Depending on the length of your stride, approximately 6000 steps.
The answer depends on the length of your stride.
A step is not a uniform unit of measurement - different people's steps are different lengths. The two units are therefore incompatible.
11 rungs.
Take one step. Now, measure how long that step was in inches. Take that figure and divide it into (4* 5280 * 12). That will equal how many steps it would take for 4 miles.
if when you drive you go for a layup then 2
You are allowed one in a half steps when in motion to shoot a layup, your first foot that lands when picking up the dribble counts as one half step your second foot that lands counts as a half step and then your third foot that lands the one you will jump off of to shoot the layup counts as a half step giving you a grand total of one in a half steps hope this helps... a lot of people get confused with counts each foot that lands as a whole step...
because they cheat
A layup is when you are very close to the basket when you shoot the ball. I would say a player would be 3 feet or less from the basket when they shot a layup.
Two. Like always.
you get two free throws
You cannot master the layup upon your first attempt. Layups are mastered after years and years of practice. The first year will help you get the basics down; the second year will help you perfect the right or left handed layup; the third, fourth, and fifth years will help you with layups from many different angles; and the sixth year and beyond will help you with the opposite handed layup.
When you are doing a layup, you go toward the basket. I'm sorry don't know what you mean.
If you are talking about playing basketball, it generally would be a good idea to know how to 'do' a layup. In basketball, the layup is one of the most important shots in the game because most points are scored that way.
it is very easy to use rondo layup,thats all you have to do is grip the ball and do a finger roll.................
yeah but its really hard to do for beginners why not try the switch hand layup i think thats what you mean
layup