NBA-23 ft. NCAA-21 ft. High School-19 ft.
The distance from the hoop to the three point is19 ft but for proffesionals it is22 ft
23 Feet, 9 Inches
If you shoot and make a basket inside the three point line or with your feet on the three point line it is worth two points. If you shoot and make a basket anywhere behind the three point line without your feet on the line it is worth three points. If you get fouled when you are shooting you go to the free throw line to shoot free throws. This is an uncontested, untimed shot that if you make it, it is worth one point.
Most courts are or have been 19 feet, but since the NCAA changed the college 3-point line from 19 to 20 feet, many open gyms are changing to 20 as well. An NBA 3-point line is 23 3/4 feet away.
Twenty three feet nine inches at the top of the key. As little as twenty two feet at the corners.
In Basketball, a field goal (a shot made from outside the three-point line) is worth three points.
In basketball, a field goal (a shot made from outside the three-point line) is worth three points.
For the 2007 season, the NBA three point line is 4 feet longer from the goal than the NCAA three point line at the top of the key (23 feet, 9 inches for the NBA to 19 feet 9 inches for the NCAA). However, starting in the 2008 season, the NCAA's three point line will be lengthened to 20 feet 9 inches at the top of the key.
Theres no field goal in basketball.
The surface area of an NBA men's official basketball is between 1.97 and 2.12 square feet.
A regular shot is worth two points. Any thing outside the three-point line is worth three points. Each foul shot is worth one point.
A field goal in basketball is worth three points while a free throw is worth 1 point