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Could 3-On-3 Basketball Be The Next Olympic Sport?

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The International Olympic Committee has been asked to consider adding 3-on-3 basketball to the 2016 Rio Games.

With the Rio Games merely three years away, organizers are finalizing the list of sports that will be hosted. The IOC has already removed baseball, softball, and, shockingly, wrestling from the Olympics, and now they're looking to possibly add 3-on-3 basketball.

FIBA made the proposal for this format, and even though there won't be an official decision until the IOC executive board votes on it in August, we thought it'd be a good idea to check out the sport, just in case.

So what exactly would 3-on-3 basketball look like in the Olympics?

So what exactly would 3-on-3 basketball look like in the Olympics?

Remember the movie White Men Can't Jump? Of course you do, that movie is awesome. Anyway, 3-on-3 basketball is sort of like that...the format was inspired by several forms of streetball from around the world, or what some may consider the "pick-up game" style.

Basically, teams of three (plus a sub) play each other on one half-court, and the top teams in each group advance.

How it got started...

How it got started...

FIBA started testing this format at the 2007 Asian Indoor Games and 3-on-3 made its worldwide competitive debut at the 2010 Youth Olympics in Singapore, featuring 40 teams from 38 different countries.

How it's different...

How it's different...

Unlike the NBA or the international games you might be used to watching, 3-on-3 basketball is only ten minutes long, and the first team to 21 points wins the game.

If neither team has reached 21 at the end of regulation, the team with the highest score wins the game. If the game goes into OT, the first team to score 2 points wins.

Aside from that, the rules play pretty close to the playground:

Shots inside the arc, and free throws, are one point, with shots outside the arc awarding two points.

There's no "make-it-take-it" rule, and a defensive player must dribble or pass the ball out beyond the arc, following a turnover or a missed shot.


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