No you have to keep the ball in place from where it lies even if it hits a cart, tree, building, etc.
No it isn't, you must start and finish your free throw attempts behind the free throw line
Different 5 second violations (1) on a throw in, a player has 5 seconds to throw in the ball (2) closely guarded, when the player with possession of the ball in their front court is closely guarded by a defensive player in a legal defensive position, the player can hold or dribble the ball for 4 seconds.
no not all the way to there, but it does have to go compeltly behind your head, so depending on how you throw it may have to go back there
illegal. player must be completely off the playing field.
You just throw a normal alley oop but you have to have a trailing player behind you. This is quite hard and is uncommon but it is possible.
A softball player is supposed to throw 400 balls a day but if your throwing with a partner than its 800 because than you and your partner each throw 400 balls.
Because he was a slugger.
Yes it is legal to throw a ball over the defenders head
No, it is perfectly legal to throw money away.
Yes, Hikkomi Gaeshi is still a legal throw in competition Judo, but as a countertechnique.
When a defensive player tackles a quarterback behind the line of scrimmage as he is trying to throw the football .... that is called a sack.
As long as the ball is thrown from behind the line of scrimmage, and a forward pass has not already been thrown during the play, then the play you describe is perfectly legal.