In basketball, when a person dribbles the ball, the opposing defender is left behind by the dribbler

Updated on physical education 2024-02-26
32 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The defender can only reach 180 degrees before his shoulder, and if you break parallel to his shoulder, then he can reach out to stop you for a foul. According to the rules, this kind of physical confrontation that deliberately blocks the opponent's behavior is considered a foul, but when the actual game is played, the defender will find loopholes in the rules. This so-called loophole is to use "space" to defend, not to defend against people.

    To put it bluntly, it means that the defender puts his hand in a position, and if the offensive player collides with him, then the defender cannot be judged to have committed a foul. Just like blocking, if you stand still and the opponent has to bump into it, then it doesn't count as a defender's foul.

    The criterion is the position of the two, and if you have completely detached from the other and the opponent deliberately puts his hand on your path "again" in order to block you, then it is definitely a foul. But if you slide backwards in the opposite direction and get out of position before you break through to him, and then reach out to block it, you don't have a foul.

    To sum up, if you have left the opponent behind and he still reaches out to stop you, whether he intends to steal the ball or not, as long as he makes physical contact with you (except in the case of knocking the ball down), it is a foul (even if you hit his hand). But if it doesn't hit you, it doesn't count, because the referee will decide that the action didn't have a direct impact on you.

    Second, when shooting, physical contact that affects the opponent's ability to complete the entire shooting action is considered a foul, including a part of the block. For example, if you take the ball, before shooting, the opponent's block directly covers the ball that you have not yet shot, and your action is deformed, affecting the completion of the next action, that is also a foul. Not to mention a direct collision with you in mid-air, even if the ball in your hand has already been shot, as long as the referee determines that your action has not been completed, this kind of collision is considered a foul.

    But the rules are the rules, and because of some objective factors in the actual game, the referee will decide what ball will blow and what ball will not blow according to his own temper, standard or form of the scene, so it is not absolute, and he can only adjust his actions according to the referee's scale. Wild balls are even more insecure.

    This understanding may be a little complicated, I don't know if you can understand it.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    If a defender makes illegal physical contact when he or she adopts an incorrect defensive position or an incorrect defensive posture in an attempt to prevent the ball carrier from dribbling through to him with his or her legs, his shoulders, hips and legs, he or she is blocking a foul.

    The man's hand block was clearly a defensive foul.

    As for the latter case, it is difficult to judge, the offensive player forms a cylinder after jumping, and the defender cannot infringe on this cylinder. It's okay for him to hit your ball with his hand ==, such as taking your foothold or invading your cylinder in the air, which is a problem.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The first one is definitely a foul, the second depends on the situation, if he is going towards the ball, the physical contact with you is not very intense, you have already shot, it is not a foul; If he knocks you down before you can make a move or makes a big touch, it's a foul whether it's rushing or intentionally.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    It was a foul, and I didn't know much about it before, but then I asked our PE teacher and he said yes.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Jumping up from behind, the body contact is relatively large, and you will basically be fouled, and the first situation you mentioned is also a foul.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Such a maneuver can easily blow for a foul.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    This is what our teacher taught:

    1. If the defender is standing out of bounds and his feet are on the ground, then even if the attacker throws the ball at him, the attacker is still out of bounds.

    2. If the defender jumps from in bounds to out of bounds, but his feet have not yet touched the ground, then the defender is out of bounds.

    3. If the defending player has one foot in the boundary and one foot outside the boundary, then the defending team is out of bounds.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    In the rules of basketball, if a player is on the sidelines, or on the end line, he is an object off the court. You can use a player out of bounds as a chair or something. So it's the defender's possession.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Attacking possession, as the defender touches the ball out of bounds and is out of bounds.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    The defender's, because the opponent has gone out of bounds, is considered out of bounds, if he hasn't hit his body out of bounds, then it is considered the attacker's! But he's already out of bounds, and the attacker is out of bounds!

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    According to what you mean, it should be the ball on the defensive end, but there is a special case where the defensive player is out of bounds (not landed), it should be regarded as the last touch of the ball on the defensive end, and the ball is on the offensive end!

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    There are 2 situations after the ball is shot:

    The first is that after the ball goes out, if it hits the part above the hand during the rising period of the ball, it will be whistled for a foul, and the second is that after the ball goes out, if the ball has fallen in an arc and hits the hand, it is considered an effective defense at this time. Because of his set of shooting actions, there is no qualitative change because of the beater, and it belongs to the effective range.

    Of course, it's okay to interfere with the opponent's actions, defend the opponent, can't cover him, and of course do your best to interfere.

    I think defense is the most important part of the game, and you can't throw it away.

    Maddie is an example of this. The offense is super good, but people don't want to defend.

    Ha, that's a lot of.

    Use everything you have, and prevent him from killing.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    2 Shooting Actions:

    Start: When a player starts a continuous motion (usually before the ball leaves his hand), at the discretion of the referee, and he has started a scoring attempt by throwing, slapping or dunking the ball at the opponent's basket.

    End: When the ball has left the player's hand, as if the player is shooting in the air, and the feet fall back to the ground.

    The hand-to-hand ratio of a player attempting to score may be caught by an opposing player, thus preventing him from scoring, or even being considered to have made a scoring attempt. In this case, the ball leaving the player's hand is not essential.

    There is no link between the legal number of steps of the run and the action of shooting.

    Continuous movement in the shooting action:

    Starts when the ball stays in the player's hand and has started the shooting motion, usually upward.

    The shooting attempt must include the player's arm and/or body movements.

    It ends when the ball has left the player's hand or if a new shot is made.

    This rule may help you, but the hit is a foul anyway, and the difference is whether it is a foul on the shooting action or not, because the penalty for the foul is not the same. It depends on the mastery of the scale of the on-the-spot referee. For a foul on a shooting action, one free throw is awarded for the ball shot, and two free throws are missed.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    The moment the ball is thrown with the wrist, the defender hits the hand and generally considers it an action foul.

    Because the former's shooting action has not yet been completed.

    Of course, it still depends on what game and the referee's scale, after all, the referee is also a human being.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    The most common example of foul play is the NBA's frequent three-point shot, where the defender gets a little excited and the defender slaps the offensive player's hand, and the result is 3 free throws.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    The key is also to judge whether the shooting action of the shooting player is completed (not the ball is shot or completed, including the entire coherent action) If it is considered that the shooting action is completed and the defender does not obviously infringe on the interests of the shooting player, it can not be judged, and if it is considered that the shooting action is not completed, the penalty should be awarded.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    When the ball is shot, the shooting posture is not completed, it is considered a hitter, for example, the hand is about to move forward and is beaten, it is a foul, if the hand action has been completed, it is not a hitter!

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    If the ball has been shot, it is generally not a foul, but if it touches the palm of the shooting player, a foul is awarded.

    When making a specific referee, it also depends on whether there is any other contact.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    If the shooting action is completed, it is not a foul, but it depends on the referee, if you move very much, it is basically a foul.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    It depends on whether the shooting player has been violated and whether the shooting action has been interfered with.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    Penalty criteria for thugs:

    1. In the process of dribbling, the opponent intercepts the hand.

    2. When standing and playing, the opponent hits the hand.

    3. When you want to shoot, the opponent hits the hand.

    Not a penalty:

    1. In the process of dribbling, the opponent intercepts and hits the ball directly above the ball to take it away 2. When shooting, the ball has left the hand, and then the hand is not blown to foul, because the opponent did not interfere with the shooter.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    When the ball rises again, if the hitter fouls! ~

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    Generally speaking, when an offensive player shoots, the player who defends him actively defends, and when the player decisively blocks the shooting player to shoot the ball, he occasionally inadvertently touches the shooting player's hand, that is, "handball is one", which is allowed by the rules and should not be awarded a foul to the defender. In layman's terms, it means that the ball accidentally touches the hand of the shooting player after the shot, and it is not considered a foul. If any defender of the offensive team before completing the shot and returning to the off-ball state on the ground can blow a penalty for the contact of his upper arm and his upper arm and below the upper arm (wrist, hand, or even fingers), the specific operation can generally be ignored before the ball is shot without affecting the shooting, if the intensity and nature of the violation affect the offensive player's shot, even if the ball has been shot after the more serious contact can still blow the defensive violation.

    Malicious aggression by the defender: Whenever the offensive team occurs (including dribbling or shooting or passing), it can be whistled as a foul or even a malicious foul. In the event of a block or steal, a beater's blow penalty:

    Theoretically, there should not be any physical contact with the block or steal, if the hitter behavior occurs after the block or steal, it can be ignored (for example: if the defender shoots to block the offensive player's shot, the arm of the same series of actions falls into contact with the attacker's arm can be ignored, and the same is true for steals), if the body contact occurs at the same time as the block or steal, the batter can be blown for a foul, but it also depends on how the referee decides the penalty, friends who often watch the ball know that the NBA The second typical black whistle of the 08 finals, the seventh game of the Lakers Green Army this year (in fact, seven games arranged by the league) especially in the fourth quarter, the Green Army has been going inside, if there is less than one foul, you can know it by intuitive comparison of free throws, and the second Kobe Bryant's inexplicable fouls had to be benched, and the 08-09 season Spurs vs. King game, the last duel timed out, and the video also showed that the duel was invalid, but the referee insisted on being effective, so the king lost directly, no way, Having said so much, I want you to know that the referee is also a big factor, it is impossible to see every action very clearly during the game, and he may not be able to see the hand when the ball is not shot, even if there is a video, it is impossible to study the video first and then award a penalty, so the game will be fragmented, okay, I hope what I said is helpful to you, and I hope you can adopt my opinion, thank you.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-14

    You look at the NBA's blowing penalty, sometimes this one is blown very harshly, because this kind of hitter must be causing interference to the shooting team. An obvious criterion is whether the defender's hands are pressed down to infringe on the opponent's cylinder The correct movement must be with both hands straight up.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-13

    If it is a jump shot, it is a foul when it touches **, but at the same time, it also depends on the position of the defender, and the vice does not meet the cylinder principle. But if you can't shoot a jump shot on the spot, even if you complete the shooting action after the ball is shot, it is not a foul!

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-12

    Yes, as long as it is a wrist on the hand, it is considered a foul.

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-11

    It mainly depends on whether the basketball shooter completes the shooting coherent action, if he completes the play without fouling, otherwise he will foul.

  28. Anonymous users2024-01-10

    Count, if you score, you will have to add 1 penalty ball.

  29. Anonymous users2024-01-09

    See if he can't jump, if he jumps and violates your cylinder, it's a foul.

  30. Anonymous users2024-01-08

    It's not a foul! Sometimes the referee will blow a penalty if he doesn't see it clearly.

  31. Anonymous users2024-01-07

    When two basketball players grab the ball in the air, and one person's hand touches the ball, and one accidentally hits or deliberately hits the other's hand, is this considered a foul?

    Kiss, when two basketball players grab the ball in the air, one person's hand touches the ball, and one person accidentally hits or deliberately hits the person's hand, this is a foul, but it does not cause a serious hit or hard robbery, and the general referee does not blow the penalty.

  32. Anonymous users2024-01-06

    In basketball, when the attacker starts the layup, the defender pulls the ball from the back or side, but lets go before it is taken off, does the defender cause a foul?

    In basketball, if a defender pulls the ball from behind or from the side when the attacker starts a layup, but lets go without pulling it off, the situation is generally considered a foul. According to the rules of the game of basketball, this situation is considered a "hitter" foul by the defending team, which is when the attacking team dribbles or shoots, and the defending team uses their hands or arms to deliberately block, hit, push, or hit the body or hand of the attacking player's silver key arm. Therefore, if the defender does not succeed in getting the ball, but deliberately blocks or hits the attacking player with his hand or arm, then such an action can be considered a foul and usually gives the attacking team the opportunity to make a free throw or restart the ball.

Related questions
12 answers2024-02-26

In general, you still have low self-esteem, but you are afraid that others will look down on you, so you use narcissism to satisfy your vanity, resulting in such a contradictory phenomenon, you need to regulate your inferiority complex, you must know that compared with your own shortcomings and the advantages of others, you will always be a loser, and you can be very confident when you find your own advantages and grasp them advantageously.

19 answers2024-02-26

Actually, I also have a crush on a girl, you don't have to be afraid of what your friends don't do, when you refuse for a girl, you will refuse with words like I just want to be friends with you, although you must be uncomfortable, but you still have to smile and say yes. >>>More

2 answers2024-02-26

The classic sentence to believe in a person is as follows: >>>More

39 answers2024-02-26

Love appearance is relatively high. At least this person does not deceive love without feelings.

10 answers2024-02-26

Change yourself and learn to fit in. For feelings, liking is liking, because you also have the right to love, as long as there is an opportunity, we have to create, because there are not many people in life who can make you like; Boys treat you as a buddy, it's nothing annoying, you can fit in, you can play together, why care about the boundaries between men and women, can't there be pure friendship between classmates? What do you think.