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Some phones have different methods of entry.
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Dunk: An athlete holds the ball with one or both hands, jumps up in the air and dunks the ball directly into the hoop from top to bottom.
Rebound: When a shot is missed, the player jumps up in the air to put the ball into the basket.
Positioning: The attacker uses footwork to block the defender behind him, which is called a positioning.
Receiving the ball: Move in the direction of the pass's flight and catch the ball with the trend.
Misplaced defense: The defender stands on the side of the attacker he is defending and prevents him from receiving the ball.
Key Position: The attacker uses his body to block the defender behind him and occupy a favorable receiving position.
Breakout: Dribble past the defender.
Air Cut: The attacker runs to the basket empty-handed.
First pass: The second pass of the receiver from defense to attack.
Block: The action in which the defender manages to knock the ball out in the air when the attacker takes a shot.
Fill-in: When a defender misses the correct defensive position, another defender takes up the correct defensive position in time.
Assist: Assist your teammates in defense.
Pressing Defense: Get close to the attacker and constantly use offensive defensive actions to threaten the opponent's safety with the ball or prevent the opponent from receiving the ball.
Diagonal Cut: Run diagonally from the sideline to the basket or diagonally to the middle of the court.
Time difference: When shooting, in order to avoid the opponent's defense's block, use air stays to change the shooting time.
Response: Attacking players without the ball, take the initiative to grab the ball.
Positioning: When the attack and defense are switched, the offensive and defensive sides are arranged.
Strategy: The offensive team responds to and transfers the ball in the front court or through the tactical coordination of the middle player to create offensive opportunities such as air cuts, cuts, and covers.
Cover: An offensive combination in which an offensive player blocks the path of his opponent with his body and creates an opportunity for his partner to get rid of the defense with reasonable technical movements.
Breakout: The offensive player with the ball breaks through and passes the ball together.
Passing and cutting: The offensive player with the ball uses the pass to cut immediately after the pass, and the quasi-catch attack and make up the defense: When a defender loses his position, and the offensive player breaks through with the ball and has the possibility of scoring directly, the other defender in the vicinity immediately gives up his opponent to defend the attacker who breaks through with the ball.
Switching: Defenders swap defenses.
Closing the Door: Two adjacent players defending the ball carrier quickly close in the direction of the attacker's breakthrough, forming a "barrier" to block the attacker's breakthrough route.
Pinch Attack: Two defenders work together to jam an attacking player and block his pass.
Squeeze through: When two attackers are screening, the defender of the ground is close to them, and at the moment when the attacker is about to complete the screen, they take up the position, squeeze sideways between the two attackers, break their screen, and continue to defend their opponent.
Penetration: When an attacking player is covering, the defending screener's player moves slightly away from the opponent and allows his companion to pass between his own screeners and continue to defend the opponent.
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