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1 NBA three-point line is meters, while FIBA three-point line is meters. This can well explain why many 3-point masters in the NBA can't eat under FIBA rules. Because in the NBA, they generally don't choose mid-range shots.
That's clearly not worth it. If you shoot in a pitching area that you are very unfamiliar with, the shooting percentage will naturally not be too high. The proximity of the three-point line also makes the joint defense in FIBA more effective.
Breakthrough becomes harder. 2 NBA has a wider field. Its three-second zone is also larger.
It is a rectangle of meters. This allows for better control of crowding under the basket. (In fact, because some BT long people are really invincible, the three-second zone has been expanded again and again) and FIBA is a trapezoidal three-second zone.
The area is also smaller. 3 There are 7 timeouts in NBA games and 3 in overtime. FIBA, on the other hand, only had one in each of the first three quarters and two in the fourth quarter, for a total of five timeouts.
There will be 1 overtime. And players in FIBA do not have the right to call a timeout. So don't yell at a certain juncture when watching a FIBA game, for example, when there is a second behind the side that gets the ball but doesn't have time to shoot"Why doesn't xx call a pause!
Because they don't have that right. And the NBA has also had two TV commercial pauses for commercial purposes, and the interference ball under the FIBA rules is looser than the NBA. Basically, as long as the ball is about half outside the cylinder of the hoop, it can be knocked off.
Do you remember the shot of YM slapping the ball on the hoop? 5 The NBA has a 3-second rule for defense. This is more conducive to singles and breakthroughs.
Bring out your personal abilities. FIBA, on the other hand, is exempt from this restriction. 6 The NBA does not have a 5-second violation limit.
For example, a dead ball of 5 seconds, a serve of 5 seconds, a violation. Because the NBA plays net time. As soon as the ball is dead, the watch stops.
In addition, the NBA and FIBA have different ways of stopping the table when exchanging possession after a goal has been scored. In general, the NBA stoppage is a little more frequent, resulting in actually longer game times. FIBA free throws also have a 5-second limit.
So you don't see FIBA players with the kind of Malone or Keed. 7 NBA games are longer. for 4 sessions of 48 minutes.
Whereas FIBA is 4 sessions of 40 minutes. Plus the difference in the stop meter. You get the feeling that FIBA game time flies by quickly.
8 NBA baskets with offensive reasonable zones. Even if you stand in a defensive position first and are knocked down by the opponent's layup, it is not considered to hit someone with the ball. FIBA does not have this area.
The fake fall becomes more powerful. 9 No player number 00, 1, 2 or 3 is allowed under FIBA rules, and player numbers start with number 4. This is because it is easy to confuse referee gestures.
1 free throw, 2 points, 3 points. 10 The NBA can assist in adjudicating decisions based on television footage. And FIBA cannot.
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Supplementing these points is the most obvious 1: The NBA game is 48 minutes long, divided into 4 quarters of 12 minutes each. And FIBA is 40 minutes.
It is divided into 4 quarters of 10 minutes. 2: The distance between the 3-point line and the basket in the NBA court is meters; This distance on the FIBA pitch is meters; 3:
When an NBA player throws the ball, if the ball is in a downward trend, if a defender touches the ball, even if it interferes with the ball, the ball is valid. There is no such rule in FIBA.
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1. Different venues: The field standard of FIBA is 28 meters x 15 meters, while the field standard of NBA is 28 65 meters x 15 24 meters.
2. The balls used in the game are different: the FIBA balls are made of 12 pieces of synthetic leather, and the weight of the balls is kept between 567 and 652; The NBA ball is made of 8 pieces of leather, and the weight of the ball is maintained at about 624 grams. From the perspective of basketball use, the NBA's ball is indeed much more rigorous, and it is also better than the FIBA ball in terms of feel.
3. The game time is different: the total duration of the FIBA is 40 minutes, 10 minutes per quarter, and a game takes about 1 hour and 50 minutes, while the NBA single game is 48 minutes, each quarter is 12 minutes, and a single game takes about 2 hours and 30 minutes.
4. Different defensive rules: There is no 3-second defense under the FIBA rules, while the NBA has a 3-second defense rule, and this rule also makes many NBA stars shy away from international games.
5. Technical fouls are different: FIBA is a free throw, while the NBA is a free throw, and the NBA has a greater punishment for technical fouls.
6. The number of timeouts is different: 4 timeouts in FIBA games and 1 timeout in overtime; The NBA has seven timeouts per game and three during overtime.
7. The number of fouls is different: FIBA has a limit of 5 fouls per game; 6 in the NBA.
8. The number of free throws that exceed the number of fouls in each game is different: FIBA is the team's 8th foul per half; In the NBA, the team commits the fifth foul or the last two minutes of each half.
9. Different ways to call a timeout: it is the coach who calls a timeout in FIBA; And in the NBA it is the players on the court who ask for a timeout.
10. The distance between the three-point shot is different: the distance between the 3-point line and the basket on the FIBA court is 6 25 meters; This distance on the NBA court is 6 70 meters.
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FIBA's specific rules:
1. The game under FIBA rules is 40 minutes, divided into two halves, and each half is 20 minutes.
2. The distance between the 3-point line and the basket on the FIBA court is meters.
Viewed down from the top, the FIBA headquarters takes on the shape of a hand. The entire office building is made up of a steel structure consisting of five finger-shaped vertical sections that connect with each other – a nod to the FIBA logo. In addition, the element of "hand" can also be found everywhere in the FIBA campus.
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1. The venue is different.
The FIBA court standard is 28 meters x 15 meters, while the NBA court standard is meters, and the court standard is different, which leads to the difference in the distance of the three-point line.
2. The ball used in the game is different.
FIBA balls are made of 12 pieces of synthetic leather, and the weight of the balls is kept between 567 and 652 cans; The NBA ball is made of 8 pieces of leather, and the weight of the ball is maintained at about 624 grams. From the perspective of basketball use, the NBA's ball is indeed much more rigorous, and it is also better than the FIBA ball in terms of feel.
3. The time of the competition is different.
The total duration of the FIBA is 40 minutes, each quarter is 10 minutes, and a game takes about 1 hour and 50 minutes, while the NBA has a single game of 48 minutes, and each quarter is 12 minutes, and a single game takes about 2 hours and 30 minutes.
4. There is no 3-second defense under the FIBA rules, while the NBA has a 3-second defense rule, and this rule also makes many NBA stars shy away from international games.
5. Technical fouls are attacked, FIBA is a free throw, while the NBA is a free throw, and the NBA punishes technical fouls more severely.
Second, the origin of the NBA three-point line.
The farthest distance from the NBA three-point line is meters to the basket, which is farther than the three-point line in the FIBA standard court (meters). Moreover, the NBA's three-point line is composed of an arc with a radius of meters and two line segments located on both sides parallel to the sidelines, which is not a regular semicircle as most people think.
This irregularity causes the three-point line to be at different distances from the rim. Among them, the farthest area is the arc area, which is meters; The nearest distance is in the straight line area, in meters.
The NBA didn't have a three-point line until the 1979 and 1980 seasons, and before that, the NBA games were no three-point at all, except for two-point shots and one-point shots.
At that time, the shape of the three-point line was exactly the same as it is now, but due to the limited skill level of the players, many people's long-range shooting ability is a certain gap with the current players, so the number of three-point shots and the number of shots are very small. The top five players on the three-point shooting list in 1993 and 1994 averaged 165 shots per player, with a high of just 292.
In order to change that, the NBA shortened the distance to the three-point line in 1994 and 1995, and many players flocked to try their hand at the three-point line, and the top five players in the three-point shooting list that season averaged 258 shots per person, with a high of 425.
This three-point shooting situation is hardly a reflection of a player's long-range shooting ability, so the NBA moved the three-point line back to the original 7 25 meters in the 1997 and 1998 seasons.
Encyclopedia - Basketball Rules.
Encyclopedia - Three-point line.
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The rules of FIBA are not exactly the same as those of the NBA, one is FIBA, the other is the American Professional Basketball Federation, and the rules are different depending on the background and mode of operation:
1) Each NBA game is 48 minutes long and is played in 4 quarters of 12 minutes each; FIBA is 40 minutes, divided into two halves, each half is 20 minutes.
2) The NBA's three-point line is formed by an arc with a radius of 7 25 meters and two line segments located on both sides parallel to the sidelines, and is not a regular semicircle. This irregularity causes the three-point line to be at different distances from the rim. Of these, the farthest area is 7 25 meters in the arc area, and the closest distance is 6 70 meters in the straight line area.
The distance between the 3-point line and the basket on the FIBA court is meters, and the FIBA is about 50 centimeters shorter than the NBA's three-point line;
3) The NBA court is 90 feet 50 feet (meters); FIBA is 28m to 15m.
4) a 16-foot-19-foot (m) rectangle in the NBA; FIBA is a trapezoidal shape of 6 meters.
5) The number of NBA pauses per game is 7; 4 times for FIBA. The number of NBA timeouts in the tiebreaker is 3; 1 time for FIBA.
6) The NBA requests a timeout for the players on the court, and the FIBA is the coach.
7) NBA timeout is 1 minute and 40 seconds each time; 1 minute for FIBA.
8) The NBA has one 20-second TV timeout (commercial) in the first half (first two quarters) and one second half (last two quarters); FIBA None.
9) 24 seconds per offense in the NBA; 30 seconds for FIBA.
10) The number of individual fouls in the NBA is 6; 5 times for FIBA.
11) NBA free throw time is 5 seconds; 5 seconds for FIBA.
12) The number of NBA on-court referees is 3; 2 people for FIBA.
13) The NBA has a 5-second violation without pressing defense, and the FIBA has.
14) Free throws that exceed the number of fouls per game, the NBA's 5th foul or the last two minutes of each half; FIBA is the team's eighth foul in each half.
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The rules of FIBA are still very simple, and they are the same as the blowing penalties of our Chinese CBA. Only the NBA and FIBA's are not very compatible.
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