the muscles you use are your fore arms, biceps, and triceps. when you dribble it you are using your triceps to push it down and your forearms to stabilize it. when the ball bounces off the floor and into your hand again you are using your biceps because they move back. your forearms actually act as stabilizers.
you use your toe muscles
This question is a bit confusing because bones have joints, muscles do not. For the most part your elbow is involved, but you also use your shoulder and wrist to dribble.
Your boner.
Dribbling was added to basketball on May 14, 1953.
Dribble a tennis ball
no dribbling bouncy balls is though
The wrist joint and several bones related to the joint (radius, ulna, carpals, metacarpals) are necessary for dribbling a basketball, in addition to the elbow joint. Muscles like the deltoid, bicep, and tricep are also utilized in dribbling. The hip, knee, and ankle joints are also key for running. Jumping utilizes the hamstrings, quadriceps, and gluteus Maximus. The trapezius and the deltoid, meanwhile, are the main should muscles used to shoot. Other important shooting muscles include the pectoral muscles, the hand muscles, and quadriceps.
pivit, shoot or pass
Speed in basketball is used for the throwing of the ball and the speed of the player running or dribbling with the ball. :)
Done by: basketball GiRl
Not much, if at all. Dribbling with a golf ball requires different hand movements and grips than if you were dribbling a basketball. Dribbling a basketball everyday or a soccer ball would work, but not so much a golf ball.
Basketball handling is also called dribbling. But handling is more than that. Its about the skill of dribbling. Like cross-overs, spiders etc. To make this less confusing its basically fancy dribbling.
Dribbling.
Dribbling and shooting.
1950's