Module 7.

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Study the rules and regulation of the game (volleyball) Module 7

Differentiate the duties and responsibilities of each officials during the game.

1. The toss is a fundamental part of the serve in volleyball. You can't serve a ball without tossing it up in
some way, shape or form. With that being the case, the volleyball serve rules state that when you serve,
only one toss is allowed once the referee has blown their whistle. The goal as a group is for participants
to hit the ball as many times as they can in a row without the ball dropping to the ground or going out of
bounds.

2. Volleyball scoring is essential to the game. It determines which teams wins and loses.

Basic rules of volleyball scoring:

A side out is used as reference to an absolute rule, this is when only the serving team can score.
Although, now the meaning of side out has changed. A side out now referred to when the receiving
team gets to serve even if they get a point or not. The scoring system was changed to the Rally system. A
rally is a sequence of playing actions that decides each point from the moment the ball is served until
the ball is out of bounds. If the serving team wins the rally they continue to serve, and if the receiving
team wins the rally they receive the opportunity to serve.

There are two scoring methods used for volleyball. The first is known as side out scoring, which basically
means the only team that can score is the team that is serving. If the non-serving team hits the ball in
the opponents' court or their opponents make an error, they earn the right to serve only. With rally
scoring, either team can score regardless of who the serving team is. Games typically must be won by a
minimum of two points with both scoring systems.

3. The player serving the ball must stand behind the end line or restraining line at the back of the court
until after they have contacted the volleyball. To serve a player hits the ball with their hand over the net
and into the opposing team's side. If the ball doesn't go over the net or hits the ground, the point is
over. The opposing team must now return the ball without letting it hit the ground. They can hit the ball
up to three times. Typically a team will try to set up an attack. They use the first two hits to set the ball
for a spike or hard hit over the net. The two teams continue hitting the ball back and forth until the point
ends. A point can end by one team hitting a winning shot that hits the ground within the opponent's
court or by one team causing a fault and losing the point. Which volleyball team serves the ball is
determined by the previous point. Whoever won the previous point, gets to serve next. At the start of a
match, the first serve is determined by a volley.
Scoring in volleyball is pretty simple, but it also has changed over time. Most matches are divided up into
sets. A typical match may be a best of 5 sets where the first team to win 5 sets wins the match. In each
set, the first team to 25 points wins as long as they are 2 points ahead. A point is scored on every rally,
regardless of which team serves.

4.

5.

6. DOUBLE FAULT: A double fault occurs when players of opposing teams simultaneously commit faults.
A replay is called for double faults. ... A player completely crosses the centerline and contacts the
opponent's playing area. A player attacks the ball completely on opponent's side of net. If the ball is
simultaneously contacted by two opponents, then the team on whose side the ball falls into shall have
the right to play the ball three times. b. If the ball is held simultaneously by two opposing players, it is a
double fault and the official will direct a replay.

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