a Water Polo player intercepting a pass and throwing the ball to score a goal. -apex :)
a Water Polo player intercepting a pass and throwing the ball to score a goal. -apex :)
a Water Polo player intercepting a pass and throwing the ball to score a goal. -apex :)
a soccer goalie trying to block a ball
All players in basketball play both offense and defense.
Your question's kind of off, if a defensive player has the ball, their on offense not defense therefore he/she is not a defensive player, but an offensive. Sounds like you're trying to ask is it a foul to jump in the air when the offensive player is trying to shoot. If that's your question then the answer's no, just straight up classic man-to-man defense.
No, Willie Parker was an offensive player. He was an NFL running back.
In speaking about American football and basketball, there are legal and illegal picks to be made on both offensive and defense. Accidental picks can also occur. Generally speaking a pick is placing oneself solidly and without moving in the anticipation of being in the way of an opposing team player. A "moving" pick in basketball, as an example, involves an offensive player "moving into the way of an opposing player. Contact then amounts to a foul in that the move was far too late to be fair and thus is illegal.Also, in American football there is an offensive pick that is illegal. This involves blocking up field defensive backs so they cannot protect against the forward pass. In conclusion, most often picks are set by the offensive team.
You are failing math so you decide to be the best basketball player on the team
The only 'offensive' player would be the server, who always starts out the point. No player really plays offense or defense, because no player (or pair of players in doubles) always retains possession of the ball. In basketball, football, and soccer, a team or player has possession of the ball, and the opposing team has to prevent the team from scoring. In tennis, the server starts out the point and has the starting offensive advantage, but since tennis players rally (unlike those of basketball, football, and soccer), there is no definitive offensive player.
There are many different types of screen plays, but essentially, the screen play is used to take advantage of an aggressive or blitzing defense. The defense is allowed to rush the quarterback but then, at the correct moment, the ball is released to an offensive player. Then, the offensive blockers, who just let the defensemen pass them, are free to block for the ball carrier.
Yes. If you remove a players helmet it is a 15 yard penalty. If you are defense and he is offense, it is an automatic first down.
Depending on which side recovers the loose ball. If the defense player does it is a safety and worth 2 points to that team and they get the ball back on a kick off. If the offensive player gets it, and makes it out of the end zone he takes it as far as he can and the game continues from there. If the offensive player gets it and is tackled inside the end zone, it is again a safety for the other team. Do you mean if the ball is fumbled out of the back of the end zone? In that case, it's a safety awarded to the defense. If the ball is fumbled into the end zone but the offense recovers and is tackled, that's also a safety. If the ball is fumbled into the end zone but the defense recovers, it's a touchdown for the defense.
The question is sort of confusing, I will answer the best way I can: you can inbound the ball and pass it to someone backcourt, even though you had already crossed midcourt. So for example: if the defense fouls you (not a shooting foul), your team keeps possession, when you inbound the ball, you can pass it to a player that is backcourt and it won't be a violation. Hope this helped.