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In today's basketball, you can't have physical contact, and squeezing an offensive player away with a heavy shoulder is of course a foul, and even less with your hands, in other words, you can only use the rapid movement of your body to touch the opposing player.
The rules are for the service of the game, to learn and use in the big action, as long as it is not dangerous to destroy and violate the opponent's normal action, it is not a foul, and it depends on the nature of the game you play, if it is high school basketball, of course, there are a lot of attention If it is above the college level, how can there be so many layups that do not touch the hand, even if they hit the hand, the action is coherent, and some referees will not blow it, and the player who goes to the basket can only blame the player who goes to the basket for not protecting the ball enough.
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In the case of not being able to contact, you are cooperating with your teammates to cover the defense, that is, you can only stand there and not move your feet, and you can move after a while, as for the defense, as long as it is not a hitter, a foul action such as hitting someone, it is essential to play basketball will contact the opponent.
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If you don't have any body contact at all, then you can just wait for someone to throw and wait there for the ball to fall into your hands?
Body contact is okay, but it can't be too much, you can't hit people with your hands, you can't make too much movement.
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Don't sink your shoulders, just don't bump into each other.
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Courage is the right answer.
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In general, you can't hit it with your shoulder
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When you break through, as long as the defender's feet are not on standing, you use your body to squeeze them away, even if you squeeze them down, it doesn't count as a foul. Certainly not too obvious heavy shoulders.
If the offensive player is holding the ball and the defender is leaning on it with his body, that is, when the offensive player is changing direction and accelerating the breakthrough, the defender keeps touching the offensive player with his hands or body, then it should be considered a foul.
Generally speaking, when an offensive player breaks through, the defender should make an offensive foul, or break the ball, and follow the opponent with a sliding step. It is a foul to move your feet constantly when changing direction or breaking through directly, clinging to the opponent's body, or when the opponent is dribbling, holding hands, and squeezing the opponent out with her body all the time.
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1.As long as you are stationary at the time of contact, and the contact is on the torso, it is an offensive foul.
2.If the defender stands there and doesn't move, the offensive player pushes him out of the way, which is an offensive foul. If both of them are fighting for position, as long as there is no bad movement in the hand, it is not a foul. Now basketball encourages physical confrontation.
3.As long as there is no physical contact from behind and the hand is just pressed on the ball, it is not a foul.
4.If neither of them is jumping straight on the spot, it's not a foul. If he's jumping vertically on the spot, you've definitely fouled him by knocking him into the air. Hehe, being able to knock others into the air is likely to be the second case.
5.You don't add this very much, if it's your lord Kuan Tangerine who touches him, it doesn't matter if the side action is done.
Hope it helps.
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1 If he has a heavy shoulder, filial piety, and slow to hit you, no matter what you do, it is his foul! The heavy shoulder action is compared to the Chinese team this year.
Yi Jianlian was blown in the game! Second, there is no heavy shoulder movement.
Made, he bumped over, you moved, you stood in the first seat, theoretically there was no foul, but in practice, unless you.
Fall straight to the ground, or you're blocking the foul!
3 This should be awarded a scrum, no foul!
4. Take off at the same time, no foul action before, and hit non in the air.
Deliberately digging and shouting, no matter who gets the ball, he doesn't make a clever model!
5 You didn't foul!
Situation 1: Since you are on the street, remember to protect yourself with your hands.
chest, and then stand up, he can't bump into it and have nothing to say. That's it!
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A fierce physical confrontation that occurs to prevent the opponent from scoring a goal, or a foul that injures the opponent.
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A fierce physical confrontation that occurs, or a foul that injures the opponent!
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To make a correct judgment on whether physical contact constitutes an offensive foul, we must first understand the three basic principles of physical contact:
It is the responsibility of each team member to avoid contact as much as possible.
Either player has the right to occupy a position that is not occupied by an opposing player as long as there is no physical contact while occupying the position.
If a contact foul occurs, the player who caused the contact is responsible.
According to these three basic principles, combined with the purpose of the action of the players in the game, observe and distinguish which physical contact constitutes an offensive foul and which physical contact does not; what physical contact is intentional and illegal; what physical contact is unintentional and reasonable; Which athlete actively causes physical contact and which athlete passively causes physical contact will be the key for referees to determine whether physical contact is an offensive foul.
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First of all, according to the basketball refereeing law, the general basketball offensive side is the offensive incentive factor, which means that if it is a serious foul, it will not be blown for an offensive foul. But what is an offensive foul?
First of all, we all know that if the offensive player is in the offensive rational zone, then this kind of action must be blowing defensive fouls, but in the offensive rational zone, it depends on the actions of the attacking side and the defending side, who is bigger (more to look at the defenders), first of all, if the defenders have been retreating, in the intentional avoidance of the offensive players' physical contact, and the offensive players take the initiative to hit the defenders, then it is very good to blow the offensive fouls, according to the situation you said, It is whether the defender dodges before jumping, or actively collides with the attacking player.
In addition, if the offensive player has obvious pulling and hitting in the air and other actions that are easy to cause physical injury to the offensive player, then the blowing penalty is obvious. However, if the defender simply jumps to interfere with the offense, rather than intentionally ramming the offense, the penalty mark will return to the previous point. If the offensive player pushes the defender away with other actions in addition to the dunk action, such as lifting his feet in the air or throwing his arms visibly outward to push the defender away, then the offensive player is also justified in being whistled for a foul.
In summary, if the defender is in a backward state all the time, and the offensive player is not in the offensive rational zone, and the action is clean after the jump, and the offensive player actively rushes the defender, and there is an unreasonable movement when the body is in contact in the air, then this situation will be blown as an offensive foul. Otherwise, it is generally whistled as a defensive foul.
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