That all depends on the coach. There is no specific spot that someone stands on offense and defense. You will stand in different spots for different forms of defense and different spots for the type of offense you are running.
in basketball, there aren't offense players and defense player. everybody on the team knows how to play offense and defense
A player may be guilty of an offside infraction directly from a direct free kick.
All players in basketball play both offense and defense.
The restart for an offside offense is an indirect free kick. Another player must touch it for a goal to be scored during an indirect free kick.
get back on offense
kick it in the goal kick it in the goal kick it in the goal kick it in the goal
Yes, you can be called offside on direct free kicks and indirect free kicks. You cannot be offside on a throw-in, goal kick, corner kick, or kickoff, though.
Using the arm to [deliberately] touch the ball is called deliberate handling and is a direct free kick offense. If a player commits a direct free kick offense within their own penalty area, then the direct free kick becomes a penalty kick. Note that goal keepers are immune to this particular offense within their own penalty area.
Yes, but only with an indirect free kick for the opposing team.
Kick ball
The line is part of the area it contains meaning that "on the line" is also "inside the area." So, a player trips an opponent. This is a Direct Free Kick offense. Also, it was a defender inside their own Penalty Area, this Direct Free Kick is now upgraded to a Penalty Kick.
A kick ball violation in basketball occurs when a player intentionally kicks the ball with their foot or leg. This results in a turnover, with the opposing team gaining possession of the ball.