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Yes and no. You cannot usually hit a tennis ball that is not on your side, but if the ball bounces on your side first and, when it bounces, spins back to the opponent's side of the court, you may hit it before it bounces again.
You!
The ball bounces back and forth, like an echo.
On hard court the ball bounces to the pace of your opponent. But on grass courts the ball bounces slower. On a clay court you tend to slide more therefore making it a little harder to recover.
because the wet pitch makes the ball slow and wet by:ali
the umpire runs across the court and looks at the players to check were the ball is and then puts it on a tally then he goes to the referee and sings cher songs
If the ball is stopped on the back stick, the umpire should give a free-hit to the opposing team.
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.
In tennis, the main umpire is called the chair umpire (they sit in a chair high above the court so they can see the entire court well). In major tournaments, there are usually also line judges who stand behind each line on the court. The line judge calls when a ball is out, and the chair umpire may overrule any line judge's call. The umpire also calls the score after every point.
A ball bounces because of the conservation of energy. When a ball is dropped, it gains potential energy. When it hits the ground, this energy is converted into kinetic energy, causing the ball to bounce back up until all the energy is dissipated.
Your question is worded weird but, if the court is made of clay, the ball would bounce better than a dirt court, so it affects how well the ball bounces
Only if you got the ball for tree-fitty.