.Basketball Rules and Regulation.
.Basketball Rules and Regulation.
.Basketball Rules and Regulation.
and
Regulations
13 Rules of
Basketball
-Written by James Naismith
1. The ball may be
thrown in any direction
with one or both
hands.
2. The ball may be
batted in any direction
with one or both
hands, but never with
the fist.
3. A player cannot run
with the ball. The player
must throw it from the
spot on which he
catches it, allowance to
be made for a man
running at good speed.
4. The ball must be held
by the hands. The
arms or body must not
be used for holding it.
5. No shouldering, holding,
pushing, striking or tripping in
any way of an opponent. The first
infringement of this rule by any
person shall count as a foul; the
second shall disqualify him until
the next goal is made or, if there
was evident intent to injure the
person, for the whole of the
game. No substitution shall be
allowed.
6. A foul is striking at
the ball with the fist,
violations of Rules 3
and 4 and such as
described in Rule 5.
7.If either side makes three
consecutive fouls it shall
count as a goal for the
opponents (consecutive
means without the opponents
in the meantime making a
foul).
8. A goal shall be made when the
ball is thrown or batted from the
grounds into the basket and stays
there, providing those defending
the goal do no touch or disturb
the goal. If the ball rests on the
edges, and the opponent moves
the basket, it shall count as a
goal.
9. When the ball goes out of
bounds, it shall be thrown into
the field and played by the first
person touching it. In case of
dispute the umpire shall throw it
straight into the field. The
thrower-in is allowed five
seconds. If he holds it longer, it
shall go to the opponent.
10.The umpire shall be the judge
of the men and shall note the
fouls and notify the referee
when three consecutive fouls
have been made. He shall
have power to disqualify men
according to Rule 5.
11. The referee shall be judge of
the ball and shall decide when the
ball is in play, in bounds, to which
side it belongs, and shall keep the
time. He shall decide when a goal
has been made and keep account
of the goals, with any other
duties that are usually performed
by a referee.
12. The time shall be two
fifteen-minute halves,
with five minutes rest
between.
13. The side making
the most goals in that
time shall be declared
the winner.
Fouls
and
Violations
Personal Fouls: The rule for a
personal foul is a little ambiguous
and it depends on the referee
whether he thinks if the action was
serious or not. A personal foul is
said to have been committed when
an unfair disadvantage is caused
to an opposition player through
unnecessary physical contact like
Hitting, Pushing, Slapping,
Holding and etc.
Technical Fouls: When a player
shows dissent towards a referee or a
player, or shows unsportsmanlike
conduct during the course of the
game, it is known as a technical foul.
Repeated incidents of technical foul
will also result in the ejection of the
player. The number of technical fouls
to be committed by a player before he
is ejected also depends upon the
discretion of the referee.
Personal foul penalties: If a player is shooting while a being
fouled, then he gets two free throws if his shot doesn't go in, but
only one free throw if his shot does go in.
⦁ One & one. If the team committing the foul has seven or more
fouls in the game, then the player who was fouled is awarded one
free throw. If he makes his first shot, then he is awarded another
free throw.
⦁ Ten or more fouls. If the team committing the foul has ten or
more fouls, then the fouled player receives two free throws.
Charging. An offensive foul that is
committed when a player pushes or runs
over a defensive player. The ball is given
to the team that the foul was committed
upon.
Blocking. Blocking is illegal personal contact
resulting from a defender not establishing
position in time to prevent an opponent's
drive to the basket.
Flagrant foul. Violent contact with an
opponent. This includes hitting, kicking, and
punching. This type of foul results in free
throws plus the offense retaining
possession of the ball after the free throws.
Violations
Walking/Traveling. Taking more than
'a step and a half' without dribbling the
ball is traveling. Moving your pivot foot
once you've stopped dribbling is
traveling.