Home / Physical Education / Class XI / Team Games
Team Games — CUET Physical Education hero
Class XI 🏃 Physical Education ~8 MCQs/year Ch 5 of 11

Team Games

CUET unit: Games and Sports / Team Games — history, rules, equipment specifications, fundamental skills

📌 Snapshot

  • Chapter defines a team game and surveys seven classic team games — Basketball, Cricket, Football, Handball, Hockey, Kabaddi, Kho-Kho and Volleyball — with history, rules, court/ground specifications, equipment and skills.
  • CUET regularly tests factual data (year of invention, court/ground dimensions, ball weight/circumference, number of players, duration, officials).
  • Skill names (dribbling, passing, shooting, rebounding) and rule-violations (3-sec, 5-sec, 8-sec, 24-sec, LBW, offside, 7-metre throw) are high-yield distractor material.
  • Indian-context facts (BFI founders, Durand Cup, AIFF, Arjuna/Khel Ratna awardees) and governing bodies (FIBA, ICC, FIFA, IHF, AHF) are recurrent MCQ themes.

📖 Detailed Notes

2.1 Core concepts

  • A team game is an activity in which individuals are organised in a team to compete with the opposing team in accordance with a set of laws/rules to win; classic examples are Basketball, Cricket, Football, Handball, Hockey, Volleyball etc. (NCERT §Team Games intro, p. 129)
  • Basketball is played between two teams of five players each on a court; it builds bone-muscle strength and boosts immunity. (NCERT §Basketball, p. 129)
  • Basketball was invented by Dr. James Naismith in December 1891 at the YMCA Training School (now Springfield College), Springfield, Massachusetts; first rules were published in the college magazine "Triangle" on 15 January 1892 under the title "A New Game". (NCERT §History, p. 129-130)
  • FIBA (Federation Internationale de Basketball) was founded in Geneva in 1932; Basketball was officially recognised as an Olympic game in 1936 at Berlin; first appeared in the III Olympic Games at St. Louis, USA in 1904. (NCERT §History, p. 130)
  • Basketball reached India c. 1905 at YMCA Calcutta; BFI (Basketball Federation of India) was constituted in 1950 at Mumbai; first National Championship under BFI held at Ludhiana in 1951. (NCERT §History of basketball in India, p. 130-131)
  • Basketball court measures 28 m × 15 m with at least 2 m free space; lines are 5 cm wide; centre circle has a radius of 1.80 m. (NCERT §Playing court / Boundary lines, p. 131)
  • Free-throw line is 5.80 m from inner edge of end line and 3.60 m long; restricted area outer edges are 2.45 m from mid-point of end lines. Scoring — 3 points from beyond 3-point line, 2 points from inside, 1 point for free-throw. (NCERT §Free-throw lines, p. 132)
  • Backboard dimensions 1.80 m × 1.05 m; ring inside diameter 450-459 mm; net 400-450 mm with 12 loops; rim is 3.05 m from ground. (NCERT §Backboard, p. 133)
  • Men's basketball (Size 7) circumference 749-780 mm and weight 567-650 g; Women's (Size 6) 724-737 mm and 510-567 g. (NCERT §Table 1, p. 134)
  • A team has up to 12 members including captain; 5 players on court; game has 4 periods of 10 minutes each, half-time 15 min, 2-min intervals between quarters; tied scores → 5-min extra periods. (NCERT §Team / Playing time, p. 134-135)
  • Time violations — 3 sec (restricted area), 5 sec (holding the ball), 8 sec (must go to opponent's court), 24 sec (shot clock). Five personal fouls → player excluded. (NCERT §Violations / Fouls, p. 136-137)
  • Fouls categorised as Personal, Technical, Unsportsmanlike, Disqualifying. Basic skills include stance, footwork, dribbling, passing-receiving, shooting and rebounding. (NCERT §Fouls / Basic Skills, p. 138)
  • Passing types — Chest, Overhead, Push, Bounce, Shoulder, Hook, Off-the-dribble, Baseball. Shooting types — Jump, Dunk, Free Throw, Layup, Three-point shot. (NCERT §Passing / Shooting, p. 139)
  • Three basic defences — Man-to-man, Zone, Combined defence. (NCERT §Defence, p. 140-141)
  • Prasanthi Singh received Arjuna Award (2017) and was the first basketball player to receive Padma Shri (2018). (NCERT §Awards, p. 141)
  • Cricket game first recorded in 16th-century England; first recorded match in Kent in 1646; MCC formed 31st May 1787; ICC (then Imperial Cricket Conference) formed 30 Nov 1907; BCCI established 1928; India's first Test was vs England in 1932. (NCERT §Cricket — History, p. 142-143)
  • Cricket: 11 playing + 5 extras = 16; 3 umpires, 1 match referee, 2 scorers; bat 38 in/965 mm long and 4.25 in/108 mm wide; ball 155.9-163 g, circumference 22.4-22.9 cm; pitch 22 yds (20.12 m) × 3.05 m; stumps 28 in high, 9 in wide. (NCERT §Cricket Table, p. 145)
  • 11 ways of dismissal — Bowled, Caught, Stumped, LBW, Run Out, Hit Wicket, Handled the Ball, Obstructing the Field, Timed Out, Hit the Ball Twice, Retired. (NCERT §When is a batsman declared out, p. 146-148)
  • Football — FIFA founded in Paris in 1904; FA (England) was the first governing body; Durand Cup started in Shimla 1888 (second oldest in the world). AIFF formed 1937; affiliated to FIFA in 1948 and AFC in 1954. (NCERT §Football — History, p. 149-151)
  • Football ground: length 90-120 m, width 45-90 m (FIFA); ball circumference 68-70 cm, weight 410-450 g, air pressure 0.6-1.1 atm. There are 17 Laws of football; match — two equal halves of 45 minutes with half-time ≤ 15 min. (NCERT §Laws 1, 2, 7, p. 151-154)
  • 11 players per team (one goalkeeper); ≥7 required to start; max 3 substitutes (official competition). Fouls penalised by Direct/Indirect Free Kick or Penalty Kick; Yellow/Red Card system. Goalposts 7.32 m apart, 2.44 m high. (NCERT §Laws 3, 12, p. 152, 155-160)
  • Handball — international governing body formed in 1928 as Federation International Handball Amateur; renamed IHF in Copenhagen 1946; first men's World Championship 1954, women's 1957. Women's Handball added to Olympics in 1976 Montreal. (NCERT §Handball — History, p. 161)
  • Handball Federation of India established 1972; first National Championship at Rohtak (1972). India's first Asian Games participation 1982. Court is 40 m × 20 m; team has 16 players (7 playing: 6 court + 1 goalkeeper). (NCERT §Functional Rules, p. 161-163)
  • Handball: 3 steps with the ball, 3 seconds holding; durations by age — 8-12 yrs (2×20 min), 12-16 yrs (2×25 min), 16+ (2×30 min); overtime 2×5 min. Penalties — Yellow Card warning, 2-minute suspension, Red Card disqualification (= three 2-min suspensions). (NCERT §Playing the Ball / Punishments, p. 164-166)
  • Handball goal area = 6-metre line, free-throw line = 9-metre line (broken), 7-metre line for penalty; goal interior 2 m × 3 m. (NCERT §Specifications, p. 167)
  • Handball ball sizes — IHF Size 3 (men/male youth >16): 58-60 cm, 425-475 g; IHF Size 2 (women, male youth 12-16): 54-56 cm, 325-375 g; IHF Size 1 (female youth 8-14, male 8-12): 50-52 cm, 290-330 g. (NCERT §Table 5, p. 168)

2.2 Definitions to memorise

Term Definition Page
Team game Activity where individuals are organised in a team to compete with the opposing team under rules to win 129
Violation An infraction of the rules of the game (e.g., dribbling, out-of-bounds, time rules in basketball) 136
Personal foul Illegal personal contact between two opponents in basketball; >5 fouls → player excluded 137
Technical foul A non-contact foul of a behavioural nature (warning, disrespect, foul language, delay) 138
Rebound Gaining possession of the ball after a missed field goal or free throw 140
LBW Ball bowled hits the batsman first (not bat) and would have hit the wickets — Leg Before Wicket 147
Offside A player is offside if nearer to opponents' goal line than both the ball and the second-last opponent 155
7-metre throw Penalty throw in handball awarded for illegally demolishing a clear scoring chance 165
Throw-off Restart in handball given to team that wins toss; opponents 3 m away from ball 164
Twelfth player Reserve fielder in cricket used if a player is injured — cannot bat, bowl, keep wicket or captain 143
Free throw (basketball) Unopposed 1-point shot from 5.80 m line after a foul 132
Three-point shot Field goal scored from beyond the 6.75 m arc — worth 3 points 132
Crouch start (basketball stance) Low triple-threat stance for dribbling/shooting/passing 138
Zone defence Defenders cover an area rather than a specific player 140
Man-to-man defence Each defender marks a designated opponent 140
LBW Leg Before Wicket — ball would have hit stumps but for the pad 147
Yellow Card Caution shown to player for serious foul (football/handball) 158, 165
Red Card Sending-off; player permanently excluded from match 158, 166
Direct Free Kick Football restart from which a goal can be scored directly 156
Indirect Free Kick Football restart from which goal can only be scored after a touch 157
Penalty Kick Football kick from 11 m spot for foul inside penalty area 157
Throw-off Handball restart at centre after toss 164
FA Cup World's oldest football championship (1872, England) 150

2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember

  • Fig. 5.2 — Basketball court (28 m × 15 m) — locate centre circle (radius 1.80 m), 3-point line, no-charge semi-circle, restricted area. (p. 131)
  • Fig. 5.3 — Restricted area in basketball: 5.8 m × 4.9 m, no-charge semi-circle, neutral zone. (p. 132)
  • Fig. 5.4-5.5 — Basketball backboard: 182.9 × 121.9 cm; rim 3.05 m from ground; inner rectangle 61 × 45.7 cm. (p. 133)
  • Fig. 5.7 — Basketball player positions: 1-Point guard, 2-Shooting guard, 3-Small forward, 4-Power forward, 5-Centre. (p. 134)
  • Fig. 5.15 — Cricket fielding positions (slips, gully, point, cover, mid-off, mid-on, square leg, fine leg, third man, long off/on, deep square, deep mid-wicket). (p. 144)
  • Fig. 5.17 — Cricket pitch: 20.12 m × 3.05 m with bowling, popping, return creases. (p. 145)
  • Fig. 5.19 — Umpire signals: Bye, Leg-bye, Out, Short Run, Six, Four, Decision Change, Dead Ball. (p. 146)
  • Fig. 5.23 — Football ground with 90-120 m × 45-90 m, penalty spot 11 m, centre circle radius 9.15 m, penalty area 16.5 m × 40.3 m. (p. 151)
  • Fig. 5.29/5.30 — Handball court 40 m × 20 m: 6-m goal-area, 9-m free-throw (broken), 7-m penalty, 4-m goalkeeper restraining line. (p. 162)
  • Fig. 5.32 — Handball goalpost: 3 m × 2 m, posts 8 cm square cross-section, painted in two contrasting colours. (p. 168)

2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points

  • Basketball 3-point line distance vs free-throw distance — free throw is 5.80 m; 3-point shot is from outside the 3-point arc (don't confuse with the no-charge semi-circle 1.25 m).
  • Basketball Time Rules: 3-sec (in restricted area), 5-sec (holding), 8-sec (cross half-court), 24-sec (shot clock) — frequently swapped in distractors.
  • FIFA founded 1904 in Paris; Durand Cup 1888 in Shimla — second oldest tournament in the world (FA Cup 1872 is the oldest football championship).
  • Cricket ball weight 155.9-163 g is often confused with football ball weight 410-450 g.
  • Handball court (40 × 20 m), Basketball court (28 × 15 m), Football ground (90-120 × 45-90 m) — dimensions get swapped.
  • Cricket pitch length — 22 yds = 20.12 m, not 22 m. Width 3.05 m or 10 feet.
  • BFI established 1950 at Mumbai; first National Championship under BFI 1951 at Ludhiana — students often invert these.
  • Basketball ring inside diameter is 450–459 mm and rim is 3.05 m from ground — exactly equal to cricket pitch width by coincidence.
  • Basketball Men Size 7 = 749–780 mm / 567–650 g; Women Size 6 = 724–737 mm / 510–567 g. The "Size 5" used by mini basketball is NOT discussed.
  • Handball ball IHF Sizes 1/2/3 — Size 3 men (58–60 cm, 425–475 g); Size 2 women (54–56 cm, 325–375 g); Size 1 youth (50–52 cm, 290–330 g). Easy to mis-assign by gender.
  • Cricket has 11 ways of dismissal — not 10 — including "Hit the ball twice" and "Retired".
  • Football has 17 Laws (not 11 or 19); match = 2 × 45 min; max 3 official substitutes.
  • Handball durations by age: 8–12 yrs (2 × 20 min); 12–16 yrs (2 × 25 min); 16+ (2 × 30 min); overtime 2 × 5 min.
  • Handball penalties: Yellow Card warning → 2-min suspension → Red Card disqualification = three 2-min suspensions. NTA likes to drop a step.

2.5 Key concepts table — court dimensions, durations and historical anchors

# Sport / item NCERT specification Page
1 Basketball court 28 m × 15 m; 5 cm lines; 2 m free space; centre circle r = 1.80 m 131
2 Basketball free-throw line 5.80 m from end line; 3.60 m long 132
3 Basketball scoring 3 (beyond arc), 2 (inside), 1 (free throw) 132
4 Basketball backboard 1.80 × 1.05 m; rim 3.05 m high; ring ID 450–459 mm 133
5 Basketball Size 7 (M) 749–780 mm circumference; 567–650 g 134
6 Basketball Size 6 (W) 724–737 mm; 510–567 g 134
7 Basketball team 12 members; 5 on court; 4 × 10 min + 5-min OT 134–135
8 Basketball time violations 3-s, 5-s, 8-s, 24-s 136–137
9 Basketball fouls types Personal, Technical, Unsportsmanlike, Disqualifying 137–138
10 Basketball founder Dr James Naismith, Dec 1891, YMCA Springfield MA 129–130
11 FIBA Geneva, 1932 130
12 BFI Mumbai, 1950; 1st National 1951 Ludhiana 130–131
13 Cricket MCC formed 31 May 1787 142
14 ICC 30 Nov 1907 143
15 BCCI / India 1st Test 1928 / 1932 vs England 143
16 Cricket ball 155.9–163 g; 22.4–22.9 cm circumference 145
17 Cricket bat 38 in / 965 mm long, 4.25 in / 108 mm wide 145
18 Cricket pitch 22 yds / 20.12 m × 3.05 m 145
19 Cricket dismissals 11 ways (Bowled, Caught, Stumped, LBW, Run Out, Hit Wicket, Handled, Obstructing, Timed Out, Hit Ball Twice, Retired) 146–148
20 Football FIFA founded Paris, 1904 149
21 Durand Cup Shimla, 1888 — 2nd oldest in world 150
22 AIFF 1937; FIFA-affiliated 1948; AFC 1954 151
23 Football ground 90–120 m × 45–90 m 151
24 Football ball Circumference 68–70 cm; 410–450 g; 0.6–1.1 atm 152
25 Football laws 17 Laws; 2 × 45 min; ≤ 3 substitutes; goalpost 7.32 × 2.44 m 152–160
26 Handball governing body IHF, Copenhagen 1946 161
27 HFI 1972; 1st National Rohtak 1972 161
28 Handball court 40 m × 20 m; goal 2 × 3 m 162, 167
29 Handball team 16 squad; 7 on court (6 + 1 GK) 163
30 Handball ball balls Size 3 (M) 58–60 cm; Size 2 (W) 54–56 cm; Size 1 (Y) 50–52 cm 168

2.6 Extended discussion — why team games dominate the CUET stem-density curve

Team games occupy the highest stem-density slot in the CUET PE syllabus because every game contributes at least four exam-friendly fact families: a founder / federation cluster, a court/ground dimension cluster, an equipment specification cluster and a rule / time / scoring cluster. Multiply by seven sports and you have roughly 30 atomic facts ripe for direct-recall MCQs.

The founder/federation cluster is best memorised as a paired table. Naismith → Basketball → 1891 → FIBA 1932 → BFI 1950; cricket "16th-century England" → MCC 1787 → ICC 1907 → BCCI 1928; football FA 1863 → FIFA 1904 → AIFF 1937 → Durand Cup 1888; handball → IHF 1946 → HFI 1972. NCERT explicitly notes that Durand Cup is the second-oldest tournament in the world — the world's oldest football championship is the FA Cup (1872), mentioned in passing.

The court/ground dimension cluster has internal mnemonics. Handball court is double the size of basketball court in each dimension (40 × 20 m vs 28 × 15 m, give or take). Football is range-based (90–120 × 45–90 m) to accommodate older grounds. Cricket pitch is a single immutable strip (22 yds × 10 ft = 20.12 × 3.05 m). Basketball rim is at the same numerical height (3.05 m) as the cricket-pitch width — useful memory bridge.

The equipment specification cluster is where students most often slip. Basketball ball: Men Size 7 (≈ 8" diameter, 567–650 g); Women Size 6 slightly smaller and lighter. Football: 68–70 cm circumference, 410–450 g, 0.6–1.1 atm air. Cricket: 155.9–163 g, 22.4–22.9 cm circumference (smaller and heavier than the basketball/football). Handball: gendered sizes 1/2/3 with both circumference and weight bands. CUET examiners exploit cross-sport weight confusion by inserting a cricket ball weight under a "basketball" stem.

The rule/time/scoring cluster has its own subtle traps. Basketball: 3/5/8/24 second rules; 4 × 10 min game; 5 personal fouls = exclusion. Football: 17 Laws, 2 × 45 min, 3 substitutes, offside (level with 2nd-last opponent or last two = onside), yellow/red cards. Cricket: 11 ways of dismissal including the rare "Hit the ball twice", "Timed Out" and "Retired". Handball: 3-step rule + 3-second hold; Y-card → 2-min → R-card (= 3 × 2 min); 7-metre throw is the penalty; 9-metre line is the free-throw; 6-metre line is the goal area.

🎯 Practice MCQs

First 3 questions free · create a free account to unlock the rest — answers & explanations included, no payment needed

Q1. Basketball was invented by Dr. James Naismith in which year and at which institution?

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

Naismith invented Basketball in December 1891 at the YMCA Training School (now Springfield College), Springfield, Massachusetts. The first rules were only published on 15 January 1892, which makes (C) a trap.

Q2. According to the NCERT, the dimensions of a Basketball playing court are:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

The court is 28 m × 15 m with ≥2 m free space. Option (D) is the Handball court size — a common distractor.

Q3. Match List-I (Time Rule in Basketball) with List-II (Duration) and choose the correct option: List-I: (a) Holding the ball (b) Restricted area (c) Crossing into opponents' court (d) Shot clock List-II: (i) 3 seconds (ii) 5 seconds (iii) 8 seconds (iv) 24 seconds

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: A

Holding = 5 sec, Restricted area = 3 sec, Opponents' court = 8 sec, Shot clock = 24 sec — directly.

🔒 9 more practice MCQs

Create a free account to unlock every MCQ in this chapter — answers and explanations included. No payment needed.

Already registered? Just log in and they'll all appear here.

📊 Previous-Year Questions

Practise with real CUET Physical Education previous-year papers — every question solved, with the correct answer and a step-by-step explanation.

View solved CUET PYQ papers →

Ready to drill Physical Education?

Unlock all MCQs, chapter tests, mocks & PYQs for ₹199/year.

Get UniDrill Pro