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In the simplest terms, striking is hitting the ball.
it is the striking batsman who ran
a baseline player, literally keeps the ball at the baseline. he focuses on keeping hr depth of the ball very deep into the court, near the baseline. this can be a good tactic, or a very bad one.. depending on the situation. and serve and volley, once again literally: serves and sprints to the net. they make the serve so explosive in force, that when they find themselves done with the serving motion, theyre halfway into the court, and have no choice but to play at the net. hope this helped
The player who is serving must stand behind the baseline, between the center mark and the sideline. A foot fault takes place when your foot touches the ground on - or forward of - the service line before you strike the ball.
No, as long as your feet don't cross the baseline, your fine. *Note- do not catch the ball with your racket if you decide not to hit your toss. If it touches the racket, it counts as a serve.
The legal serve where the opponent fails to touch the tennis ball is called 'ACE'.
As long as the ball doesn't touch the ground and the opposing player hits it back, then it is considered in.
In American college ball and the NBA, you may run the baseline after a made shot or free throw. If the throw in is due to something other than a made shot or free throw, you may not run the baseline when attempting to throw the ball in.
Striking the ball with the foot.
Yes
the purpose is to change the ball's speed
home run