I agree, but I know a lot of people don't. I got in trouble a few years 
ago for constantly calling travel on some guy from Oxford when he hadn't 
thrown the disc - every time he moved (a good few inches each time), I 
called travel. Other people seemed to think this was out of order, but 
personally I reckon the simple solution is to keep your foot still. If 
he moves it changes the way I can force him, even if he doesn't actually 
throw it yet, and I say it's a travel - it affects the game. It affects 
my balance for the throw that he actually does make. But it didn't make 
me popular.

I guess the other option is to let him drag me all over the pitch with 
travels and then only call it when he throws, but if he doesn't move his 
pivot on the actual throw he gets angry about that call instead. You 
can't win...

Benji

Adam AlRasheed wrote:
>> it's > an issue about how much movement of my pivot foot constitutes a 
>> travel > that affects the game,  
>>     
> Surely any movement of your pivot foot (accept the actual pivot, obviously) 
> is a travel. I know this wasn't the main point of your post, but it probably 
> needed saying.
>  
> Adam
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