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When numbers are used in motion (e.g. 4 out 1 in motion), the first number refers to the number of players outside the three-point line and the second number refers to the players inside the three-point line. 5 out motion offense (simple and screen away) 3-2 motion offense; 4 out 1 in motion offense; Dribble drive motion offense; Princeton offense
Kansas' initial defense was a box-and-one, which consisted of four players in a box around a basket while one player, King, played defense on North Carolina's Rosenbluth. [43] [44] Kearns received a pass along the baseline and was fouled in the act of shooting. [43] He missed the shot, but made both free throws to give Carolina the early 2–0 ...
The result was the Gonzaga front line overpowered Kentucky at the rim. Before fouling out, the 6-foot-9, 240-pound Graham Ike had 23 points. Ben Gregg, a 6-10, 230-pound sophomore, went for 14 points.
Ball screen – offensive play in which a player sets a screen on the defender guarding the player with the ball. Baseline out-of-bounds play – the play used to return the ball to the court from outside the baseline along the opponent's basket. Box set – a formation in which four players align themselves as the four corners of a box. Often ...
Of all the disappointing defensive moments that occurred during UK’s home loss to Tennessee last weekend, the Wildcats’ ineptitude when defending baseline out-of-bounds plays was near the top ...
The offensive and defensive lines controlled the flow of Saturday's 33-30 overtime win over Kansas ... He also was flagged for a late hit on an out-of-bounds play with Texas holding onto a 30-27 ...
The review change could have come into play at least once in last season's playoffs, when Dallas' Kyrie Irving fouled Minnesota's Jaden McDaniels and the ball went out of bounds. No foul was called on the play, and even though the review clearly showed Irving hitting McDaniels' arm the ball was awarded to Dallas because it went out off of ...
Plays that would normally stop the clock, such as penalties, incomplete passes, going out of bounds, or change of possession, would not stop the clock. The rule varies by state; for example, the clock does not stop upon a score in Colorado, Indiana, Kansas (regular-season games only), or Missouri (fourth quarter only).