-
I think that wrong movements, close physical contact, and unconscious pulls are more likely to lead to fouls when defending.
In the basketball game, the offense and defense of the two sides are like "commonplace", when one player holds the ball to attack, the other side will make corresponding defenses, some are "people look at people" strategy, some are "two pack one", in short, to prevent the opponent from breaking through their own defense. Misalignment in defense is often the most likely to lead to fouls. Taking an inappropriate position, or moving that results in an incorrect body posture, are the beginning of an incorrect movement.
The most common is the foul caused by a mistake in positioning, in order to prevent the opponent from snatching the ball from his own hands, the offensive player will make some "fake" movements, and dribble movements when moving, so that it can easily lead to collisions. When dribbling sideways, there will be a blind spot, so that you can't observe the opponent's movement in all directions, and you may end up hitting someone.
Physical contact fouls are when the opponent is holding the ball and trying to dunk, and the defender can easily touch the opponent's arm or hand when he is about to hit the basketball, which is also the most common form of foul in the defensive rules. Finally, there is the unconscious pulling action, during the game, both players are in a state of high concentration, there are many movements are made unconsciously, when someone crosses you, you will unconsciously want to pull the opponent, resulting in a very serious foul.
Finally, in order to prevent fouls, when the player is attacking, the player holding the ball must do a good job of predicting the actions of the opposing player, when the defender first occupies a favorable defensive position, the offensive player should do a good job of controlling the body movements, try not to make extra moves, either stop immediately, or change direction, in order to prevent physical contact between the players on both sides. A good move can often make the difference between a game and a match. There is a misunderstanding in action fouls that you can stick to people in the game, but you can't press people, and you must make your movements clean and neat.
When blocking an opponent, be "fast, accurate, and ruthless", and a surprise attack will catch the defender off guard. Similarly, a defender's brilliant move can be surprisingly successful.
-
Staying too long in the three-second zone, defending too much, blocking the opponent's shot too aggressively, resulting in a hitter, and the opponent hitting the ball when dribbling.
-
When blocking an opponent in a basketball game, it is easy to foul with actions such as hitting, pushing, pulling, locking throats, and elbowing.
-
Fouls: Hitting, hitting people with the ball, blocking fouls, covering fouls, offensive fouls, excessive action or showing strong dissatisfaction with the referee are technical fouls. 1.
When making a shooting action, or being fouled by an opponent when making a coherent shooting action, you can make a free throw at this time, 2When the opposing team has committed a foul in a quarter, 3Malicious foul by the opponent.
-
Illegal physical contact with other players, or unsportsmanlike conduct, or using one's body to knock down another person are foul actions and actions. Free throws are made if someone else interferes with the shot, touches the shooter's arm, or hits the shooter's arm.
-
Foul actions in basketball include hitting, walking, blocking, hitting people with the ball, moving gears, technical fouls, and interfering with the ball. Hitting people with the ball, blocking, hitting hands, these actions will make free throws.
-
What are the foul actions?
1. Assault foul. In the case of either live or dead ball, physical contact between players is a foul. A team member shall not pull, block, push, bump, trip or prevent another team member from traveling by stretching his hands, arms, elbows, shoulders, hips, legs, knees, feet or bending his body into an "incorrect position" (beyond his cylinder); Do not condone any rude or violent behavior.
2. Touch the opposing team with your hands or arms. Illegal use of hands or unlawful arms occurs when a defender is in a defensive position with a hand or arm on the opponent's body with or without the ball and maintains contact to hinder his or her progress. "Hooking" or wrapping around a defender with an arm or elbow for an unfair advantage.
When dribbling, use your outstretched forearms or hands to prevent the opponent from getting control of the ball.
3. Blocking, blocking the net is the illegal physical contact that hinders the opponent's player with or without the ball. If a player ignores the ball, faces the opposing player, and moves position as the opposing player moves, unless other factors are included (i.e. the covered player deliberately pushes, hits, or pulls). He is primarily responsible for any contact that occurs.
When a player occupies a position on the field, it is legal for his arm or elbow to extend his cylinder, but when an opposing player tries to pass, they must move inside his cylinder. If the arm or elbow is outside of his cylinder and in contact with it, it is blocking or pulling.
4. Technical fouls, technical fouls are fouls without physical contact. Types of behavior include, but are not limited to: ignoring a referee's warning.
Rude touching referees, technical representatives, record desk personnel, or team members. It is rude to communicate with referees, technical representatives, recording desk personnel, or opposing players. Use words and actions that are likely to offend or incite viewers.
Teasing an opposing player or shaking around his eyes can obstruct his vision. Excessive elbow strikes, after the ball has passed through the basket, deliberately touching the ball or hindering the quick execution of throwing the ball into bounds to delay play. Fall and pretend to be foul.
5. Non-defensive from behind, illegal defense is physical contact between defenders and opposing players from behind. The fact that a defender is officially trying to steal the ball does not justify contact with the opposing team from behind. This kind of illegal defense behind the scenes is mainly used to illustrate the situation of important players on the inside.
When an interior player plays an important role and his own player passes the ball, the defender behind him is not allowed to try to receive the ball. The defending team tries to get the ball, and any physical contact between the two sides will result in a defensive foul.
6. Hitting people with the ball, hitting the ball refers to a foul action in basketball game, which is the physical contact between the ball holder and the defender's torso. When the defender has already stood up at the moment of contact, the attacking team constitutes a stroke. Illegal cover-up generally refers to disobedience to punishment, verbal offense, dangerous physical tendencies, etc.
When there is no physical contact; It is unsportsmanlike for a defender to intentionally pull, block, push, bump or trip a player with or without the ball.
-
There are a lot of foul actions, first of all, deliberately grabbing the ball or hitting the opposing player with an elbow, or deliberately doing some inappropriate behavior, etc., these behaviors are fouls.
-
Basketball foul actions include blocking fouls, hitting hands, and elbowing opposing players. As well as stepping feet, there are also some unsportsmanlike fouls, such as deliberately dragging others.
-
Under normal circumstances, hitting, pulling, pushing and blocking are all foul actions in basketball rules, especially the phenomenon of pushing people, and the deduction of points is more serious.
-
In basketball, hitting people with the ball and blocking fouls are offensive fouls caused by the wrong body contact caused by the unreasonable position, incorrect body posture, improper starting method and illegal action taken by the player and the defender when attacking and defending. In order to accurately judge the foul of hitting a person with the ball and blocking a foul, it is first necessary to clarify the technical requirements of the rules for the player with the ball when attacking and the player with the defending ball when defending.
Offensive requirements. The ball carrier must anticipate the opposing defense, and whenever a defender appears in front of him and occupies a reasonable defensive position, he must control his body at all times or stop immediately. Either immediately change the direction of movement to avoid physical contact with defenders.
Otherwise, if physical contact occurs and an offensive foul is caused, the player with the ball will be responsible.
Defensive requirements. Blocking fouls.
Defenders must occupy a lawful defensive position. This legal defensive position is defined as: (emphasis) when the defender faces the opponent.
The feet should land on the ground in a normal straddle position, and the distance between the feet should generally be the same width as your shoulders or slightly wider than your shoulders. In addition, the legal defensive position extends vertically into his upper space, and he can put his hands over his head, but his arms must be vertical. Therefore, a legitimate defensive position can be considered as a rectangular vertical plane.
The width of the short side of the ground is limited by the player's feet, the two long sides extend vertically upwards from the point where the feet land, and the other short side in the air is at the height that the player can reach when jumping. According to the principle of vertical planes, if there is physical contact over the vertical plane of the attacking player and causes an offensive foul, the defending player is responsible, and conversely, if there is physical contact above the vertical plane of the defending player and causes an offensive foul, the attacking player is responsible. The vertical plane of each team shall move as the player moves, and the air above the vertical plane of each shall not be occupied by the opponent, unless there is no physical contact, or physical contact has occurred that does not constitute an offensive foul.
If a defender makes illegal physical contact when he or she adopts an incorrect defensive position or an incorrect defensive posture in an attempt to prevent the ball carrier from dribbling through to him with his or her legs, his shoulders, hips and legs, he or she is blocking a foul. When a ball carrier breaks through with the ball, if the defender does not step back or to the sides, if he does not stand in position first, and the contact does not occur in the torso but towards the upper part of the ball carrier, and actively causes illegal physical contact with the ball carrier, the defender also blocks the foul.
-
In basketball, when a defensive player defends an offensive player, he or she is called a blocking foul when he uses an unreasonable position, incorrect body posture, improper starting method and illegal action to cause wrong physical contact.
-
A blocking foul in basketball is when a dribbler is on his way and a defender suddenly blocks the way, causing a blocking foul.
-
It can be understood as:
My car went straight, and you turned around halfway to interfere with me going straight, so that you loaded it, which is to block the foul.
If my car is parked in a reasonable area and you drive over and scold me, you are an offensive foul.
-
What is a blocking foul in a basketball game? The foul in basketball should be when someone else scores, and it should mean a foul.
-
The other man's layup has taken three steps, and you are head-on.
-
It can be divided into (1) ordinary offences: such as walking with the ball, dribbling twice, kicking the ball or punching the ball. (2) Jumping Ball Violations, (3) Jumping Ball Violations: Players other than jumping players may enter the ** Jumping Ball area before the jumper touches the ball.
2) Basic Rules of Basketball Game 2:
The 30-second rule.
- The offensive team must shoot within 30 seconds of possession of the ball on the court (24 seconds in NBA games and 35 seconds in NCAA games).
The 10-second rule.
- The team starts with control of the ball from the back court and must get the ball into the front court (opponent's half) within 10 seconds
The 5-second rule.
- After possession of the ball, the player must take the throw-in within 5 seconds. FIBA rules stipulate that free throws must also be made within 5 seconds (10 seconds in NBA rules).
The 3-second rule.
- Fouls caused by physical contact with the opponent, such as an altercation with the referee.
Assault foul. --Foul play caused by physical contact with the other person.
Technical fouls. - A player or coach is awarded a foul for poor performance, such as an altercation with the referee.
Cancel the foul of the game knowledge.
- Foul actions made by players that do not reflect the spirit of sportsmanship, such as hitting someone. Upon such occurrence, the player shall be immediately sent off the field.
The player committed 5 fouls.
- Whether it is an offensive foul or a technical foul, a player who commits a total of 5 fouls (6 in the NBA) must leave the court and must not play again.
A violation --- is neither an intrusive foul nor a technical foul that violates the rules. The main offences were: illegal dribbling; dribble away; 3-second violation; Get the ball out of bounds.
The player goes out of bounds. --A player dribbles the ball or the ball touches an area beyond the boundary line or cocoon line. The ball is not counted out of bounds in the air until it touches the line or the area outside the line.
-
Basketball: After committing a foul in actual combat, you must understand these actions of the referee!
-
Pull people, wave elbows. Hit people with the ball...
-
Fighting, pushing, blocking, attacking, pulling, etc.
-
If a player fouls him when shooting, it is a foul to be fouled, and actions such as pulling and pushing people are also fouls, hitting others when covering for teammates is a covering foul, if the attacker knocks down a defender who has been standing is an offensive foul, if the attacker is attacking, suddenly the defender is halfway to kill a trip to bite the gold is a blocking foul. If you pull the jersey with a lot of action, it is a physical foul, and if you yell at the referee, push the referee or sit on the technical table, it is a technical foul. Technical fouls can likewise blow coaches.
For example, if you take more than two steps with the ball, it is called a walking violation, and if you can't serve the ball for five seconds, it is called a five-second violation. An eight-second dribble is called an eight-second violation. Staying in the three-second zone under the basket for more than three seconds is called a three-second violation.
A shot must be made within twenty-four seconds, and if there is no shot or the shot does not hit the basket, it is called a twenty-four second violation. If you dribble and dribble and suddenly close the ball, and then start dribbling again, it is called a second dribble violation. If the dribble is suddenly touched out of the half court by a teammate due to a passing and dribbling error, our team will pick up the ball again and call it back to the court for a violation.
Talking to an opponent during a basketball game is a technical foul. >>>More
Kicking the ball with your foot is not a foul, it is a violation. >>>More
Jump Ball: The referee throws the ball between one player from each side, and the jump ball begins, and the jump ball is only legal if it is slapped by one or both team players. Scrums, when one or more players from each team hold the ball so tightly that either player cannot possess the ball without rough maneuvers. >>>More
C thug does not count as a foul, but if the action is too large, a malicious foul or a technical foul can be awarded. >>>More
Rebounds are divided into offensive rebounds and defensive rebounds. >>>More