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Take a good look at this rule, which is all the rules for dribbling, and note that there is no limit to the number of steps a player can take when the ball is not in contact with the player's hand, and I hope it will help you.
Article 24 Dribbling.
Definition. Dribbling begins when a player who has gained control of the ball on the court throws, slaps, rolls or dribbles the ball on the ground and touches the ball again before it touches another player.
The dribble ends when a player touches the ball with both hands at the same time or allows the ball to stay in one or both hands.
The ball can be thrown into the air while dribbling, as long as the player throwing the ball touches the ground or another player before touching the ball again with his hand.
When the ball is not in contact with the player's hand, there is no limit to the number of steps a player can take.
A player who accidentally loses and then regains control of the ball on the field is considered to have missed the ball.
The following are not dribbles:
Consecutive shots.
Missing a catch at the start or end of a dribble.
Attempt to gain control of the ball by striking the ball with a slapstick from near the other players.
Slap the ball in the control of another player.
Intercept passes and gain control of the ball.
As long as there is no dribbling violation, the ball is tossed between hands and allowed to stay in your hands until it touches the ground.
Stipulate. A player may not dribble again after the first dribble has been completed, except after he has lost control of the ball on the court between dribbles
Shooting. The ball is touched by an opposing player.
Pass or miss, and then touch or be touched by another player.
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When dribbling, as long as the ball is kept in motion, there is no strict restriction on one step or two steps, and the referee will not be very rigid in judging step by step.
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.I'll show you how. You play slowly, try these methods, and if you don't move, you use that.
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Depending on what situation you are, 1: In the case of catching the ball, you can take 2 steps when you catch the ball, and then dribble after you have walked, and you will blow 2 dribbles.
2: Catch the ball, don't dribble, stop for a while, you have to dribble the ball and then start walking, so that you don't blow the step.
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You can step together while putting the ball down.
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When dribbling, there is no limit to the number of steps you can take when the ball is not in your hand, for example, when counterattacking, there are no defenders in front of you, you can push the ball out and run n more steps.
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Not necessarily, depending on what situation you are in.
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The current pace of basketball confuses me, I can't figure out whether to move or not, as soon as I get it, it's the new rules, what are the new rules?
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Start dribbling: 1. When you have a pivot foot and your feet are standing on the ground, when you start dribbling and moving, the pivot foot must not be lifted before the ball is shot. (The rules are the same when starting to dribble and move, I've combined it into one rule).
2. When there is no pivot foot, neither foot can be lifted before the ball is shot.
Pass or Shoot:
3. If there is a pivotal foot, the player can jump (lift) the pivotal foot, and the non-pivotal foot can continue to stay on the ground, or both feet can leave the ground (can leave at the same time or separately), and any kick shall not fall back to the ground before the ball is shot.
4. There is a pivot foot, and when moving, the team members can jump (lift) the pivot foot and land with one or both feet at the same time. However, one or both feet must not fall back to the ground before the ball is thrown. (The three-step layup technique comes from this rule, and the specific search for "three-step layup" is very detailed).
5. When there is no pivot foot, one or both feet can be lifted, but the ball must not fall back to the ground before it is shot.
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All movements on the court that do not synchronize the ball with more than three steps can be punished as a walking violation.
Explanation: The violation of walking is limited to the ball handler, and is mainly a blow penalty for the ball possessor's dribbling action that is not allowed by the basketball rules.
The written technical rules of basketball games record: all the movement behavior on the court that does not synchronize the ball with more than three steps can be blown as a state return to the foot violation, holding the ball to move beyond the allowable range that is walking, the Shizhi rules stipulate that the air catches the ball, the two feet land on the ground successively, and the foot that lands first is the pivot foot Both feet land on the ground at the same time, both feet can be the pivot foot, and the foot that moves later is the pivot foot, and the pivot foot can pass and shoot the ball when lifting the pivot foot to pass or shoot the basket, the ball leaves the hand before leaving, The pivot foot cannot touch the ground When the dribble begins, the ball must be removed from the hand before the pivot foot can be lifted, and violating the above rules is walking.
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Walking is a popular name for walking with the ball in our daily life, but its official name is "walking with the ball". When a player holds a live ball on the field and one or both of his feet move illegally in either direction beyond the limits set forth in these Rules, he is dribbling the ball. There are three branches of regulations that stipulate the steps of team members:
When standing on both feet, when moving, and when both feet are not pivotal feet. Each branch contains two dots: start dribbling, passing, or shooting.
Common 6 rules. As long as the footsteps of a player do not violate these rules, it does not constitute walking. The rules of basketball define walking with the ball like this:
When a player holds a live ball on the field and one or both of his feet move illegally in either direction beyond the limits set forth in these Rules, he is dribbling the ball. To judge whether to walk, we must first judge the athlete's pivotal foot, and correctly judging the pivotal foot is the key to judging walking. The following quote is from Rule 25 of the Basketball Rules – Carry the Ball:
Establish a pivot foot for a player who catches a live ball on the field: When standing on the ground with both feet:
The moment one foot is raised, the other foot becomes the pivotal foot. When moving: If one foot is touching the ground, that foot becomes the pivot foot. If both feet are off the ground, the player lands with both feet at the same time, and the moment one foot is raised, the other foot becomes the pivot foot.
If both feet are off the ground, one of the player's feet hits the ground, and that foot becomes the pivot foot. If the player jumps and the foot lands on the ground at the same time, neither foot is the pivot foot.
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Walking is a type of offensive offense that is widely used in amateur competitions.
Moving beyond the allowable range with the ball is a step. The rules stipulate that you can catch the ball in the air, and land with both feet on the ground one after another, with the foot that lands first as the pivot foot Both feet land on the ground at the same time, and both feet can be the pivot foot (the foot that moves later is the pivot foot) Lifting the pivot foot can pass and shoot, but cannot dribble When lifting the pivot foot to pass or shoot, the ball must leave the hand before the pivot foot can touch the ground When the dribble begins, the ball must leave the hand first, and then the pivot foot can be lifted Violating the above regulations is walking.
The infraction of walking is limited to the ball handler and is primarily a blow penalty for the ball handler who performs a dribbling motion that is not permitted by the rules of basketball. According to the written technical rules of basketball, all movements on the court that do not synchronize the ball with more than three steps can be punished as a walking violation.
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The so-called walking is to take more than two steps when the ball is in the hand and the ball is not shot, if the ball appears in the hand when walking more than two steps is to walk with the ball.
All basketball games, including the NBA, are very strict about walking, but the audience doesn't know what counts as walking.
To see if you are walking, you must first know when to start calculating. Footwork is counted from the first time the foot leaves the ground after the ball, and if the ball is volleyed, it starts when the foot hits the ground and then leaves the ground.
The so-called two steps are to leave the ground once with each foot and land again. If the ball has been taken two steps in the hand, the ball must be passed or thrown if the foot that lands first and then leaves the ground, and if it continues to dribble or hold the ball, it is a walk.
It should be noted that if only one foot keeps walking and the other foot is always on the ground, he will always only take one step, if he has already taken two steps, as long as he lands first (it doesn't matter which foot lands first), the foot will never leave the ground, no matter how many steps the other foot takes, it will only count as two steps (not more than two steps).
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