Foot Fault
When serving a legal serve in tennis, you must stand behind the baseline. The line you must be behind is called the baseline.
A baseline player is a tennis player who rarely goes to the net, if at all, and sticks to the back of the court at the baseline rather than employing the serve-and-volley or chip-and-charge techniques.
In doubles tennis matches, the serving rules require the server to stand behind the baseline and alternate serving between the two teams. The server must serve diagonally across the court to the opponent's service box. The server must also wait for the receiver to be ready before serving. If the server commits a fault, they get a second serve. If they fault again, it results in a double fault and the point goes to the opposing team.
Elena Dementieva was a tennis player from Russia. She was known to play an offensive style of tennis, usually staying near the baseline. She used her forehand mostly.
It's where you stand when you serve. Behind the baseline in one of the four corners of the court. Best way I can say it.
A baseliner is a tennis player who seldom moves towards the net, preferring to play near the baseline.
No, when serving in tennis, the server's foot must not touch the baseline until after the ball has been struck. The server must keep both feet behind the baseline during the serve. If any part of the foot touches the baseline before hitting the ball, it results in a foot fault, and the serve is considered illegal.
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
Milos Raonic...with a serving speed of 225km/h
The baseline
In USTA doubles tennis matches, the server must stand behind the baseline and alternate serving between the two teams. The serve must be hit diagonally across the court and land in the service box on the opposite side. The server must also call out the score before serving.
From one baseline to the other, a tennis court is 78 feet long exactly (23. 78 meters). In terms of width, it is exactly 36 feet wide (10. 97 meters).