TRANSFORM YOUR TEAM'S SEASON WITH PROFESSIONALLY PLANNED SESSIONS
Use our expert plans or build your own using our library of over 700+ drills, and easy-to-use tools.
JOIN NOW
The shooter / goal attack has taken up position to shoot. The defensive player takes up position behind the shooter, the three feet rule is applied and no other infringement is present. The defensive player places her hand beneath the ball, not touching the ball or the player. The shooter brings the ball down to take the shot and touches the hand of the defensive player.
Is this taken as contact and how strictly is this rule applied?
Lee-Anne
From an umpiring point of view there would have to have been interference for the contact rule to be applied e.g. ball being brought down forcefully onto the defensive player's hand causing loss of balance or pushing away of hand. If goalie is merely touching ball to hand, no real interference has occurred so play continues with no player penalised. You will find many different interpretations on this one during games with the most common being that the defensive player would be incorrectly penalised from a legal defensive position in front or behind goalie.
in more ways than one
The Wing Attack is the critical link between midcourt possession and circle feeding. This masterclass breaks down the movement patterns, timing, and spatial awareness that separate elite WAs from the rest, with practical drills to develop these skills at every level.
Footwork is the foundation of every skill in netball. This guide provides a clear explanation of the stepping rule, the mechanics of one-foot and two-foot landings, pivoting technique, and progressive drills to build footwork confidence from junior level upward.
The early 'shoot from anywhere' era is over. Smart teams now use data-driven decision models to decide when the two-pointer is worth it.
Use our expert plans or build your own using our library of over 700+ drills, and easy-to-use tools.
JOIN NOW