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Basketball scorekeeping

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Basketball unit of scoring accumulated by making field goals and free throws

Abasketball scoreboard

Basketball scorekeeping is the practice of tracking thestatistics of abasketball game throughout the duration of play. Points serve as the measure of scorekeeping, determining the ongoing score, and are accumulated by makingfield goals andfree throws.[1] The team with the most points when the game ends is declared the winner.

History

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The first method of basketball scorekeeping came about in 1891 whenJames Naismith, the inventor of basketball, published his original 13 rules of the game.[2] According to Rule 13, the winning team was decided by who scored the most number of goals.[3] The very first basketball game ended with a score of 1–0, equating a single point to each goal.[4] By 1896, the scoring system changed, representing a goal—now called a field goal—as 2 points, and free throws as 1 point.[5]

Decades later, the three-pointer emerged into a professional league in 1961, awarding the shotmaker an apt 3 points, when theAmerican Basketball League (ABL) painted the first official three-point line.[6] After the ABL folded in 1962, years passed before the NBA finally gave it a one-year trial in 1979, which they ultimately kept.[7] By 1986, the NCAA adopted it, but each major conference had different distances for their three-point lines.[8] And a year later, in 1987, theNational Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) implemented the three-point line across high schools.[9]

Scoring

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When a player successfully shoots thebasketball through the opponents hoop, their team is awarded between 1 and 3 points. This point value is determined by three primary shot types:

Free throw being shot by LA-Lafayette's Makayia Hallmon against the Texas-Arlington Mavericks in 2022

Free Throw (or Foul Shot)

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1 point is scored for a team when its player makes an unguarded shot from the free throw line. Free throws are awarded from shooting fouls,personal fouls that exceed theteam foul limit, ortechnical andflagrant fouls committed against a player.[10] Referees are solely responsible for calling fouls that can result in free throw opportunities, during which the game clock is stopped. It should also be noted that a free throw is not a field goal.[11] Typically, free throws are tracked as a separate statistic in official scorekeeping.[12]

Two-point Field Goal

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2 points are scored for a team when its player makes a field goal from anywhere inside the three-point line.[1]Layups,slam dunks, post shots, and mid-rangejump shots all award the same amount of points despite their differences in distance and difficulty. Unlike free throws, the game clock does not stop when a field goal is scored, as the ball is consider in play.[13] Additionally, if the scoring player is fouled in the act of shooting, a made free throw turns the two-point field goal into athree-point play.[14]

Three-point Field Goal

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3 points are scored for a team when its player makes a field goal from anywhere outside the three-point line.[1] This shot is worth an extra point compared to a standard two-point field goal because it is generally more difficult to convert and relatively less common to shoot.[15] The shooter must not be touching the three-point line before when attempting the shot. They are often recorded as their own statistic on the scoresheet, while also contributing to the overall field goal totals.[16] Additionally, if the scoring player is fouled in the act of shooting, a made free throw turns the field goal into afour-point play.[17]

Point records

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References

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  1. ^abc"How does basketball scoring work?".keepthescore.com. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  2. ^"Where Basketball was Invented: The History of Basketball".springfield.edu. Retrieved27 October 2025.
  3. ^"Dr. James Naismith's Original 13 Rules of Basketball".USA Basketball. Retrieved27 October 2025.
  4. ^"Who Invented Basketball? 5 Notable Evolutions in Basketball - 2025".MasterClass. Retrieved27 October 2025.
  5. ^"Rules History".www.basketref.com. Retrieved27 October 2025.
  6. ^"History of the 3-Pointer".USA Basketball. Retrieved10 November 2025.
  7. ^"This Day In History: Oct. 12 - The first 3-point field goal | NBA.com".NBA. Retrieved10 November 2025.
  8. ^"This Day In Sports: The NCAA Goes For 3".ESPN.com. 2 April 2010. Retrieved10 November 2025.
  9. ^Lynch, John (27 March 1987)."High School Basketball Draws Line, Adopts 3-Point Rule".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved10 November 2025.
  10. ^"Free Throw Shots: How Free Throws Work in Basketball - 2025".MasterClass. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  11. ^"What Is a Field Goal In Basketball?". Retrieved23 October 2025.
  12. ^Max (21 October 2025)."What Is a Field Goal in Basketball? Definition & Stats".sportssurge.alibaba.com. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  13. ^"Basketball: The Clock and Timing".www.ducksters.com. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  14. ^"Men's Basketball Survives at the RAC; Outlasts Rutgers, 84–71, in OT".Shupirates.com. 31 January 2008. Retrieved12 May 2008.
  15. ^Raptors 905 (3 September 2015)."Three-Point Shot".NBA.com: Jr. NBA. Retrieved23 October 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^"Stat Glossary | Stats | NBA.com".NBA. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  17. ^"Four-point play – (Basketball): Definition". MiMi.hu. Retrieved10 January 2009.
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