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I Need Help I need Someone who can tell me exactly how to score in tennis without being confusing?

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because im playing tennis and i need to know how to keep score im tring to get good before the seasons start help meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee plaeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

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  1. it starts out 0-0

    if you win one game(which means maybe you get the ball past the person)

    the winning person gets 15 points

    then on to 30

    then 40

    and when that person reaches 50 they put a point on the bigger scoresheet

    so if someone gets to 50 its 1-0\

    first person to 6 wins

    im assuming ur in high school so you haveta win two matches

    (haveta win like 6-0 6-0)

    if the margin is within two, you have to play on until someone pulls away to two and that person wins


  2. In the scoring, there are points, games, sets and matches.

    Matches are won by getting "best of" sets. If you play "best of three" (usually), then you must win 2 of the three sets. In grand slams and some other tournaments, men may play best of five matches, which can go to 3, 4, or 5 sets.

    To win a set, you must win 6 games. Thus, a set score could be 6-4, 6-3, 6-2, 6-1, or 6-0. You must win by two games, i.e. you cannot win 6-5. Thus, if your opponent has won 5 games, you can only win 7-5.

    If both players reach 6 games, then a tiebreak may be played. First one player serves once. Then the opponent serves twice. Then the first player serves twice. They alternate, serving twice until one of the players gets 7 points and is ahead of the opponent by at least 2 points. Tiebreak points may go far until one of the players wins by 2 (e.g. 18-16 points in the tiebreak is not unheard of). In all the grand slams except the US Open, the 3rd set of a women's match or the 5th set of a men's match is determined by winning two games over the opponent instead of a tiebreaker. The US Open uses a tiebreaker in the 3rd and 5th sets of the women's and men's matches, respectively.

    A tiebreak score is reported as 7-6 (#) and the # is the number of points won by the player who LOST the set. For example, if the tiebreak was won 7-3, then that set is scored as 7-6 (3), where it is implied that the winner got 7 points in the tiebreak. If the tiebreak was won 10-8, then that set is cored as 7-6 (8), where it is implied that the winner got 10 points in the tiebreak.

    Now, for points. A point is won by hitting a winner or your opponent hitting an unforced error. A winner is an unreturnable shot. An unforced error is a shot that hits outside the lines. A game is started a 0-0. 0 is called "luv" in tennis. If the serving player then wins a point, the score is 15-0 (fifteen, luv). If the receiving player wins it, the score is 0-15 (luv, fifteen). Next point won goes to 30. After that, it goes to 40. Winning a point after you're at 40 gives you the game with one important exception: if your opponent also is at 40, you're at deuce. So, if the score is 40-30, 40-15, or 40-0 and the person with the 40 gets the next point, they win the game. If the score is 40-40 (deuce), then the person who wins the next point will get a designation of AD. The score will then be 40-40, advantage (name of the player who won the point). If that player wins the next point, they've won the game. If they lose the point, it goes back to straight deuce. Players can go back and forth between deuce and advantage to either player many times (such games can go on for many minutes, in fact), until a player with advantage wins the next point and thus wins the game.

    Other points about mechanics: double faulting on the serve gives the receiver the point. Hitting the net on a serve with the ball falling in the proper area is a "let," it is not counted as a fault but it must be served again.

  3. A tennis match is composed of sets. The winner of a specified number of sets (typically two or three) wins the match. A set consists of a number of games (typically at least six), which in turn consist of points.

    Scoring Each Game

    A game consists of a sequence of points played with the same player serving, and is won by the first player to have won at least four points and at least two points more than their opponent. The half of the court used for service alternates between sides, beginning with the right-hand half, known as the deuce court, and continuing with the left-hand side, known as the advantage court.'

    As simple as this scoring appears, the running score of each game is described in a manner peculiar to tennis: scores of zero to three points are described as "love" (or "zero"), "fifteen," "thirty," and "forty," respectively. The origins of the fifteen, thirty, forty scores are believed to have medieval and French roots. It is possible a clock face was used on court, with a quarter move of the hand to indicate a score of fifteen, thirty, and forty-five. When the hand moved to sixty, the game was over. Another explanation is that the scoring system was copied from the game sphairistike, which was played by British officers in India during the 19th century. That game's scoring system was based on the different gun calibres of the British naval ships. When firing a salute, the ships first fired their 15-pound guns on the main deck, followed by the 30-pound guns of the middle deck, and finally by the 40-pound lower gun deck.[1]

    The origin of the use of "love" for zero is also disputed; it is possible that it derives from the French word for an egg (l‘oeuf) because an egg looks like the number zero. "Love" is also said to possibly derive from "l'heure" or "the hour" in French. When stating the score, the server's score is stated first. If the server (or the umpire) announces the score as "thirty-love," for example, it means that the server has won two points and the receiver none.

    If each player has won three points, the score is described as "deuce" rather than "forty-all". From this point on, whenever the score is tied, it is described as "deuce" regardless of how many points have been played. The player who wins the next point after deuce is said to have the advantage. If the player with advantage loses the next point, the score is again deuce, since the score is tied. If the player with the advantage wins the next point, that player has won the game, since the player now leads by two points. When the server is the player with the advantage, the score is stated by him before the next point as "advantage in." When the server's opponent has the advantage, the server states the score as "advantage out." These phrases are sometimes shortened to "ad in" and "ad out."

    Note that a score of "thirty-all" is functionally equivalent to "deuce", and "forty-thirty" is equivalent to "advantage". These equivalences are not used in a professional match where the umpire states the score. A score of "thirty-all" means that the players have won exactly two points each, while a score of "deuce" means that the players have won at least three points each.

    The current point score is announced orally before each point by the umpire, or by the server if there is no umpire.

    Scoring a set

    A set consists of a sequence of games played with service alternating between games, ending when the count of games won meets certain criteria. The players also swap ends of the court after each odd-numbered game. The score of games within a set is counted in the ordinary manner, except that a score of zero games is read as "love". The score is written using digits separated by a dash. The score is announced by the umpire or server at the start of each game.

    In doubles, service alternates between the teams. One player serves for an entire service game, with that player's partner serving for the entirety of the team's next service game. In addition, players of the receiving team receive the serve on alternating points.

    Traditionally, the set is won by the first player to have won at least six games and at least two games more than his or her opponent. More commonly, when the score is tied at 6-6 (each player having won six games), a special tiebreaker game is played. The winner of the tiebreak wins the set by a score of 7-6. The tiebreak is sometimes not employed for the final set of a match, so that the deciding set must be played until one player or team has won two more games than the opponent. This is true in three of the four major tennis championships, all except the United States Open where a tiebreak is played even in the deciding set (fifth set for the men, third set for the women) at 6-6. A tiebreak is not played in the deciding set in the other three majors - the Australian Open, the French Open, and Wimbledon.

    Scoring a tiebreak game

    At a score of 6-6, a set is often determined by one more game called a "seven point tiebreak." Points are counted using ordinary numbering. The set is decided by the player who wins at least seven points in the tiebreak but also has two points more than his opponent. For example, if the score is 6 points to 5 points and the player with 6 points wins the next point, he wins the tiebreak and the set. If the player with 5 points wins the point, the tiebreak continues and cannot be won on the next point, since no player will be two points better than his opponent. Since only one more game is played to determine the winner of the set, the score of the set is always 7-6 (or 6-7). Sometimes the tiebreak points are also included, for example 7-6 (7-4). Another way of listing the score of the tiebreak is to just list the loser's points. For example, if the score is listed as 7-6 (8), the tiebreak score was 10-8 (since 8 is the loser's points, and the winner must win by two points).

    The player who would normally be serving after 6-6 is the one to serve first in the tiebreak, and the tiebreak is considered a service game for this player. The server begins his service from the deuce court and serves one point. After the first point, the serve changes to the first server's opponent. Each player then serves two consecutive points for the remainder of the tiebreak. Furthermore, the first of each two-point service starts from the server's advantage court and ends in the deuce court. After every six points, the players switch ends of the court. At the end of the tiebreak, the players switch ends of the court again, since the set score is always odd (13 games).

    History of the tiebreak

    The tiebreak was invented by James Van Alen in 1965 after an earlier, unsuccessful attempt to speed up the game by the use of his so-called Van Alen Streamlined Scoring System (VASSS). For two years before the Open Era, in 1955 and 1956, the United States Pro Championship in Cleveland, Ohio was played by VASSS rules. The scoring was the same as that in table tennis, with sets played to 21 points and players alternating 5 services, with no second service. The rules were partially created in order to limit the effectiveness of the powerful service of the reigning professional champion, Pancho Gonzales. Even with the new rules, however, Gonzales beat Pancho Segura in the finals of both tournaments. Even though the 1955 match went to 5 sets, with Gonzales barely holding on to win the last one 21-19, apparently it took only 47 minutes to play.[2] The fans attending the matches preferred the traditional rules, however, and in 1957 the tournament reverted to the old method of scoring.

    The tiebreak was then invented by Van Alen in 1965 and was introduced at the United States Open in 1970 after a successful trial period at Newport, Rhode Island. Originally, the winner of the tiebreak was the first player to reach five points, and there was no requirement that someone win by two points.

    Impetus to use the tiebreak gained force after a monumental 1969 struggle at Wimbledon between Pancho Gonzales and Charlie Pasarell. This was a 5-set match that lasted five hours and 12 minutes and took 2 days to complete. In the fifth set the 41-year-old Gonzales won all seven match points that Pasarell had against him, twice coming back from 0-40 deficits. The final score was an improbable 22-24, 1-6, 16-14, 6-3, 11-9.

    In 1971 the tiebreak was introduced at Wimbledon when the score in any set except the final set reached 8-8 in games.

    In 1979 the tiebreak was changed to be in effect when any set reached 6-6 in games.

    Scoring the match

    Most matches consist of an odd number of sets, the match winner being the player who wins more than half of the sets. The match ends as soon as this winning condition is met. Men's singles matches may consist of five sets (the winner being the first to win three sets), while most women's matches are three sets (the winner being the first to win two sets).

    While the alternation of service between games continues throughout the match without regard to sets, the ends are changed after each odd game within a set (including the last game). If, for example, the second set of a match ends with the score at 6-3, 1-6, the ends are changed as the last game played was the 7th (odd) game of the set and in spite of it being the 16th (even) game of the match. Notably in such situations where a set ends with an odd game, back to back games see change of ends i.e. ends are changed before and after the first game of the following set. A tie-breaker game is treated as a single game for the purposes of this alternation. Since tie-breakers always result in a score of 7-6, there is always a  

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