Basketball rules out of bounds or not

Updated on physical education 2024-02-09
22 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Don't overcomplicate it. Just combine the basic rules of basketball.

    When the ball lands on the ground outside the boundary, it is counted as the last person to make contact with the ball out of bounds.

    There are 10 players in the basketball game, and each team has 5 players. 3v3 matches are played with 6 people, 3 players per team. Not even one less game can be played.

    To sum up: You hit the opposing player and hit the ground before the ball lands on the ground outside the boundary. It's very clear, count the opponent's player out of bounds.

    I don't know how many floors of friends say that the team members are not considered people when they stand outside the line? Wouldn't that be a 4v5 or 2v3 game, then the game can't be played, and the metaphor of the player as a stool is really interesting!

    So I think the ball belongs to our players.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The ball goes out of bounds or even the ball touches it"Except for the team members"The player who goes out of bounds and is the last to touch or be touched by the ball is the player who puts the ball out of bounds.

    The rules state that it is in addition to the players. Then why can't the opposing player be the last player to touch the ball?

    It's your possession of the ball, according to you, for the following reasons:

    The ball touched"Except for the team members"If the opposing player (belonging to the ten players of the game on the field) he stands outside the field, or even before he jumps in from the field without his feet touching the ball, the ball should belong to you, he is a player not an object outside the field, which means that he takes the ball and lands on the ground.

    Trust me, national second-level basketball referee, hehe.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The ball should be awarded to the opponent, and according to basketball rules, when a player is already standing on the sidelines, it means that he touches the ball out of bounds, and it is another person who touches the ball at the moment before he touches the ball.

    When the opposing player stands on the sidelines, we treat him as a spectator, and when he touches the ball, it is equivalent to the spectator touching the ball, so of course it is the opponent's possession of the ball, and our own side makes mistakes.

    That is, if you make a mistake and pass the ball to an opposing player, the player is out of bounds before receiving the ball and when receiving the ball, and the opponent is still deemed to have the ball.

    You think it's the last touch of the ball, but the ball is out of bounds and doesn't make any sense when the player touches the ball off the pitch. The ball is already dead.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    According to international rules or NBA rules, the ball is yours (provided you don't hit the opponent's knee).

    The reason is simple, the last player to touch the ball is the opposing player.

    I also took a look at the argument above, which mainly focused on whether the opposing player is a player on the field or not. In fact, the players on the field refer to the players who are on the field, not the players who are standing on the field.

    The ball belongs to you, in fact, it is also very easy to understand: let's give a hypothesis, if the opposing player who is hit by you steps on the ** with one foot, then is he a player on the field? Therefore, it is self-defeating to think that the players who stand outside the field are not "players on the field".

    The above is the humble opinion of a referee who has only officiated amateur matches in the second level of the country.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    You make it clear that the opposing player is already out of bounds, so you can treat him as anything out of bounds, such as a stool. In that case, if you throw the ball on the bench out of bounds, then you must have gotten the ball out of bounds. ps:

    Even if he has one foot out of bounds or just steps on the line, he is out of bounds. In all the years I've been playing basketball, that's how people have been punished by the people I have played with.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    If the opponent is playing on the court, it must be your possession, and the moment the ball hits him, it is out of bounds.

    If the opponent is not a player on the field, but a substitute for another team, it is equivalent to smashing the audience, then it is someone else's possession.

    These are the only two cases.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    There is no controversy at all about this issue, it must be the award of the opponent's possession. Because the opposing player is already out of bounds before the ball goes out of bounds and lands on the field, the opposing player is an out-of-bounds object, so you are the last person to contact in the bounds, and finally the ball goes out of bounds due to a mistake. The ball is awarded to the opponent.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    It's as simple as that, of course, it's the opponent's possession. The player you throw at is already out of bounds, just as you are throwing the ball into an object out of bounds. If you hit an opposing player in bounds and the ball is bounced off by the opposing player, it is out of bounds.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Of course, it's your ball possession, the opposing player outside the bounds is still the opponent's player on the field, you can't because he stands outside the boundary, the player who doesn't belong to the opponent, the ball finally touches him out of bounds, of course, the ball belongs to you, do you still have to ask?!!

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    We get the ball!

    Because you "hit the ball on the player who is out of bounds".

    The opponent is a legal "player" on the pitch, unlike a spectator, who is participating in the game and adjudicates a "throw-in".

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    If he's out of bounds and you don't mean it, that's your possession, give it points.

    They all love basketball, give some face!!

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Count them as violations. You serve. Because the opponent is a player playing on the field. Even if it's out of bounds. The ball hit him. It is also a violation of the other party.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    The last player who touches the ball is counted as out of bounds, so if the opponent gets out of the ball market, the ball belongs to you, and it will be implemented on October 1, 2010.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    It's you who make a mistake because that person is outside, and you go to save the ball and hit that person, it's the same as throwing it outside.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    The ball should belong to the opposing team because the player who touches the ball is already out of bounds when he touches the ball.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    It is you who have the ball, and the criterion is the last player to touch before the ball hits the ground.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    It's the opponent's ball, I'm the second-level referee of national basketball, and the third floor is right.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    The opponent shall be awarded possession of the ball.

    Reason: A player is out of bounds when any part of a player's body comes into contact with the ground on or above the boundary line, or with any object other than the player.

    When the ball touches: 1. A player or any other person outside of bounds;

    2. Ground or human objects on the line, above or outside the boundary line;

    3. The pillar or back of the rebound;

    That is, the ball is out of bounds.

    The player who makes the ball out of touch or even if the ball touches something other than the player out of bounds, and the player who touches or is touched by the ball last is the player who puts the ball out of bounds.

    This is taken from the rules of basketball, judging by your example, the ball is the last ball you touch before it goes out of bounds (i.e. before it touches a player out of bounds), so you should be awarded out of bounds and given the ball to the opponent.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    This counts as the opposing player out of bounds.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    Of course it's your ball, the NBA does that.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    The rules for the out-of-bounds basketball decision are as follows:

    1. A player goes out of bounds: When any part of a player's body touches the ground or any object other than the team member on the boundary line, above or outside the boundary line, the player is out of bounds.

    2. The ball is out of bounds: When the basketball touches the ground or any other object on the line, above or outside the line, the backboard support, the back of the rebound or any object above the playing field, the ball is considered out of bounds.

    Basketball rules refer to the various rules that are applied in the game of basketball, and generally speaking, the basketball rules commonly used in the world are the official basketball rules of FIBA, which are designated by the International Basketball Association.

    Basketball out of bounds is judged to be the player who caused the ball to go out of touch when the ball is out of touch or before the ball comes into contact with something other than the player. If the ball goes out of bounds because it comes into contact with a player on or off the line, then it is the player who puts the ball out of bounds.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    The rules for basketball out of bounds are as follows:

    1. A player is out of bounds when any part of a player's body comes into contact with the ground on the boundary line, above the boundary line or outside the boundary line, or any object other than the team member;

    2. When the ball touches a player or any other person outside the bounds, the basketball goes out of bounds;

    3. When the ball touches the ground or human object on the boundary line, in front of the boundary line or outside the boundary line, the basketball is out of bounds;

    4. When the ball touches the pillar or back of the rebound, the basketball is out of bounds;

    5. The ball goes out of bounds or even if the ball touches other objects other than the team members out of bounds, and the Qinju player who touches the ball or is touched by the ball is the player who makes the ball out of bounds.

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