Foul, abusive, or threatening language is an automatic send off (red card). If it is a player, then that player may not be replaced.
Depending on the level of the foul or bad behavior (taking someone out by purposely harming them), a player may receive a yellow or a red card. The red card is more serious.
A foul may only be committed by a player, against an opponent, on the field, and while the ball is in play. A coach is not a player and so cannot commit a foul. A coach may be guilty of bringing the game into disrepute by not acting responsibly, in which case the coach will be dismissed.
Very much so. If a player crosses the foul line during their delivery they receive a score of 0 for the shot regardless of how many pins are knocked down.
>A player control foul is what uninformed people call a charge. In reality, a charge is similar >to a blocking foul. Actually, a player control foul is any foul that is committed by a player who is control of the ball. This is in contrast to three other types of fouls: A team control foul is a foul that is committed by a player whose team has the ball but who is not the team member in control of the ball. A loose ball foul is committed when neither team is in control of the ball. There is no term for the usual foul committed when the other team has control of the ball. A charge is the "rulebook" term for a pushing foul. It can be committed as a player control foul, a team control foul, a loose ball foul, or a "defensive" foul. The official should signal a player control foul (of any type, charging, tripping, or otherwise) with one hand behind the head and the other arm extended outward. A defensive charging foul is signaled by the official using a pushing motion. The reason for the distinction between player control, team control, loose ball, and defensive fouls is that when a team is over the foul limit, free throws are awarded for some types of fouls but not others. (I believe you shoot for any foul except player control, but this may differ by organization - HS, NCAA, NBA, etc.)
If it looks like the player who fouled did it on purpose then it would be called an intentional foul. otherwise just a foul
You appear to be confusing this sport with baseball.
This is a foul on the offensive player. The defensive player does not have to fall down in order to get a charge called
When a player on the team with the ball commits a foul
When the batter hits the ball into foul territory, and an opposing player catches it in foul territory on the fly.
In basketball, an intentional foul is deliberately committed by a defensive player with a purpose to stop the play. The penalty or penalties of an intentional foul are foul shots from the fouled player in exchange for ball possession.
No the player can not.