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- Q219868 subject Q7400726.
- Q219868 subject Q8291619.
- Q219868 abstract "The key, officially referred to as the free throw lane by the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the restricted area by the international governing body FIBA, and colloquially as the lane or the paint, is an area on a basketball court underneath the basket bounded by the endline, the foul line and other lines which are known as freebody lines, that are usually painted (although unpainted on some courts with painted perimeters). It is a critical area on the court where much of the action takes place in a game. Restrictions areas under the key is also an area the defender can not be in more than 3 seconds, not including the key The key, in all games, starting with FIBA's amendments to its rules in 2010 (to be first implemented after the 2010 FIBA World Championship), is rectangular. Prior to 2006, the key in FIBA-sanctioned tournaments (mostly basketball played outside the United States, and almost all international tournaments including the World Championships and the Olympics) was trapezoidal in shape. Both NBA and FIBA keys are 16 feet (4.9 m) wide, while NCAA keys are narrower at 12 feet (3.7 m).The most-commonly enforced rule on the key is the "three seconds rule" in which a player from the offensive team is prohibited from staying on the key for more than three seconds, or else the player's team will lose possession of the ball. Another rule enforced is the lane violation in which players from both teams are prohibited to enter the lane until after the free throw shooter releases the ball from his hands (the shooter is prohibited to enter the key until after the ball hits the rim). An innovation is the introduction of the restricted area arc directly underneath the basket where the defending player cannot force an offensive foul on the opposing player.".
- Q219868 thumbnail Basketball_keys.svg?width=300.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q1072012.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q1191341.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q1250119.
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- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q15073191.
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- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2001832.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q209.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q211438.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q219868.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q222052.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2264628.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q232405.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2341939.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2353718.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2437570.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q2485448.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q261338.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q271805.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q314185.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q3277611.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q354115.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q3705278.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q46199.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q46303.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q488855.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q48890.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q578998.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q641227.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q680499.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q7400726.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q746826.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q781491.
- Q219868 wikiPageWikiLink Q8291619.
- Q219868 comment "The key, officially referred to as the free throw lane by the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the restricted area by the international governing body FIBA, and colloquially as the lane or the paint, is an area on a basketball court underneath the basket bounded by the endline, the foul line and other lines which are known as freebody lines, that are usually painted (although unpainted on some courts with painted perimeters).".
- Q219868 label "Key (basketball)".
- Q219868 depiction Basketball_keys.svg.