For the beginning of every point, the server has two chances to get a serve in the correct service box. If on the first serve the ball is called a fault, then it is second serve. If on the second serve there is a let, then it is still the second serve, and the server may redo the serve.
service line
No. The interior lines (half-lines) on tennis courts determine the service court, into which the serve must be made. An ACE is any legal serve that is not successfully returned by the opponent, winning the point for the server.
The service box in racquetball begins 15 ft away from the front wall and ends 20 ft from the front wall (the exact middle of the court). The service must land beyond this 20 ft line but before the back wall (40 ft).
No, you CANT step over the serving line when you serve in volleyball. The "ref" on the side of the court, on the stand, will call it, and give a point to the opposing team. Usually the line judge should call it....
Behind the out-of-bounds line. how far back from the line depends on what type of serve you are doing, if you are doing a jump serve you'll probably stand back a ways, if you are doing an overhand serve it depends on how strong of a server you are or how experience you are.
When the server either exceeds the time allotted after Referee #1 blows his service whistle or the server touches the boundary line with a foot at the moment of contact of their hand and the ball. The receiving team receives a point and service.
Fault (in tennis) describes a invalid serve. It is a fault if the serve fails to land in the receiver's service court; if the serve is made beyond the baseline or the wrong side of the center mark on the court. It also applies if the server misses the ball completely on a serve.There is also Double fault which is two failed attempts in which the opponent receives the point.And last there is a Foot Fault which is when the severs foot enters the court before the ball contacts the racket. It also applies if the servers foot is on the wrong side of the center mark or the server is running or walking during the serve.
it is a foot fault when any part of each foot touches or crosses the base line before or during the time period when the raquet makes contact with the ball
I have played Volley Ball for three years on varsity. When you serve this ball, it means that your team has possesion of the ball. you stand behind the service line and you wither do a over-hand or under-hand service. the ball goes over to the other team. they will then get a chance to pump the ball to the setter. and the setter will set the ball to one of the opposite hitters or back row attackers to get a point on the other team. . . . . . . . . . . hope this helped =)
a server serves from the back right hand corner behind the boundary line. [[(if you pass the boundary line, the serve will not count and its automatic ball for the other team.)]] You have to be behind the boundary line but you can be anywhere behind the line inside the court.
In professional tennis, there are line judges for that. In non-professional tennis, however, a server can call his or her own serve out. Most do not because it is a point against them, even though the opponent thought the serve was in.