A player has five seconds to inbound the ball, if he/she has not inbound the ball in five seconds, it's a "turnover" the other team gets the ball.
no
worksite analysis
Yes but there are exceptions. You're only allowed to move after a team scores. If it is a dead ball, then the referee tells you where to inbound the ball and that's the only spot you can inbound the ball.
In the NCAA you have 10 seconds to cross midcourt and you can not cross back over.
it is an organisation that is inbound
The clock ends as soon as it is inbounded so Save that doesn't matter.
No A team can not inbound the ball from the front court into the back court without penalty.
directed or moving inward or toward a center; "the inbound train"; "inward flood of capital" inward bound: inbound ships Bound inward; incoming: inbound commuter traffic.
A player has 5 seconds to get the ball in bounds.
Technically it's over the line but it's rarely called.
Yes, "inbound" means "incoming."