I am genuinely curious, what would be the alternative? I think this call is missed all the time too, but if you took it away what would stop defenders from creating contact with their body while defending drives?
Maybe I'm just missing your point which is quite possible
Combackz hit it for the most part.
There is already supposed to be a technical assessed for flopping.
Realistically every attempt to “draw” a charge is a flop. The amount of contact it takes to knock a 6’6 230lb man to the floor is very excessive if he’s attempting to play defense and move his feet.
A foul is a foul is a foul. Making a special category of “block/charge” just encourages ambiguity and defenders to attempt to stop playing good defense (I.e moving their feet, staying straight up, challenging) and plant their feet and take contact to draw a charge.
Obviously the sliding under is the worse of them from a players safety standpoint. But even from a “cleaning up the game/officiating standpoint, this is the most missed call in basketball bc it’s muddy water at best.
As stated before, excessive contact created by the offensive player (shoving, trying to bulldoze through a defender, being out of control and barreling into a crowd etc) while the defender is in good legal guarding position can be a common foul on the offensive player as stated by rule.
But if you start calling the bad defense, stop your feet, flop and “draw” a charge technicals, as is already in the rules(or at least common Defensive fouls), then within a matter of weeks (probably would only take a written statement pre season) that stops being a technique taught and utilized as “defense” and thus taking out the hardest call in the game and potential injuries.
Essentially you’re calling the game as it’s designed to be called. The flopping and draw a charge strategy evolved from the ambiguity of “legal guarding position”. Sure, technically the defender claims the space and the offensive player is coming into his space etc. but realistically the defender is creating the contact by stopping his feet and not making an effort to defend and flopping and taking advantage of how the rules were being enforced.
The end result is better basketball, less chance of injuries, and taking some judgement out of officiating. It’s more of a point of emphasis/clarification of rules while removing verbiage than a rule change.
Having the block/charge call just encourages players to attempt to “draw” (essentially flopping) a charge as a strategy.
Just my humble opinion though. I just don’t think creating contact by stopping making an effort to defend and falling down should be a defensive strategy.