A serve that is so well hit that returner cannot even touch is called an ace
Ace serve. Often just past the serve line and in the crack.
Loss of serve
the foot fault, bad serve, and the handout
This is called an "out." The server loses their serve and it is now their opponents turn to serve.
Drive serve: very hard and low serve.Z-serve: Bounces of the front wall and one side wall before landing in the receiving area at an angle.Lob serve: comes in high off the wall and is difficult to play if hit properly.
When serving, this is called a "drive serve."
A dropped racquetball will not return to its original position because it is a requirement in the USRA Guidelines that if the racquetball is dropped from 100 inches at a temperature of 70-74 degrees Fahrenheit it must only bounce 68-72 inches. All official racquetballs are made to do this, which is why it won't bounce back to where it was at first.
In racquetball, the player who begins with the serve must first bounce the ball off the floor before hitting the front wall. The ball may not touch the back wall and can only touch one of the side walls before the other player returns the serve. If the ball does bounce in these restricted areas, it is considered to be a fault. The players continue to return passes to each other by first hitting the ball to the front wall before allowing the ball to hit the floor. Unlike in the initial serve, the ball may hit any of the walls once the serve is successfully in play.
Only the server can score points in racquetball. If the receiver hits the ball against the front wall and the server cannot get to it in time, it is the receivers turn to serve. They do not get a point for this.
What you need for racquetball is Goggles (to protect eye vision) A specialized Racquetball Racquet Racquetball Gloves A couple of Racquetball Balls And A partner A place to play
Chuck Leve has written: 'Inside racquetball' -- subject(s): Racquetball 'Inside racquetball' -- subject(s): Racquetball
Racquetball