and personal. This latter rule is similar to those in use in college, high school, and middle school basketball in the United States. However, in the NBA and WNBA, players are allowed six personal fouls before being disqualified, and technical fouls assessed against them do not count toward this total. However, unsportsmanlike technicals in the NBA carry a $500 fine and players are suspended for varying amounts of time after accumulating fifteen technicals in the regular season or seven in the playoffs. In most American competitions, disqualification of the offender, be he player, coach, or otherwise (often incorrectly called and confused with "ejection") is the penalty for being assessed two technical fouls in a game. In addition, any single flagrant technical foul, or a "disqualifying foul" in FIBA, incurs ejection. FIBA rules do not provide for ejection for any number of non-flagrant technicals against a player; however, two technicals on a coach or a third technical on the bench results in his ejection.
[edit] InfractionsMany infractions can result in the calling of a technical foul. One of the most common is the use of profane language toward an official or another player. This can be called on either players who are currently active in the play of the game or seated on a team's bench. It can also be assessed to a coach or another person associated with the team in an official capacity such as a trainer or an equipment manager. Additionally, coaches or players can be assessed a technical foul for disputing an official's call too vehemently, whether or not profanity is involved. Other offenses can result in technical fouls, such as:
Delaying the game (in the NBA, NCAA, and NFHS, most of these infractions incur a team warning for a first offense, followed by a team technical, or player technical, if the same player who received the first warning delays the game a second time), including:
and more technical issues, such as:
Until 2001, the NBA also had a unique rule, that of the illegal defense, which was designed to stop defenders from dropping back into a zone and thus preventing drives to the basket. The penalty, after a warning, was a technical foul charged to the offending team and one shot for the offense, except that if the first violation occurred within 24 seconds of the end of a period, the technical was assessed without warning. Beginning with the 2001-02 season, the NBA changed the illegal defense rule to the "defensive 3-second rule," which prohibits a defender from being in the shooting lane for three seconds, unless guarding an opponent within arm's reach (or the man with the ball, regardless of distance). The penalty is the same as it was for an illegal defense, except that no warning is issued. Additionally, home teams can be assessed technical fouls on their crowd for excessive use of artificial noise or for dangerous offenses such as throwing items (particularly ice or coins) onto the court. Usually a fight or lesser altercation between players results in a "double technical", a technical foul on both players involved. If any player leaves the team bench during a fight, he can be charged with a technical foul and ejected, as can any coach that does so without the beckoning of an official. Rules against fighting vary from high school to college to the NBA, but all levels penalize severely for such conduct, to include suspensions and (in the NBA) heavy fines. [edit] PenaltyIn college basketball, NFHS, and lower divisions, the penalty for technical fouls has been increased over the years. Initially, the opposing team was awarded one free throw. This was later increased to one free throw and possession of the ball. For a while, "bench technicals" assessed on a coach or non-active player were considered more serious and resulted in the award of two shots. Today, high school basketball (NFHS in the United States) provides for two free throws and possession of the ball, regardless of circumstances, for a technical foul. International basketball provides a similar penalty. College basketball awards two shots, with the ball then put in play at the point of interruption (POI), the spot and circumstances where play was stopped for the technical. In the NBA, the penalty remains one free throw for the opposing team, with play resuming from the point of interruption. The team awarded the foul shots for a technical may select the player(s) to shoot them (this rule differs slightly from level to level). [edit] Famous instancesOne of the most famous technical fouls ever assessed was called on Chris Webber of the University of Michigan late in the 1993 NCAA championship game. Down by two points to North Carolina with only seconds remaining, Webber called a timeout when Michigan had already used all of their allotted timeouts. The resulting penalty ended any hopes Michigan had of claiming the championship. A review of the game showed the angle that Webber had towards his bench. It appeared that a spectator sitting behind the bench may have been calling for "time" and from Webber's point of view it could have been misconstrued as a call from his bench.[citation needed] In what has been called the greatest game ever played[1], Game 5 of the 1976 NBA Finals between the Phoenix Suns and Boston Celtics, the Suns found themselves one point down with one second left in double overtime, no timeouts remaining and possession of the ball under their defensive basket after a John Havlicek bucket. Faced with the near-impossibility of sinking an 80-foot desperation shot, Suns guard Paul Westphal hit upon an unusual solution. He intentionally called a timeout the Suns did not have. While this gave the Celtics a free throw, which Jo Jo White successfully converted to increase the lead to two, it gave the Suns possession at halfcourt. This enabled Gar Heard to sink an 18-footer as time expired to force a third overtime. NBA rules were changed the following year to prevent a repeat occurrence by not advancing the inbounds pass to halfcourt in similar situations.[citation needed] An instance where many technical fouls could have been called, but were not (the game was abandoned, a remedy available to the officials when too many players are disqualified or ejected for the game to continue, or when a team continually commits technicals in order to make a travesty of things), was the Pacers–Pistons brawl involving players and spectators on November 19, 2004, in an NBA game between the Indiana Pacers and Detroit Pistons. Two opponents, Ron Artest of the Pacers and Ben Wallace of the Pistons, began scuffling after Artest fouled Wallace hard. This escalated into a fight where players from both teams became involved, and grew worse after Artest retreated to the scorer's table and was hit by a cup thrown by a spectator. Artest and several teammates and opponents then ran into the seats and fought fans there. Had technical fouls been formally assessed, the result may well have been the ejection of both teams' entire squads. In the end, several players were suspended for multiple games, including Artest for the remainder of the season.[2] In a 2007 game against the Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio's Tim Duncan was charged a technical foul by referee Joe Crawford for laughing on the bench (supposedly "gesturing in such a manner as to indicate resentment," as indicated above). As he had already picked up a technical foul on the previous play, this led to his ejection. Upon further review it was determined that this technical foul was inconsistent with the league's game management, and NBA commissioner David Stern suspended Crawford for the rest of the season. Duncan was also disciplined by the league and fined $25,000 USD. [3] The most technical fouls ever charged to a team in a single game is 6 (all in the second half), to Aris Thessaloniki in a game against Olympiakos of the Greek A1 League on February 10, 2008. Rasheed Wallace holds the record for the most technical fouls received during one season in the NBA. In the 2000-01 season, he received 41 technical fouls, which - measured over a full regular NBA season without playoffs - means one technical foul every two games. [edit] See also[edit] References
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