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looks for fouls and reffs
Common fouls are touching the foot, hacking, touching the back-stick, not being 5 metres and obstruction/interference. Others occur less often, such as the ball entering the circle directly (a new rule), deliberately clearing the ball over the backline, a goalkeeper using something other than the stick outside the circle, intimidation, manufacturing an offence and dissent. Some almost never happen; exam
The singular form of fouls is fouls.
Mostly "flagrant fouls" a foul that's committed on purpose by the defensive player, if a player gets two of them in one game he's ejected from the game and has to leave right then, he cannot sit on the bench, but must go backstage. And he also cannot play for the rest of the game.
2 technical fouls and 6 fouls
Team fouls are the total fouls that all the players together committed. Personal fouls are each player individually.
over 600 fouls
If you are in the penalty box, you are playing hockey. Hockey is the only major U.S sport that does not have fouls. When a foul or fight occurs in hockey, you are subjected to the penalty box for a certain amount of time. If you are in a fight in hockey you are allowed to continue to fight until at least one player has hit the ice then it must stop, and once that is over with both players must go to the penalty box.
In most leagues it is 5 fouls until you are out. However, in some tournaments they can make up whatever rules they want so any number of fouls. But basically it is 5 fouls. -Kristen (I have played basketball for 6 years)
Team fouls are reset to 3. Personal fouls remain the same
6 fouls. If you get 6, your out.