Baseball is different than football or Basketball or hockey in that there is no limit to the number of time outs a team can call during a game. Generally, a time out in baseball only lasts for a few seconds.
In Major League Baseball, there is no rule restricting the number of time outs that may be requested. However, other leagues may have rules limiting the number of time outs requested.
no
Yes, it is legal.
no
zero
You get three 30 second timeouts and 2 full timeouts per game
yes but then zombies come out and eat it
Yes . You can save timeouts in high school
In an NBA game, each team is given six timeouts. They get four 60-second timeouts and two 20-second timeouts.
Three full timeouts and two 30-second timeouts are allowed in high-school basketball.
During college football games, media timeouts occur mostly on scoring plays. However media timeouts can also occur after punts or kickoffs. They can occur on long injury timeouts as well.
TV timeouts occurs after the first deadball situation after 16 minutes left in the period, 12 minutes left in the period, 8 minutes left in the period, and 4 minutes left in the period. Should a team call a time out during a period and the broadcaster go to commercial, one of the TV timeouts is deleted from the schedule.
A time out is something a coach can call that stops times (hence "time out"). During this time, a coach can substitute players in and out of the ball game, draw up plays, talk to their players, or talk to the referee. This allows the players a break. There are 20, 30, and full time outs (which are 1 minute in length). Coaches have a certain number of timeouts, and after each half, they are restored. Although coaches can choose when to call most timeouts, some are mandatory. TV announcers will often refer to some timeouts as "mandatory timeouts." These are strictly to allow the television commentators a break. Both coaches must call a certain amount during the game by certain points, and if they don't, they will lose a timeout.