stedman graham
Steadman Graham
Stedman Graham
Yes, if you move it without moving the ball. If you move the cup and the ball, then it's a penalty.
Blowing it?
By getting the ball into the hoop without doing an illegal move.
When you move with the ball without dribbling, it's called "traveling," which is a violation in basketball and other sports. This occurs when a player takes too many steps without dribbling the ball, resulting in a turnover. To avoid this, players must either pass the ball or dribble it while moving. Maintaining control and adhering to the rules is essential for gameplay.
Stedman Graham
When you have the Basketball and you run or walk more then one step without bouncing it Travelling is taking two consecutive steps with different feet without dribbling the ball, unless the ball is released after the second step and before the third step occurs. I arrive at this conclusion not by the rule book, but by watching basketball on TV.
In the NBA rule book, traveling violations occur when a player takes more than two steps without dribbling the ball. The player must establish a pivot foot and can only move that foot without dribbling. If a player violates these guidelines, it results in a traveling violation and the opposing team gains possession of the ball.
ball + book = 3.5 book + mug = 6.5 mug + ball = 6.5 adding that all up gives us: ball + book + book +mug + mug + ball = 3.5 + 6.5 + 6.5 2*ball + 2*book + 2*mug = 16.5 2*(ball+book+mug) = 16.5 ball+book+mug = 8.25 Answer: 8.25
There is no limit, however for most games, the cue ball must hit the object ball and a ball must hit a rail afterwards. Considering that a ball can travel 8 rails or more without hitting a ball and still be capable of making a legal shot the ball may have travelled more than 800 inches.
As stated, no. The ball would be considered out of play.