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What's the difference between home team timeout, visiting team timeout and official timeout in basketball match?

Some fans who often watch live text will ask what the official pause means, so I want to say some detailed rules about NBA pause. Short pause A short pause is a 20-second pause, which is introduced as a TV advertisement pause in some places. Each team has a short pause in the first half, which means that the short pause in the first half is invalid if it is not called to the second half; Overtime is an extension of the second half, so a short pause in the second half can also be used in overtime. Regular Pause A regular pause, also called a long pause, has two kinds of time: 100 second and 60 seconds. Each team has six regular pauses in the regular time of 48 minutes, usually four of which are 100 second pauses, which are needed for one to four quarters. In addition to these four necessary pauses, the other two regular pauses are 60 seconds, usually reserved for the last two minutes of the fourth quarter. (The rest time between the first and second quarters and between the third and fourth quarters is 130 seconds. There is also a 100 second timeout in the second and fourth quarters, which does not account for the number of timeouts of any team, so it is called a formal timeout. Therefore, the two teams will have at most 18 pauses in a game within 48 minutes: two formal pauses, 12 regular pauses and four short pauses. Each team has three 60-second routine pauses in each overtime, and the routine pauses that are not used up within 48 minutes are invalid until overtime. In the fourth quarter, each team can only call three regular timeouts at most. In the last two minutes of the fourth quarter and the last two minutes of each overtime, each team can only call two timeouts (excluding short timeouts), so by the end of the game, we can see that the maximum number of timeouts available to the team is 2, 1 short. Regular pauses can be replaced at will, and there is only one replacement place for short pauses. If you ask the team with a short pause to change one person, the other team can also change one person. But in the last two minutes of the game, you can change people indefinitely. In a game, there must be two 100 second pauses in the first and third quarters (once for the home team and once for the visiting team). If no team calls a timeout from the start to 5 minutes and 59 seconds, the scorer must call a timeout on the next dead ball, which is counted on the head of the home team. Similarly, from the first timeout to 2 minutes and 59 seconds, if no team calls a timeout, the scorer must call a timeout on the next dead ball and count it in the name of the team that did not call a timeout before; There must be three 100 second pauses in the second and fourth quarters (once for the official, once for the home team and once for the visiting team). Compared with the first and third sections, there is an extra time point of 8 minutes and 59 seconds, that is, there must be a regular pause in the time periods of 8 minutes and 59 seconds, 5 minutes and 59 seconds, and 2 minutes and 59 seconds. The order of suspension is: official and home team. That is, if no team calls a timeout before 8 minutes and 59 seconds, there will be an official timeout; If a team called a timeout before 8 minutes and 59 seconds, and no team called a timeout after 5 minutes and 59 seconds, then this time is a formal timeout, and that time will be counted in the name of the team that did not call a timeout before. The above 10 timeout must be called at the time of the game, regardless of the score at that time, even if it is garbage time, as long as there is a dead ball (foul, ball out of bounds, etc. In addition, it will be called sooner or later anyway, and the head coach will often take the initiative to call a timeout at those time points. Of course, if it's time to call a timeout, it's also possible that there will be no dead balls on the court until the end of this quarter. In addition, it does not mean that the two pauses in each section must belong to two teams, but it is also possible for a team to call two 100 second pauses in a section! Many people simply regard so many pauses in the NBA as advertising time, but it is far more than that. For example, as we all know, there is an unwritten rule in the NBA that substitutes should be allowed to play for a while at the beginning of the second and fourth quarters. I think it is because of the official suspension in the second and fourth quarters that it is possible-even if the substitute plays badly, he can be replaced in three minutes without wasting the number of suspensions. Thank you for your adoption!