-
The so-called assist, simply put, is when the offensive player gets a pass from a teammate and scores, and this pass can be regarded as an assist.
If A passes to B, and B takes the ball and shoots directly to score, A can be counted as an assist. However, if A passes to B, and B fakes and makes another turnaround jumper, A's pass doesn't count as an assist. Therefore, the definition of an assist is related to whether the action between passing and scoring is coherent.
Generally speaking, as long as the offense is coherent and the pass is the main key to scoring, the pass is considered an assist. In addition, the number of assists or nots is also related to the perception of the record crew, so it often happens that the number of assists counted by the audience is much higher than the number of assists recorded.
In addition, if A is covered with hot pot and B picks up the ball and shoots directly, this situation does not count as an assist.
Assists are counted differently in China than they are in the NBA. China's statistical method is relatively strict, that is, after passing the ball, the borrowing player does not need to make other superfluous actions, and directly shoots or dunks to score, and the passer will record an assist. The NBA power calculation method is more relaxed, and as long as you can easily score (excluding the personal ability factor) after receiving a conscious pass, you can count an assist, such as an open three-step layup.
-
Assists Actually, the definition of an assist in the NBA is a pass to a teammate, and the teammate scores within 2 seconds, and that is an assist.
The general definition in basketball is to help a teammate score by passing the ball.
That is, when the ball is in the live phase, the player with the ball passes the ball to help the first player to touch the ball.
Direct scoring of the act.
Key points: one. The time the ball leaves the ball from the player with the ball, the court clock is running, and the assister is in bounds.
Two. Direct score refers to:
1。From which player the scorer gets the ball, the passer counts the assist and not the other players involved in the pass.
2。A direct score is defined as a series of scoring actions after the scorer has acquired the ball, which is interpreted as the scoring opportunity obtained because of that ball.
It does not include the scoring of free throws after receiving a foul on the ball;
3。Direct scoring refers to a worthy shot or layup score, not including the scorer's second offense after getting the rebound.
There are 4 situations for assists.
Clause. 1. Pass the ball to your teammates, teammates do not run, and score directly, which is also the most common assist.
Clause. 2. Aerial relay.
Clause. 3. Catch the ball in the middle of the run and go straight to the layup or slam dunk in 3 steps.
Clause. Fourth, this kind of assist is not very common, but it can be regarded as an assist in the game, that is, it is blocked by the opposing player during the game, his own team.
A direct shot or slam dunk when a player gets the ball also counts once.
Give a long-range three-point pass, and if your teammate scores, it's an assist, of course.
-
If I pass the ball to you, you don't dribble, but you shoot or dunk directly and it counts as an assist, and no matter where you score, as long as it's on the court, it counts as my assist.
-
Assist is the act of helping the first player to touch the ball to score directly through the ball being passed by the player with the ball.
There are many types of assists: passing the ball to a teammate who doesn't run and scores directly, which is also the most common assist; air relay; Catch the ball on the run and go straight to the layup or slam dunk in 3 steps; This kind of assist is less common, but it is also considered an assist in the game, that is, it is blocked by the opposing player during the game, and one's own team member gets the ball and shoots or slams the dunk directly.
-
As long as you pass to a teammate, your teammate's goal counts as your assist.
If you pass to a teammate and the teammate passes to another teammate to score a goal, it doesn't count as your assist.
-
Any of the following conditions that are met at the same time is regarded as an assist, and none of them is indispensable.
1. The goal is not scored directly by taking a free kick or a corner kick.
Penalty with assists)
2. The goal is not scored by the opposing player.
Own-goal no assists).
3. The scorer receives a pass from the assister of the same team before the goal is scored, and the pass does not touch a third party (including the team's players, opposing players, referees) or court equipment (goalposts and corner flags).
No assist at the goalpost, no assist in the melee).
4. The shooter did not pass the ball during the period between getting the pass and scoring the shot.
No assist after a long run).
5. The pass rolls longer than the circumference of the ball.
One step and one shot without an assist.
-
Any of the following conditions that are met at the same time is regarded as an assist, and none of them is indispensable.
-
The first point of this definition is that the time of the assist is defined as the live ball phase, and the concept is the time when the ball leaves the hands of the player with the ball, and the court clock is running. This point sets the minimum range of assists: the assister is in bounds.
Suppose a player serves outside the sideline and the teammate who receives the ball scores directly, the serving player does not count the number of assists, on the grounds that the movement of the clock starts from the time when the first player touches the ball in the line, and the clock is static when the player outside the sideline touches the ball, so the statistics of assists are invalid;
The second key to judging an assist is that the pass of the ball helps a teammate score directly, and this direct score has three definitions:
First, the scorer gets the ball from which player, and the passer counts assists and not the other players involved in the pass;
Second, direct scoring is defined as a series of scoring actions after the scorer receives the ball, which is interpreted as a scoring opportunity because of the ball, and does not include the free throw score after receiving the ball and receiving a foul;
Third, direct scoring refers to the shooting or layup score, and does not include the second offense after the scorer gets the rebound;
-
No, don't mess around.
We can simply understand it in this way, the shot is counted when you catch the ball, the shot is counted within three steps of receiving the ball, and the rest is basically not counted.
An assist is a pass that results in a teammate scoring directly.
A pass to a player in the restricted area, who scores a score in the restricted area, is always considered an assist.
A pass to a player outside the restricted area who scores without dribbling is always considered an assist.
Pass the ball to a player outside the restricted area, who dribbles the ball once or more times, as long as he does not need to break through a defender, to record an assist. However, in the case of a 1-on-1, the defender has taken a position between the offensive player and the basket and is facing him in front of him (the offensive player dribbles one or more times) without counting assists. The defenders on the help side have nothing to do with it.
In a 1-on-1 situation, an offensive player who breaks through a defender is credited with an assist, as long as he dribbles to the basket immediately after receiving the ball and his defender loses his center of gravity, which applies to passing the ball to a player in the midfield position in a fast break.
If the player receiving the pass is fouled while making a shooting action and at least one free throw, an assist is registered to the passer as if it were a shot.
-
Assists are counted in the following cases:
The scorer scores a direct shot or layup after receiving the ball.
The scorer dribbles and advances after receiving a pass on the fast break offense, and the direct scorer receives the pass and misses the basket but gets a foul and scores free throws (FIBA format, NBA format does not count).
Normally, even if the scorer dribbles after receiving a pass, it can be counted as an assist as long as the pass is a direct result of the attack. But if it's a pass and the player who gets the pass has to dribble and score by attacking on his own or relying on a pick-and-roll, then of course it doesn't count. For example, if you pass the ball to O'Neal in the low post, O'Neal pushes with his back and then shakes off the blue bottom of the defense to score, of course, that doesn't count as an assist.
-
No, it belongs to independent scoring, that is, the offensive player scores by himself, how does it count as an assist? One, pass the ball to a teammate, and the teammate shoots directly to score an assist, and second, passes the ball to a teammate, and the teammate dribbles the ball, turns around, passes and then scores an assist, nothing else, of course, the algorithm I am talking about is only limited to professional basketball, and the number of assists in FIBA is only the first case I said, and the second situation is not an assist.
-
If the passing time is too long, it is not an assist, and scoring within three seconds is basically an assist. Generally, there is no precise time limit for this, sometimes it is based on a few actions, and sometimes it is based on time.
-
Assists mean that you pass the ball to your teammates, and your teammates are very comfortable receiving the ball you pass, and you don't need to make too many adjustments to score directly with the trend, so that your assists are counted. A good playmaker is definitely a good passer.
-
As long as there is no more pass in the middle and no change of possession, the previous pass is considered an assist.
-
In the 2007-2008 season, James was selected as an Eastern Conference All-Star for four consecutive years, and on February 18, 2008, James won the 2008 NBA All-Star Game MVP with 27 points, 8 rebounds, 9 assists, 2 steals and 2 blocks.
On February 27, 2008, James scored his 10,000th career point against the Celtics. At just 23 years and 59 days, he became the youngest player to reach 10,000 points. In addition, he spent 368 games to complete 10,000 points, improving that record by nine.
In the March 21 game against the Raptors, James scored 29 points, and James surpassed Doherty's 10,389 points to become the Cavaliers' total scoring player with 10,414 points. After the regular season, James became the NBA scoring champion for the first time. The Cavaliers qualified for the playoffs with a 45-37 record, facing the Wizards in the first round, beating them 4-2 in total games and eliminating the Wizards in the playoffs for the third year in a row.
Facing the Big Three in the second round against the Celtics, the Cavaliers forced the Celtics into Game 7, but unfortunately lost 3-4 in Game 7 and failed to go any further.
On February 4, 2009, James nearly completed a triple-double of more than 50 points since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1975, scoring 52 points, 11 assists and nine rebounds. From March 10 to 13, James had a triple-double in three consecutive tournaments. After the Cavaliers defeated the New Jersey Nets on March 25, they helped the team achieve its best result since its inception.
With his outstanding performance in the 2008-2009 season, James became the MVP of the regular season and became the first MVP in the East in nine years from 2001-2009 since Iverson in 2001. In the playoffs, the Cavaliers defeated the Pistons and the Hawks 4-0 to advance to the NBA Eastern Conference Finals against the Magic. In this series, James averaged 8 rebounds per game.
But in the end, the Cavaliers still lost to the Magic 2-4 in total games.
-
Calculate. Assist: A passes the ball to B, as long as the ball is in B's hand and does not pass through a third party, B shoots and scores, which is counted as A assist.
-
Chibi (Du Mu) Bo Qinhuai (Du Mu).
-
An assist is when you pass the ball to a teammate, and the teammate receives the ball and does not dribble directly to make offensive moves and score, then you call the assist. Passing is when you pass the ball to a teammate, and the teammate receives the ball and continues to dribble, which can only be called passing.
-
An assist is what you pass the ball to, and the one who receives the ball doesn't need to dribble to score directly, and the pass is a simple man-to-person pass!
-
Assists are when you're in motion, you pass the basketball to your teammates, and your teammates throw the ball in, and that's your assist! Passing is that you are in motion, you pass the basketball to your teammates, and your teammates don't throw the ball in, that's your passing!
-
Scoring directly after a pass is an assist.
-
Able to score consistently after passing the ball.
-
I understand that assists are all points that allow the receiver to score immediately after receiving the ball, and scoring a direct shot or a layup with the ball is an assist from the passer! If the receiver dribbles, it doesn't matter how many hits or time it is!
But at present, it seems that some simple and fast dribbles are not counted in the NBA, and they are also counted as passer assists.........It just seems, not confirmed! For example, the center who plugged the basket directly, and the center quickly dribbled the ball and dunked, which seems to be an assist!
Of course, my front assist concept is the most orthodox!
As for Nash's score you said, it doesn't count Kobe Bryant's assists! He didn't score directly after getting the ball, and he dribbled the ball, which is a score based on his own ability!
-
It's a bit exaggerated to catch the ball and dribble for more than ten seconds and then shoot, and the offensive time is 24 seconds.
Basketball assists are when the passer passes the ball to another player, giving that player the opportunity to score directly on the attack, for example, the receiver shoots quickly after receiving the ball, or dribbles to score a layup immediately after receiving the ball, which are considered assists.
If the player receiving the ball does not shoot directly after receiving the ball or does not score a layup directly, but dribbles the ball on the spot after receiving the ball, passes the defender through his own skills and then shoots and scores, it is not considered an assist.
To be precise, artificially defined. The theory of coefficient of friction is only a macroscopic appearance. There are two theoretical explanations I can remember. >>>More
Netizen netizens, online friends, the Internet is a virtual world, many people blow themselves to the sky, many people have a completely opposite personality on the Internet to their own reality, so most of the online friends are also virtual friends. Of course, there are those who do not oppose it, but that is only a very small minority.
The first round of the Chinese Super League this year is still very exciting, and the most surprising thing for me is Wei Shihao.
Interfere with the opponent's receiving at any time, keep your center of gravity as low as possible when receiving the ball, and don't throw the ball indiscriminately and lose your position.
Yang Chaoyue said that the meaning of idols brings people hope for life. There is indeed a certain truth in reading, idols point out the direction of people's lives, and people worship idols. A good idol image can be used for people's life, work, and learning in the future. >>>More