Although there are different times when the ball touches the top of the net, the call is all the same. During a serve, hit, pass, set, or any other motion, if the ball hits the top of the net and rolls over to the opposing side, there is no whistle and the play is playable. If the ball hits the top and doesnt reach the other side, the point goes to the opposing team and they get a chance to serve.
If the ball hits anything except the net and goes in, it is considered out. If the ball hhits the top of the net and drops in, it is considered good.
Even of the ball hits the top of the net, if it goes over, it is still in play.
'Net' is a term referring only to serves in tennis. If your ball hits the net on a serve and still lands within the correct service box, your opponent calls 'net', which means you are allowed to take your serve over. This applies to both first or second serves. If you continuously get 'net's, you would basically be serving for forever. However, if your serve hits the net and bounces anywhere outside of the correct service box, it is considered out. Once again, 'net' is only called during serves. During the actual rally, the net plays no real role. If it hits the net and goes in, it's in. If it hits the net and goes out, it's out.
That is called a let. A server is allowed to retake that serve without penalty. A server may serve an unlimited number of lets during a point without being penalized.
A let is a service where the ball touches the net and lands in the correct service court of the opponent. The service is invalid and done over but there is no penalty. A player may serve an unlimited number of lets without penalty. A service that touches the net and lands in the server's court is called a fault.
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.
In a volleyball game, while a rally is going on the team that has possession of the ball has a maximum of three hits to get the ball over the net. The most common form of this is a bump then a set then a spike. The bump is when you close your arms and pass the ball to your setter and at that time the setter sets the ball with his fingers to somebody who is ready to spike the ball to hit the ground on the other side. The spike is also known as a kill. These three ways of hitting the ball do not have to be used in that order, that is just the most common way.
No, that is called a setter dump
-All balls and serves have to get over the net if you want it to count as a point for your team. If it doesn't, it's a point for the other team. -If you hands touch the net, either when blocking or hitting, it's an automatic point for the other team. -If the ball touches the antenna on the net, then it's automatically out of bounds, point for the other team. If you were to be playing club volleyball then your fingers can't touch the top of the net or the bottom.
It should be with your front feet and not the top as the ball will go sailing over the net.
crash the ball on top while above the net
The volleyball may touch the net while crossing over it. A volleyball driven into the net may be played within the limits of the 3 team hits, so long as it indeed remains in play (typically: stays in-bounds and off the ground). If the ball rips the net or tears it down the rally must be replayed.