probably 4 or 5 feet
60 feet from foul line to head pin 39 inches wide
A Bowling lane is 60 feet long from foul line to the center of the headpin, and 62 feet 10 inches from the foul line to the back of the pins. It can range from 41-42 inches wide.
The foul line on a high school basketball court is located 15 feet from the backboard. The line itself is 2 inches wide and extends across the width of the court, which is 50 feet. This line marks the boundary for free throws, indicating where players must stand when shooting free throws after a foul.
If a ball hits the foul line, it is a fair ball.
From the foul line (the black strip one-half inch wide that runs across the beginning of the lane)... to the center of the head pin is 60 feet, with a tolerance of +or- half inch.
There are three sets of dots on the approach:First set located about 15 feet from the foul lineSecond set is 12 feet awayThird set is approximately 3 inches away.Some centers do not use targeting dots at the further levels.
Some folks call the foul line the charity stripe.
There is no advantage to crossing the foul line, however there is a safety issue due to the fact there is lane conditioner beyond the foul line, which can cause you to slip. The sport does require a zero to be counted when crossing the foul line.
well you do this and that and that constituts a foul in Bowling stepping over the foul line at the lane before you let go
it's a no pitch if it does not cross the foul line. if it crosses the foul line it's a ball
The markings on the field has a foul line. This is by the running paths by 1st and 3rd. Any ball that lands in between the foul line is a fair ball. Any ball that lands out the foul line is a foul. When ball rolls on the infield and goes out the foul territory will be called foul. But when ball lands on the outfield and rolls to foul territory is a live ball
it's a line drive that that is declared as a foul Ball