Yes, as long as it touches a line (even the outside of the center line) it is considered in.
-Te lol
Because a serve hits the net.
Andy roddick usa greg rusetski eng
Do you mean "let"? If so, a let is when a serve touches/nicks the net AND lands in on a player's serve. People call "let" so the server knows their serve hit the net. If a server hits a let, they get to redo their serve.
Yes, in tennis, a serve that hits the net and lands in the correct service box is considered a let and the player gets another chance to serve without penalty.
Let's are extremely rare in table tennis and you really shouldn't worry about it But just for the beneficial feeling of helping somebody I'm pretty sure there are infanite Just like tennis>
Yes... each time the ball hits the net, on serve, and hits the other side, it is a let.
A Let It is called a "Let".
It is called a letThe server gets to reserve the serve that was a let
In tennis, the game begins with a serve, where one player hits the ball to start the point. The server must hit the ball into the opponent's service box on the other side of the net to start the rally.
If it hits the net and goes into the service box, you get one re-serve (as opposed to getting two re-serves if you do that on your first serve). If it hits the net and does not land in the service box, then it is a double fault.
A net ball is on any shot that it goes in the net. A let ball is when you are serving and it hits the net but the ball goes in therefore re-serving.
its the servers point. if the ball hits anything and it isn't a let, its automatically your point. by tennis law, the ball has to bounce once before any return. so, its not a let, and it hit the enemy's net player, its your point.