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basic basketball, basic basketball skill, basic basketball skills, and basic basketball drills
Everything about basketball and basic basketbal, basic basketball skill and much more!
basic basketball skill - terms basic basketball skill - dribbling basic basketball skill - passing basic basketball skill - offense basic basketball - defense basic basketball skill - equipment basic basketball - defense basic basketball skill - substitutions basic basketball skill - the ball
youth basketball, elemantary basketball , Middle School basketball , High School basketball, college basketball, and professional basketball games are similar except in length and in range of basic skills. Professional basketball games are 48 minutes long, and have quarters; college basketball games are played in 40 minutes, and in halves; and high school games, 32 minutes, played into quarters. Middle school basketball is usually 24 minutes, played in quarters, elemantary basketballl games are usually 10 minute halves with running clock until the last two minutes; and youth basketball games are usually running clock with 6 minute quarters or 10 minute halves (please note, all middle schools basketball games, elemantary basketball games, and youth basketball games might be different depending on what state, where your playing, and etc). If a game is tied at the end of regulation time, an overtime (3 to 5 minutes, depending on the level of competition) is played.
Although no set of dimensions for a basketball court is universally accepted, the recommended size is 94 ft (28.65 m) long and 50 ft (15.24 m) wide.
Two points are given for a field goal, which is a shot that goes through the hoop--10 ft (3 m) high--while the ball is in play. The NBA instituted, beginning with the 1979-1980 season, the 3-point field goal, awarded to a player who scores from beyond a semicircle at a distance of an even 22 ft (6.7 m) all the way around the basket. The NCAA followed suit, beginning in 1986-87, with a 3-point semicircle that averages 19.75 ft (6 m) from the basket. One point is awarded for a free throw, or foul shot, which is attempted by a player who has been fouled, or impeded physically, by an opponent. Free throws are attempted, undefended, from a line drawn 15 ft (4.57 m) from the basket.
On the offensive, a player may advance the ball by passing or even rolling it to a teammate or by dribbling, which is bouncing it along the floor with one-hand taps. The defensive team can get the ball back by intercepting passes, blocking shots, or even by literally stealing it out of an opponent's hand, provided that no illegal body contact occurs. After a basket is made, the ball is awarded to the other team, which puts it back in play. If a field-goal attempt is missed and the ball remains in bounds, it is kept in play by the team that recovers (rebounds) it.
When personal fouls are committed on a player who is not in the act of shooting the game is restarted with a throw-in by the non-offending team from out of bounds on the sideline nearest to the place of the foul.
If there is a foul on a player in the act of shooting:
If the goal is made, the points will count and one free throw will be awarded as well.
If the shot for goal misses, two free throws will be awarded.
If the missed shot for goal was a three-point shot, three free throws will be awarded.
If you have committed five fouls, you cannot take any further part in the game.
When your team has committed seven player fouls in a half, any fouls they commit will be penalised by the one and one rule. In this case, the player who fouled is given one free throw (unless they were in the act of shooting for goal, in which case the usual free throw rules apply). The one and one rule means that, if you make the first free throw, you are given a second shot. If you miss the first throw, you don't get another one and the game continues in the normal way.
More basic basketball, there are two things you do as a basketball player...first you play offense, and second you play defense. If you as a player have the ball or your team that your on has the ball that's called offense! If you or the team your on does not have the ball your playing defense. Okay in offense the basics are for the players to pass and dribble the basketball to the court that they are playing on and shoot the ball into the basket. If they do that they get 2 points, unless it's a 3 pointer then it's worth 3 pts. If that team then makes the basketball, the other team has to take the ball out of bounds and pass the ball in (it does not matter who throws in the ball, though in say 5 yr old basketball the coach sort of lets all the players throw the ball in at one point of time so they usually tell different kids to do it at different times if that makes sense just for the kids). Then once the ball is passed in the team that just made the shot runs down the other side of the court is playing what is called defense. Where as defense the basic defense is man to man, where has each player of the team should have there own man. So all five players on the court should be matched up to another player. That is man to man defense which is the most basic defense there is and probably all that you need to know right now for the basics!
basic basketball skill - terms
basic basketball skill - dribbling
basic basketball skill - passing
basic basketball skill - offense
basic basketball - defense
basic basketball skill - equipment
basic basketball - defense
basic basketball skill - substitutions
basic basketball skill - the ball
Original 13 basketball rules by Dr. James Naismith
on NCAA basketball site
Rule Differences between Men's FIBA (International Rules), NBA, NCAA Rules
Rule Differences between Women's FIBA (International Rules), WNBA, NCAA Rules
High School basketball rules
on NFHS basketball site
signals (in
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format)
College basketball rules
NCAA Rules and Illustrated Rules (in
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format)
NCAA Statistical / Instrucstional manuals (in
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format)
NCAA basketball officiating bulletins (in
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format)
FIBA basketball rules
FIBA official basketball rules
NBA basketball rules
signals
official rules of the NBA
WNBA basketball rules
official rules and regulations for WNBA
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