It is a free ball
In football, the offside rule is when a player is in the opponent's half of the field and closer to the opponent's goal line than both the ball and the second-to-last defender when the ball is played to them. This results in an offside offense and a free kick for the opposing team.
no if you are good enough you dont some people can get a submission from anywhere
Basically, to serve a tennis ball, you need to toss the ball high enough and in front of you (i.e., toward the net), so that your racquet will make contact with the ball at some point, and so that most of your weight is "behind" the ball, in order to get the most out of the racquet's momentum when it strikes the ball. The server always stands in the half of the court diagonally from his/her opponent's half of the court; the halves are referred to as the "deuce" (right half) and "ad" (left half) sides. At the end of a given point, each player moves to the other half, and the process is repeated until the game is won.
In table tennis (ping pong) as long you hit the ball onto your opponent's half of the table, the ball is in play and must be returned or the point is lost.
You make the ball green then put the half orange on it then you inflate it and put it in the whole green. Hope I Helped You :)
You make the ball green then put the half orange on it then you inflate it and put it in the whole green. Hope I Helped You :)
You make the ball green then put the half orange on it then you inflate it and put it in the whole green. Hope I Helped You :)
No. Merely returning to an onside position is not enough. Once a player is determined to be offside two things must happen to fix it: 1. That player must get back to an onside position ...and... 2. a team-mate must touch the ball, an opponent must control the ball, or the ball must leave play.
The wrestler was able to subdue his opponent by applying a half-nelson hold.
a hemisphere.
It depends.The crucial test for whether a player wins a point after volleying the ball is ... was the ball moving towards, or away from, the playing surface?Let me explain with a question and answer ...If I hit a ball to my opponent, and it doesn't hit their half of the playing surface (table) because it's a bad shot ... but they hit the ball anyway, who gets the point?Well, it depends ...If your opponent hits/volleys the ball whilst it's still travelling over the playing surface, you win the point.But if it's already passed over the playing surface and it's obviously not going hit the table, your opponent wins the point.In other words, if there's a chance that the ball might hit the table because it's still travelling towards it, your opponent would lose the point if he prevented it from doing so by hitting/volleying it ...But ...If the ball has already passed over the table and/or is travelling away from the table, your opponent wins the point whether he hits/volleys it or not.
The game played with a half inch ball is ROULETTE