As far as I know there's a rule that states that while serving, some part of both the feet of the server must remain in contact with the surface of the court in a stationary position until the serve is delivered. Does this mean that the server can, say, stand on his toes and then deliver the service? I did that during a match, and it was called to be a fault...
I looked this up on the www.internationalbadminton.org website:9.1.3 some part of both feet of the server and the receiver shall remain in contact with the surface of the court in a stationary position from the start of the service (Law 9.2) until the service is delivered (Law 9.3); I stand on my tip toes as do a lot of other people - as far as I know so long as both feet are touching (and in the service court) then its OK. Perhaps they thought you lifted a foot?
I was about the quote 9.1.3 too. It says "some part of both feet........shall remain in contact with the surface of the court", so if you are tip-toeing, it is not a fault.
no...the referee didn't think I lifted a foot - I showed him, after the match, what I had done and he said it was a fault guess he was wrong then...
Difficult to believe that a ref would commit such an error since lifting one or both heels off the ground is very common for serving (particularly in doubles). Note that neither of your feet can slide from their initial position during the course of the serve (since some part of each foot must remain in contact in a stationary position). Is is possible that one (or both) of your feet moved from their initial position?
does the part of the foot off the ground (the heel) also have to remain in a stationary position? If thats the case, then the fault may have been rightly called since I could have moved my foot slightly upwards while serving...
The way I am reading (interpreting) 9.1.3, I would not think raising the heels during the execution of the serve would constitute a fault. Anyone else have a take on this?
I agree. The rule states that some part of both feet must be in contact with the court. I'm no expert, but from reading the rule unless your toes are not part of your feet , raising your heels should be fine.