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1.CAN 2No, you either pass the ball, dribble it forward, take three steps, or throw the ball.
3.Yes, this proves that the opponent has touched the ball, and you can grab the ball to continue dribbling.
4.No, any part of your hand touches the ball for the second time, for example, you can use your body to protect the ball without touching the ball, not letting the opponent take it, and waiting for your teammates to pick you up.
5.No, when you throw the ball in the air, you can jump up and shoot the ball on the ground, which is considered an empty catch.
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First, you can dribble the ball.
Second, if you catch the ball while standing still, you can jump forward again, if you catch the ball during the run, you can take a small step forward, and you can shoot or dribble after landing, but you can't move your feet at will.
Thirdly, it is not possible to deliberately do it, and it must be after the ball is out of the hands of the defender to continue to scramble.
Fourth, you can't pick up the ball with your hands, which is a double dribbling violation, and it is not allowed to touch the body.
Fifth, no, unsportsmanlike, two dribbling violations, the ball must touch the basket or rebound, or be above the basket.
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When you turn around after taking the ball, the foot used as support does not move, and leaving the support point is not considered a step.
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1 didn't understand that the foot must be the axis to teach 2 can't 3 can't, but generally the opponent will break the ball, you can catch it if you don't land, you can catch 4 can't 5 can't, it can be a teammate throwing the ball up, and you can catch it empty.
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A foot that has not left the ground before the ball hits the ground is not considered a walk.
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Basketball masters from all walks of life**q474883660 I am not a seller and sincerely discuss basketball.
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This is okay, after all, basketball does not stipulate that you have to take one step to dribble, but if you catch the ball with one hand, you can't, this is also a kind of ball holding, of course, as long as you have enough ability to take 10 steps without violating the rules.
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Counting the walk, this is the same as walking two steps with the ball. Sometimes the NBA doesn't blow it, it encourages offense, but when it comes to international basketball, it will definitely blow.
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The rules may be counted as a step, but if the action is coherent, the referee will not blow it, and generally the wild ball does not care.
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Don't count the step-by-step, don't count what you say, attach the FIBA rules.
24.The following are not dribbles:
As long as there is no dribbling violation, the ball is tossed between hands and allowed to stay in one or both hands before the ball touches the ground.
What does this mean, for example, you can stick to the ball and take two steps to shoot it, or when you go to the basket, throw the ball into the air and catch it yourself, or even when you go to the basket, you can throw the ball left and right, which is not considered walking.
Dribbling sticky and taking two steps is too often seen in the game, and all defenders are shaking before breaking through by sticking to the ball and moving the center of gravity up and moving two steps.
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Not counts! Neither the NBA nor the CBA counts as a step.