At the same time or not, yes. This has been tested and proven.
first there were two conferences, the NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION, and the AMERICAN BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION. But the NBA was better, so they merged into just the NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION.
In 1891, the first basketballs were made from brown leather, typically sourced from animal hides. They were often constructed from two pieces of leather stitched together and inflated with a bladder made from rubber. The design was relatively simple compared to modern basketballs, which now use synthetic materials and have a more advanced construction for better grip and durability.
The Denver Nuggets and the Golden State Warriors
two times
Two, the Miami Heat and the Orlando Magic
The inside diameter of a regulation rim is 18 inches. A regulation NBA basketball is between 29 1/2 to 29 7/8 inches in circumference, equating to a diameter of 9.39 to 9.51 inches, or an average of 9.45 inches. Now is where simple math will tell you that they won't fit, but both are able to compress over 1/2 inch each with minimal force, leaving you with a tightly fitting yet extremely possible attempt at making two basketballs at the same time. Conversely, you can take two basketballs placed side by side and place them on the top cylinder of the rim and make them not go through.
Two basketballs can fit in the hoop so the ball is half the size of the rim
== == == == Contrary to popular opinion, it is proven true that two men's regulation size basketballs can fit in a rim at the same time. Although many people have suggested this to be false, this has been proven possible a few times.
I don't pretend to have all the answers, but during my days of learning fundamentals, we were taught/showed numerous times, (during B'ball camp) Coach Stan Kelner's program called the Cybernetics of B'ball, which it was repeatedly stated, in fact, that was how they determined the size of the 'basket'...but putting two balls aside each other. The "nominal" diameter of a standard basketball is 9 inches. Therefore, "forcing" is not needed, the weight of the balls themselves allows them to pass through, but again, are they new, old, cold, hot, wet, dry? Too many questions to waste time arguing.yes actually it can. my teacher even tried it and it worked. so HAHAH yerr wrong!!!thanksbyeeYou're teacher "trying" it doesn't fully answer the question. The circumference of a basketball is 29-30 inches, making the diameter 9.39-9.55 inches. The inside diameter of a basketball rim is 18".Thus, your teacher could force the balls through, but they would not fit on their own.
A basket ball looks like it barely fits through the goal when in fact two basketballs side by side will fit through the goal.
Chuck two basketballs at their head.
spalding. I have two spalding basketballs
about one or two inches wide
No. Last two digits are the rim size. A 15" rim certainly cannot fit on a 16" tire and vice-versa.
two rim strips would be awesome.
Oklahoma city
The minimum number of lights needed for a rim lighting setup is two.