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1. It is a foul. If you deliberately hold down a defender too hard, it's definitely a foul. However, if it is a confrontation, it is generally not a foul if it unconsciously touches the shoulder in the jumping state.
2. Generally speaking, physical contact on the inside line can be considered legal if it is not too intense and is not considered a foul. However, if there is any physical contact with a defender while shooting from the outside, it is a foul. The scale of physical contact on the inside line is a little looser.
3. If you don't move from the time before the opponent jumps to the time period when it hits you, it's an offensive foul. But if the opponent has already jumped, you hold the defensive position and do not move, which is considered a blocking foul.
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1. This must be a foul, an assault foul, which can be interpreted as pulling people.
2. This question depends on whether the opponent has established a legal defensive position, whether it jumps vertically, if it jumps vertically and blocks in the case of establishing a legal defensive position, so that the opponent does not need to be responsible for physical contact, otherwise it is a foul, blocking a foul, which is judging physical contact, regardless of whether he touches the ball or not.
3. This is still a question of whether to block the foul, your player has not moved, you can think that you have already occupied a legal position on the court, but the opponent has physical contact with the basket, only when this physical contact occurs on the torso, it can be judged as hitting someone with the ball, which is the original text of the basketball rules, otherwise it is not considered an offensive foul, and there is no defensive foul, it is considered normal physical contact.
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In my opinion. 1.To count or not to count. It's reasonable for the opponent to unconsciously press on your shoulder when grabbing a rebound, and deliberately counts as a foul. If you already have the ball in your hand, it's a foul.
2.Count, when you go to the basket, you can't hit someone, and the opponent moves his foot and crashes into you, which should be considered a blocking foul.
3.Count, you didn't move, but he hit you, which is a foul. The NBA doesn't count, it's a reasonable collision zone, and if you hit it, it depends on who has a strong body.
Look lz. Hand hit above.
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1. Count as a foul, rebounding foul.
2. If you are in the NBA, the reasonable collision area is not considered a foul, and the reasonable collision area is accidentally counted as a defensive foul.
3. Look at the penalty scale, it can not be counted, and it can also be regarded as an offensive foul.
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The first type of opponent is an offensive foul, the second type of defensive offense foul, and the third depends on the position of our players and the order in which the two sides start: if we are outside the reasonable collision zone and stand first, the opponent will foul the opponent, and if we do not stand, we will block the foul. If we are in a reasonable collision zone, we will block if we do not stand still, and if we stand still, we will be pretended by the other party in vain!
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1. The opponent violates the foul.
2. Look at the specific situation to see if the defender establishes a legal defensive position before the offensive player; See if the defender jumps upright on the spot; See if the physical contact occurred in the torso.
3. The offensive player fouls with the ball and hits someone.
One thing that needs to be corrected is that in FIBA basketball rules, there is no reasonable collision zone, and don't try to make unnecessary physical contact.
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When grabbing rebounds, there must be no movement in the hands. As for the block, when jumping the block, the body cannot collide with the attacking player, and the body is allowed to fight only if it says that the ball has been interfered with.
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1.It's a small action, and if it's strict, it's a foul rebounding foul.
2.The opponent fouls and blocks.
3.Not counted.
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1。Calculate. 2。If it's just physical contact, it doesn't count, if there's a thug movement, it counts.
3。Not counted.
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See if the following rule solves your problem:
A scrum occurs when one or more players from each team have one or both hands on the ball so tightly that either player cannot gain control of the ball without rough maneuvering.
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If the opponent pulls it out with one hand, it is nothing, and the opponent's two hands are scrums.
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In the prescribed basketball standard, the opponent cannot scramble for the ball while you are dribbling, which is a foul.
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The following advice is not exactly according to the rules, but it is fully applicable when a novice like you has the ball: (1) do not run with the ball, and the ball must be out of your hand while moving, and start dribbling, otherwise it will be a violation of the walk; (2) Holding the ball with both hands, or stopping the ball more than twice, that is, you can only catch the ball, dribble, and hold the ball again, and then you must choose to shoot and pass the ball, and you can't dribble again, otherwise the dribble will be violated; (3) When dribbling, the palm of the hand cannot be upward, otherwise it is also a double dribbling violation, commonly known as turning the wrist.
When there is no ball: (1) try to use your hands less when defending the ball, and the novice uses hand movements to defend, which is basically a foul, and the defense should use your footsteps, try to keep facing the ball holder, and always put yourself in front of him, but do not make physical contact, one is painful, and the other is easy to block the foul; (2) When defending the shot or layup, shout loudly, scare him, jump less, otherwise it is easy to eat feints, raise your hands to defend, try to block the ball, cover the shooter's sight if you can't block the ball, don't touch his shooting hand with your hand when the opponent shoots, it is very easy to foul.
Of course, there are many others, the above are the most basic, you understand, just play a few more games with your friends, slowly you will become familiar with the rules, after getting familiar with more exercise, your ability will improve, you will also find that your classmates will slowly like to play with you, don't be discouraged.
Hope it works for you.
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Yes, if you start a layup at the moment of receiving the ball, you can go to the basket in three steps according to the normal rules, but if there is a pause at the moment of receiving the ball, you can't move the layup, you can only go to the basket directly. If you move without dribbling while the ball is stopped, it is a walking violation.
If you have run before, there are several situations, at the moment of street ball, the foot that has already touched the ground in the movement (or first landed, refers to the situation when both feet do not touch the ground or jumps up to catch the ball) is counted as one step, and then you can take two steps, which is counted as a three-step layup.
For example, my right hand is the main hand, and it is of course more comfortable to jump with my left foot when I get to the three-step basket, so I have to choose to start the basket with my left foot at the beginning of the three-step basket.
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No different.
As long as you start to take a step at the moment of receiving the ball, you can run a three-step basket***
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If it is not moving, it is not possible to make a three-step layup after receiving the ball, which is considered a walking violation;
If it's a running catch, of course you can.
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No; It can only be two steps, unless it is in the middle of a run, and the step of catching the ball does not count as the two steps of the "layup".
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You can dunk directly after receiving the ball in the NBA, but if you want to make a layup, you have to dribble the ball.
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It's okay to run and catch the ball.
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Both of these scenarios are possible. As long as according to the referee's judgment, the player's action is to shoot, then when the ball leaves the hand, the player no longer controls the ball, regardless of whether the ball touches the rebound or the basket, when the player gets the ball again, this is the establishment of a new ball, which is that he can shoot, dribble, and pass the ball.
In addition, the previous friends said that when the ball is higher than the basket, it is the basis for judging whether it is a shooting action, which is purely their conjecture and conjecture. The rules of basketball absolutely do not mention that the ball must be higher than the basket, although this is a bit unreasonable, but the rules are the rules, that is, the "constitution" on the court, and they must be exactly the same. Rule 15 of the Basketball Rules clearly states what is the beginning and end of a shot.
Please answer questions with a rigorous attitude, and do not talk nonsense based on your own conjectures if you have unfounded answers, so as not to mislead others.
Article 15 A player is making a shot.
A shot or free throw is a player holding the ball in his or her hand and then throwing it through the air towards the opposing basket.
Racket: Use your hand to hit the ball directly at the opponent's basket.
Slam: Use one or both hands to force the ball down into the opponent's basket.
Taps and dunks are also considered shots.
Shooting Action: 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.
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In addition, sometimes according to the performance of the player, whether the ball of the basketball intersects with the cylinder of the basket is also counted as a judgment criterion to prevent someone from deliberately still biasing and then grabbing it themselves. I don't know if that's what you said about having a shot, or if it's just a mid-range shot.
When the shooting action I am talking about, you can take the ball directly, if there is only one mid-range shot, and the basketball as a whole does not exceed the basket, then you can't take it, and it is a violation to take it.
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If you haven't dribbled before, you can't do it before you land, but you can do it after you land, but be careful not to walk from where you are to where the ball is. If you dribble the ball before, you can't, you can't land or not, and catching the ball is a violation. If it's usually played in the half, it can't be done by default.
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Yes, but you have to be higher than the basketball board to get the ball.
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According to international rules, if the ball is higher than the basket after shooting, then you can take it directly, if it is not higher than the basket, then it will not work.
The criterion is the height of the ball you throw.
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The new FIBA rules should be straightforward.
But now in informal competitions, everyone is used to counting according to the can't be counted, and it can't bounce up after landing.
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The answer to the first question: Yes is provided that there is a shooting action.
I didn't understand the second question.
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This cannot be counted as a "second dribble".
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Defend like Battier, when others shoot, just block other people's eyes, it's fine, unless he's some kind of god like Jordan, someone who can shoot without looking at the basket, satisfied.