No its not it will be the other teams ball
For in-depth instructions on how to shoot a backboard in 2K 15 Xbox one visit - gamefaqs.com/ps3/959012-nba-live-10/answers/121128-how-do-you-do-a-backboard-shot
is a two-point shot attempt made by leaping from below, laying the ball up near the basket, and using one hand to bounce it off the backboard and into the basket. The motion and one-handed reach distinguish it from a jump shot. The layup is considered the most basic shot in basketball. When doing a layup, the player lifts the outside foot, or the foot away from the basket.
A layup is when you are very close to the basket when you shoot the ball. I would say a player would be 3 feet or less from the basket when they shot a layup.
If no one touched it when the buzzer hit, yes
The basketball backboard is there to show ppl where to shot the ball to get it in.
When he shoots the ball into the basket then Joe got shot in the head by the ball.
Yes you can shoot any shot with the backboard, sometimes people say it looks bad. It actually increases your percentage when you use the backboard. Yes, it is perfectly legal to shoot a free throw off the backboard. Some might say that it looks bad, but whatever allows you to make the free-throw, besides stepping over the line or taking too long is alright! Yah, but it's doesn't always look that great. It's best to swish every single one!!
elbow shot: You should try to aim at the top right corner... like in a lay up side shot: Nothing to aim at just luck. 7th grader
Im not quite positive, but i think it is because the players would need something to keep the ball from going foul, or to get an easier shot at making the basket!:)
An illegal rejection in basketball occurs when a defensive player blocks or swats away a shot after it has hit the backboard or is on its way down towards the basket. This is known as goaltending and results in the basket being automatically counted for the offensive team.
In the NBA, a layup is when the player takes FOUR steps towards the basket and leaves off one foot (usually opposite of shooting hand) and attempts to score a basket (backboard or no backboard). The term is the same in NCAA, and HS basketball just 2 steps instead of the NBA 4 stepper.