There are unintended consequences with anything. Coaches are smart. They'll find ways to expose holes in any rule set.
Ok coach, what is your solution?
I don't mean that to be snarky, I mean that as a serious question. The problem I see with dude's suggestion is that, as
@ELA mentioned, the ends of a lot more BB games would become very boring.
Under dude's suggestion a non-shooting foul would result in one FT and the fouled team keeping the ball. Ok, lets work through ELA's example:
- Team A has an eight point lead (lets say 78-70) and the ball with 2:00 (amended from ELA's 2:30).
Fouling doesn't help because it doesn't get you the ball back and (presumably) actually makes your situation worse because it resets the shot-clock. So start at Team-A, 78: Team-B, 70, Team-A's ball with 2:30 to go and 30 seconds on the shot clock:
- Assuming Team-B is unable to force a turnover and Team-A misses their shot, Team-B gets the ball with about 1:30 to go.
- Assume that Team-B races down the court and jacks up a three that goes in in just 10 seconds it is now 78-73 with 1:20 to go.
- Assuming Team-B is unable to force a turnover and Team-A misses their shot, Team-B gets the ball with about 0:50 to go.
- Assume that Team-B races down the court and jacks up a three that goes in in just 10 seconds it is now 78-76 with 0:40 to go.
- Assuming Team-B is unable to force a turnover and Team-A misses their shot, Team-B gets the ball with about 0:10 to go.
- Team-B can win with a three or go to OT with a bucket in the last 0:10.
In order for Team-B to win they have to go 3-3 on highly unlikely quick and mostly long-range shots AND Team-A has to go 0-3 on their much more deliberate shots. An eight point lead with 2:00 (or even ELA's 2:30) to go would be effectively impossible to overcome.
Look, I get that an eight point lead with 2:00 or 2:30 to go is already difficult to overcome but the ending is still exciting because it isn't impossible. Under the current rules if Team-A doesn't make their FT's then Team-B can catch up. Even if Team-A does make their FT's, Team-B can catch up with three point shots. It is exciting because Team-B is still in the game.
Consider
@Kris61 's example that you were more directly responding to:
- Team-A has 72 and the ball
- Team-B has 70
- 0:20 to go
- Shot clock turned off
The game is basically over. The only way for Team-B to win is to force a turnover. Otherwise they are done, Team-A can just dribble out the last 20 seconds and go home. If Team-B fouls it does nothing except give Team-A the opportunity to push their lead to three points.