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Volleyball Questions Please?

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What is the difference between rally scoring and traditional scoring?

What is a carry or a lift?

When serving the ball may hit the net and go over and be considered a successful serve?

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  1. when u serve the ball and it hit the net but it went over the other side that's considered a point if the other team didn't get and volleyball players called it "short".. to warn them about the ball coming over in a short distance.


  2. Question 1. Rally scoring is when a point is given to the team that does not commit a fault during the rally. It does not matter who serves to start the rally.

    Side-out scoring is when the serving team is the only team who can receive a point for a rally if they are not the team that commits a fault during the rally.

    Question 2. "Carry" and "Lift" are very old terms and are no longer words that are even in the current USA VOLLEYBALL DOMESTIC REGULATIONS rulebook.

    Rule 9.2.2 states that The ball must be hit, not caught and/or thrown. It can rebound in any direction.

    There is no set time frame of how long the ball can come into contact with a players body but if it is on there for more than half a second, it'll probably get called.

    Question 3. In the PAVO, USAV and NFHS rulebooks, a serve that contacts the net within the antennae's without touching the antennae's and lands on the opponents side of the court within and including the boundary lines, is a legal serve.

  3. regular scoring is where, if my team is serving, and we don't get it over, you just get the ball and no point.  rally scoring is where my team is serving and we miss, you get the ball AND a point.  (so in rally- EVERY ball counts)  a carry/lift is where you make too long of a contact with the ball.  there are man ways of doing this. for the last question, it depends on your league's regulations.  i played in a league where at first it was a bad serve to hit the net then make it over, but the next year it changed to being legal.

  4. In rally point scoring, a point is awarded on every rally regardless of which team is serving. Games are normally played to 25 points in a best of 3 or best of 5 format. In both formats, the last game is only played to 15. You must have a two point advantage to win a game and there are no scoring caps in the rally point system.

    i think there is no traditional scoring involved in volleyball maybe what you mean is the side out scoring where all sets went up to only 15 points.

    in ur 3rd question i think yes as long as the ball go to ur opponents court...

    i hope it can help you...godbless..ü

  5. nothin is really different between traditional & rally scoring

    a lift is like where your hands are under the ball and its like you lifting it over the net or lifting it up......

    a carry is where the ball is in your hands to long like 3 seconds i think

    && yes thats a close but good serve as long as you kno its gonna go over the other team may not kno

    it happend to me all season

  6. Pippa almost had it all perfect - I might try to add a little. Rally scoring is a term used to describe the currently used scoring system for volleyball. In it, any team scores a point, no matter who is serving, when the ball touches the court on the opponents side inside the court boundaries; when the opponent hits a ball out of play; or when the opponent commits a violation of some kind ( touch the net, illegal contact, foot fault on a serve, etc.).

    A carry or lift is when a player contacts the ball in attempt to pass or hit it, and does not make a clean contact, or holds contact with the ball in an obvious attempt to change the direction the ball will travel. The current rules have been modified to allow some illegal contacts to be ignored when the offending player is attempting to pass a serve or dig a spike. The carry or lift is called most often when a player uses an open hand or hands in front of the midsection area and appears to "catch" the ball while trying to keep it in the air.

    The current rules allow for what is called a "let" serve to be a legal serve, as long as the ball continues over the net after contact and lands inside the boundaries of the receiving team's court.

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