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Legal Service in Table Tennis

One aspect of table tennis enlivens people more than any other. Otherwise, you should also read about this delicate table tennis serve “ghost serve”! Very interesting! Whether or not the referee formally warns you, the referee can informally alert you between gatherings that your serve may be wrong and that it may be punished if it does not improve. Here are the videos showing the illegal service at an amateur level. How are you feeling? Comment below to show your opinion! This means that the ball must be both above the level of the playing surface and behind the finish line throughout your service action. To serve legally, you must keep the ball behind the finish line and above the height of the table. Your opponent must be able to see the ball at all times. Essentially, this rule made it illegal for the server to hide the ball at any time during the service movement. Assuming the receiver is in a conventional location, he should be able to see the ball throughout the service action. One way to deal with this problem is to learn “code 15 and fair play etiquette in table tennis” here.

And share with your teammate or opponent! This is the unwritten rule, but every player must know how to have a fair game! In this blog post, I will be very clear about the service rules and encourage you to follow these rules. I`ve even made some videos that will help you see exactly what you need to do to serve legally. I have bolded the parts of Act 2.6.2 and 2.6.3 that are interesting here, which deal with the fact that the ball is allowed to fall before it can be hit. The diagram opposite illustrates this type of illegal service, where the ball was hit while it was still rising. Amateur table tennis players love illegal services! Sad but true! On each side of the table, two points are served alternately at the same time. EXCEPTION: After a 10-10 tie (“deuce”), the service changes at any time. Can I lose on a table tennis serve? Yes! There is no separate rule for serving on Game Point. In this video, the 2 players try to throw the ball towards the body. They also tried to hide the ball. This is forbidden in table tennis.

Their services are not legal. This means that if a player is unable to comply with any part of the service rule due to a physical disability, the referee may, at his or her discretion, decide what constitutes an acceptable service. As a result, the Service Regulations were amended several times in the 1930s and 1940s to prevent this type of service. As soon as you throw the ball, the point begins. So if you don`t hit it or miss the table, you lose the point. That`s why you need to make sure you`re 100% ready before you throw the ball. The last common illegal service is in table service. The ball is inside the table, which is not legal. This tip will help to make a super short service. Since the server has the advantage of being the initial attacker, turning the ball over and keeping it in play for its opponent often involves a defensive effort to minimize the opponent`s advantage. This may involve a simple abandonment to put the racquet on the ball before it passes. If a controlled return of service is possible, a hard ground strike can be performed on either side of the opponent`s baseline.

If the server storms the net immediately after serving, the returner has several options: flip the ball into the server`s feet not far behind the net and force him to hit a half-volley (which is aggressively difficult to do); Hit the ball over the head of the rushing server; or hit a loud pass deep on the net, too far left or right for the server to hit. According to the TTR system used during the 2019 ITTF Grand Final, an illegal service is one where the server throws the ball at himself at an angle of more than 30 degrees. This angle is measured from the moment the ball leaves the hand until it reaches its apogee. If you throw the ball up and touch the ball when it falls, you will find that you can create more rotation, speed, variation, and deception. So there is a real incentive to serve legally. You can develop much stronger services! When they try to serve legally, their services become much weaker. Remember that the referee does not have to warn a player before correcting a mistake. This only happens if the arbitrator has doubts about the legality of the service.

If the referee is sure that the service is an error, he must immediately name an error. This corresponds to Law 2.6.6.3, which states that platform posture and point posture are closed postures. For a long time, the use of an open attitude to serve was considered a sign of a beginner in tennis. Things have changed in recent years. At the elite level, Venus Williams had used a semi-open posture in the past to serve (she has reverted to a traditional closed posture and currently remains on the old path). In addition to Venus, Nikola Mektic[7] and Viktor Troicki[8] both abandoned the closed posture to use an open posture to serve. In a serve, the receiver must bounce the ball before attempting to hit it. In the extremely rare event that the racket or receiver`s body touches a legally delivered ball before it bounces off, the point is immediately awarded to the server. [4] If the ball has already hit the net, a let is called.

The part they find the hardest is changing the timing of their swing on the serve. With their illegal serve, they essentially release the ball and swing instantly. Hi Craig, this is completely legal. 🙂 Some players hate it. But throwing the ball to the ground, on the table, on the racket before serving is allowed. ERT cheers on serve allows you to move along the table and throw the ball at the same time to gain an angle Who is it when a dish hits the ball and it lands on the other side of the table, but bounces off the player`s side without the opponent hitting his racket? You must complain to the referee or refuse to continue playing if the opponent makes this illegal service. The hidden service was previously allowed, but ITTF changed the rule. The best way to counter this illegal service is to ask the player or referee to stop hiding the serve.

If you find yourself in this situation, stay calm. Focus on the game. Ask the referee and win the point. If you do, the opponent knows that his trick will not work and stops doing these stupid illegal services. I thought the original service should remove the end of recipients before two bounces to be legal. I also don`t see a rule that says the receiver must let the ball touch his field before returning it. Don`t you also see in the rules, is it illegal to throw your serve over the table if you hit the ball according to the rules? Do not accept the point and question the arbitrator on this matter. Ask the waiter to place the ball outside the table.

However, the referee will only give you a warning during a match. So, if any of your following services in this game are of dubious legality, for the same or a different reason. Your opponent understands the point. How do you serve the ball in table tennis? Hold the ball in the palm of your open hand, behind your end of the table. Throw at least 6″ straight up and hit it on the way down. It has to hit your side of the table, then the other side. NOTE: As soon as the ball leaves the server`s hand, it is in play and therefore counts as the receiver`s point if the ball is missed or hit incorrectly. In professional and amateur tennis, the reverse slice service is rarely used, except as a novelty. Since the word is defined backwards, one must meet the opposite side and opposite to the path of the struck disc. [clarification needed] I haven`t seen a rule about it yet, but someone I`ve played with has tried to tell me that there is a maximum distance from the end of the table to hit a serve for it to be legal. Does anyone know where he is referring to this so-called rule? Sometimes I`m 15 feet from the table when I`m serving. This also means that it is technically legal for the server to serve around the net and not above, just like for singles.

In practice, it is practically impossible to achieve this feat, so I doubt there is ever a reason for an argument! The main purpose of this rule is to ensure that the ball is visible to your opponent at all times.