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2007-02-03 17:17:26 · 13 answers · asked by PuppetyDog 3 in Sports Basketball

13 answers

no difference

2007-02-04 01:01:57 · answer #1 · answered by so what 2 · 0 0

A travel and a walk are the same thing (but a carry isn't), a "walk" is like the slang term for travelling, so announcers say he walked sometimes instead of traveled. Also, on up-and-downs (when someone jumps up to shoot and lands with the ball still in his/her hand) that is also usually called by refs as a travel. and again a carry is when you put your palm fully under the ball while dribbling, NOT when you take too many steps, or lift your pivot foot, which is travelling or walking.

2007-02-03 17:52:38 · answer #2 · answered by FOOTBALL not Soccer 2 · 3 0

They are one and the same. Interchangeable words that essentially mean the samething. And no, contrary to what a previous poster stated, carrying isn't traveling. Carrying is when your hand/palm goes underneath the ball, at any point of your dribble, before you put in on the ground --- a traveling call can be called with or without the act of dribbling --- unlike a carrying call where the call is only warranted, when and only when, the ball is put on the floor.

Nevertheless, both of the calls lead to a turnover.

2007-02-03 18:04:48 · answer #3 · answered by Albert C 4 · 2 0

What's the difference between a dunk and a jam or a slam? Nothing, one is just slang for the other. Walking = Traveling.

2007-02-03 20:01:37 · answer #4 · answered by Lmeister 4 · 0 0

well i guess walking implies that it was a short distance. when you use the word "traveling," usually it means you got in your car and went somewhere that was a good distance from your home. You wouldn't say, "I traveled to the grocery store." You would say, "I walked to the grocery store." Now, if you walked to the North Pole, then you should say "I walked to the North Pole," because you want to add emphasis to what your accomplishment. So, there's my answer. I liked that question.

2007-02-03 17:23:30 · answer #5 · answered by Bristol 2 · 0 2

strolling/vacationing. Taking more effective than 'a step and a 1/2' devoid of dribbling the ball is vacationing. transferring your pivot foot once you've stopped dribbling is vacationing.. and it truly is a few reading in case you want something else...:D

2016-11-02 06:45:57 · answer #6 · answered by dewulf 4 · 0 0

Not too much, when you walk you are usually travelling.

2007-02-03 17:20:36 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

They are the same thing people like to use both terms to sound like they know more about basketball

2007-02-04 00:17:07 · answer #8 · answered by mintyginty 2 · 0 0

Nothing, they are basically the same thing, taking more than two steps without dribbling the ball

2007-02-03 17:25:06 · answer #9 · answered by pjlawrence81 4 · 2 1

travel... walk... carry... they all mean the same thing for moving with the ball and not dribbling it.

2007-02-03 17:29:10 · answer #10 · answered by thizzin' 4 · 4 1

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