no, that is not traveling.
An alley-oop in basketball is a play where one player throws the ball near the basket and another player jumps to catch it and score in one motion. It is executed by one player throwing the ball high near the basket while another player jumps to catch it and score before landing.
The traveling violation occurs when person throws ball on the court and another player receives it and moves both feet without dribbling the ball.
Traveling to hold court in assigned regions is called riding the circuit!iMightB
No, a player must be in court if they want to defend an on court player.
It is called a singles game, involving only the singles part of the court.
riding the circuit
No, the catch phrase for Selma Hacker, the bailiff on Night Court, was actually "Excuse me!".
Another name for the local court is the municipal court.
A back court player can not legally block. It is very rare that you will see this happen and even more rare that a ref will catch it. The most likely situation you will see this is when a setter comes out of the back row, there is an over pass that the setter tries to bring back on their side of the court, but an opposing player hits the ball into the setters hand.
Of course, there are no laws in the forbidding a legal resident from traveling to another state or all over the country. That is assuming that there have been no restrictions applied by a court or the immigration department.
nope Why not. When you walk with the ball with out dribbling it is considered traveling. The rules of basketball require a player who has the ball to bounce it against the floor all the while they are moving. Bouncing is dribbling.
city court.