To determine if a serve hits the net, you can watch for the ball's trajectory as it crosses the net. If the ball touches the net and then goes over into the correct service box, it is considered a let serve and is typically replayed. If it hits the net and does not clear it, it is a fault. Observers often rely on visual cues and sometimes the sound of the ball hitting the net to make this judgment.
Let serve is where it hits net but still lands in play and you get to re-take the serve. A net serve is where it hits the net and doesn't go over all lands out of play.
If the ball hits the net on the serve during a game of ping pong, it is considered a let and the serve is replayed.
If it hits the net and goes into the service box, you get one re-serve (as opposed to getting two re-serves if you do that on your first serve). If it hits the net and does not land in the service box, then it is a double fault.
Because a serve hits the net.
If the birdie hits the net on the serve but lands past the short service line, it is considered a legal serve and the point continues. The serve is not replayed, as long as it passes the net and lands in the correct service court. However, if it does not clear the net or lands in the wrong service area, it would be a fault.
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If you are playing a point and you hit a shot that hits the next and lands on your opponent's side it's your point. If you are serving and the ball hits the next and goes into the service box it's a let and you take another serve for the serve that just hit the net. If your serve hits the net and lands out of the service box it is a fault.
Let is when the ball goes over the net and lands inside the box but hits the net going over, Let is only on a serve. Net is when the ball hits the net and fails to go get over the net.
A let is when the server serves a ball and it hits the top of the net and still goes in the correct service box. The server gets to redo that service. For example if the person serves their second serve and it hits the net and still goes in it is a let, and they get to serve again on their second serve.
It is called a "let" in tennis when the ball hits the net because "Filet" is the French word for net and the game originated in France.
In badminton, if a player's serve hits the net but still crosses over into the correct service area, it is considered a let serve and is not a fault; the player gets to serve again. However, if the shuttle fails to cross the net entirely, it is a fault, and the player loses their serve. In the case of a fault, the player does not get another chance to serve.
Do you mean "let"? If so, a let is when a serve touches/nicks the net AND lands in on a player's serve. People call "let" so the server knows their serve hit the net. If a server hits a let, they get to redo their serve.