Sounds like a "huddle".
which ever you want to play for it can be any national team that calls you up to the national team
When two amateurs play together in a team!
The Colts, they don't play in a huddle, Peyton Manning calls the play on the line.
The captin calls the toss, leads the team talks, calls the cheers at the end of the game and signs the score sheet at the end of play.
[Snooker is a one-to-one game.] Snooker players in a game, players who play snooker in a certain country or around the world? Snooker is generally a game for two individuals, although pairs matches are not uncommon, particular in league or other competitions. As for the number of players who play the game, it is an unknown quantity: probably 1000-1500 who play in NGB tournaments of the various UK associations, and probably several tens of thousands including all the casual players around the UK.
Obviously.
The coach chooses who will play which position for each game and how the team will play together as well as being responsible for training programmes (fitness, skills, practising as a team).
Example sentence - The team had to learn to pull together in order to play the game and win.
No, in 1997-98 Drexler, Olajuwon and Barkley, play together, but in 1998 Clyde retires and Houston calls Scottie to plat along Olajuwon and Charles
5 people play on the court at one time. Most of the time there are about 15 to 25 people all together on a team.
There are no requirements under the Laws of the Game. Historical sportsmanship calls for the team in possession to put the ball out of play. The non-possession team then returns the ball to the team that had possession after play has restarted, often by kicking the ball unopposed to the goal keeper.
Yes. In league bowling, the captain of each team can make official "calls" either on their own team or the other.