ANOTHER question, yes, I have lots of questions xD Haha. Um, how do you signal to your opponent that your not ready? Do you raise your hand? If they serve, do they reserve? And how does "let" work?
Ya, you might have seen some ppl do this, they look down and raise their hands. but if they do serve, and your not ready, dont touch the shuttle cuz if you do thats a sign that you were ready (even though you werent)
to signify your not ready i keep my head down and put my hand up that seems to be the general consenses but be aware that they might serve as soon as you stick your head up which could work to your disadvantage. if they serve when your not ready then you say so but you have to actually be not ready and it has to show and they will reserve it. you play a "let" when another shuttle lands on your court you have to call it though, when you strike the shuttle it hits the net rolls over but gets caught on you ropponents side before they have a chance to hit it, or when another player comes onto your court in the middle of a match. during those situations you play a let which means that the person who served to start the point will serve it again as he did before. There are other circumstances too but those are stated in the rules.
Not any more. The racquet head only has to be pointing downwards under the new laws. The shuttle has to be below your waist at the time of contact.
Some more questions, haha xD Can my racket go over the net? In doubles, the partner who isn't serving, can he/she stand in between the court? And... Can we be out of the court?
can you use 2 rackets at the same time, one in each hand? Or can you switch arms in the middle of the game, like you are playing with your left, and then you do some prince of tennis drama move and you toss the racket to your right arm and play with your right arm?
Last I checked there was also a rule saying that if the shuttle had hit the net and had clearly started to fall back down the net on your opponents side then that was the end of the point and so you would be able to touch the net before the shuttle hit the ground, last I checked anyway.
your racquet can only go over the net when you follow through but you have to have made contact with the shuttle on you rside of the net first else its a fault and you lose the point. the person who is not serving is allowed to stand anywhere on the court they can straddle the center line of they want but they cannot obstruct the view of the shuttle from the opponents. be out of the court well yes you can but obviously the has problems, if you dive for a shot and roll off the court then yeah nothing against that but then if its singles then the court is open and you have to recover fast if its doubles your partner would be there to cover it.
i havnt heard about that one before, sounds a lil weird that if you net roll it and its going down then the rally is over since it is possible for you opponent to get it back.
you cant use 2 racquets at the same time, you can however switch arms theres no rule about switching the racquet between your hands in a match wheather its benifical to you though well that all depends on how good both your hands are.
you have to make contact with the shuttle on your side of the net, then your racquet can brifley follow through over the net.
This is the one I was talking about: 15. SHUTTLE NOT IN PLAY A shuttle is not in play when: 15.2 it strikes the net or post and starts to fall towards the surface of the court on the striker’s side of the net;
that makes sense then, from what you wrote earlier it confused me cause it didnt state that your opponent struck the shuttle last sounded like it was the other player that sruck it. Just a confusion with what you wrote earlier.
I have a question about "lets" again, haha xD When should you call let? Would you still be able to call it after... A few seconds to your advantage?
as soon as there something wrong you to call a let for example, if you werent ready but they served it to you and the service was either short or long, you should be honest enough to call it a let. tho sometimes i like to take that advantage. if another shuttle lands inside your court immediately a let should be. even if your shot was a winning point. because it might have distracted the players.