Yes, one has to stand on a ladder type thing and referee to serve the ball. The other has to stand on the opposite side of the court and judge if the ball goes in or out.
Yes. One referee. Two line judges.
There are usually 2 referees in a volleyball game. One is on the stand and one is on the floor.
there are 2 refs and 2 line watchers
Volleyball has two referees, one to handle ball calls, and one to handle substitutions and timeouts. Also the first ref watches the offensive side while the second ref watches the defensive side.
The games stops for a short time and the referees go to talk about the call and agree on who's right and who's wrong.
In volleyball, a double is when a player contacts the ball twice in a row during a single play. Referees call a double by blowing their whistle and signaling with their hands that a double contact violation has occurred.
that would not work because there are three timeouts to a team
you have to call the balls that hit the line or go out when the ref can't see
Officials are usually referred to as referees, however generally there is one lead referee and one or two umpires, depending on whether there is a two or three person crew. In the NBA, the lead official is called the crew chief and the other two officials are "referees
Beach volleyball with 2 people and indoor volleyball with a team of 6 on the court.
Five seconds. But not very many referees go by this rule in levels such as high school and middle school volleyball.
Generally 3. Referee, and two Assistant Referees. However in higher standards there are sometimes 4. Referee, two Assistant Referees and a 4th Official. In European game, and also International matches, there can be up to 6. Referee, two Assistant Referees, 4th Official and then 2 officials who stand on the goal line.