Question:
what is the rules of badminton?
Jamaica_mae
2009-11-10 02:59:33 UTC
what is the rules of badminton?
Four answers:
Mikhail
2009-11-10 03:34:46 UTC
Rules of Badminton - Singles





Serving and receiving courts



You shall serve from, and receive in, the right service court when you or your opponent has scored an even number of points in that game.



You shall serve from, and receive in, the left service court when you or your opponent has scored an odd number of points in that game.



You and your opponent will hit the shuttle alternately until a 'fault' is made or the shuttle ceases to be in play.







Scoring and serving



You score a point and serve again from the alternate service court when your opponent makes a 'fault' or the shuttle ceases to be in play because it touches the surface of your opponent's side of court.



No points will be scored when you make a 'fault' or the shuttles ceases to be in play because it touches the surface of your side of court. The serving right will then be transferred to your opponent.







Rules of Badminton - Doubles





At the start of the game, and each time a side gains the right to serve, the service shall be delivered from the right service court. Only youropponent standing diagonally opposite of you shall return the service.



Should your opponent's partner touched or hit the shuttle, it shall be a 'fault' and your side scores a point.







Order of play and position on court



After the service is returned, either you or your partner may hit the shuttle from any position on your side of the net. Then either player from the opposing side may do the same, and so on, until the shuttle ceases to be in play.







Scoring and serving



If you are serving or receiving first at the start of any game, you shall serve or receive in the right service court when your side or your opponent's side scored an even number of points.



You shall serve from or receive in the left service court when your side or your opponent's side has scored an odd number of points.



The reverse pattern shall apply to your partner.



In any game, the right to serve passes consecutively from the initial server to the initial receiver, then to that initial's receiver's partner, then to theopponent who is due to serve from the right service court, then to that player's partner, and so on.



You shall not serve out of turn, receive out of turn, or receive two consecutive services in the same game, except as provided in service court errors and 'lets'.







Service court errors



A service court error has been made when a player has served out of turn, has served from the wrong service or standing on the wrong service court while being prepared to receive the service and it has been delivered.



If a service court error is discovered after the next service had been delivered, the error shall not be corrected. If a service court error is discovered before the next service is delivered, the following rules apply.



If both sides committed an error, it shall be a 'let'. If one side committed the error and won the rally, it shall be a 'let'. If one side committed the error and lost the rally, the error shall not be corrected.



If there is a 'let' because of a service court error, the rally is replayed with the error corrected. If a service court error is not to be corrected, play in that game shall proceed without changing the player's new service courts.







Faults



The rules of badminton consider the following as faults:



- If the shuttle lands outside the boundaries of the court, passes through or under the net, fail to pass the net, touches the ceiling or side walls, touches the person or dress of a player or touches any other object or person.



- If the initial point of contact with the shuttle is not on the striker's side of the net. (The striker may, however, follow the shuttle over the net with the racket in the course of a stroke.)



- If a player touches the net or its supports with racket, person or dress, invades an opponent's court over the net with racket or person except as permitted.



- If a player invades an opponent's court under the net with racket or person such that an opponent is obstructed or distracted or obstructs an opponent, that is prevents an opponent from making a legal stroke where the shuttle is followed over the net.



- If a player deliberately distracts an opponent by any action such as shouting or making gestures.



- If the shuttle is caught and held on the racket and then slung during the execution of a stroke.



- If the shuttle is hit twice in succession by the same player with two strokes.



- If the shuttle is hit by a player and the player's partner successively or touches a player's racket and continues towards the back of that player's court.



- If a player is guilty of flagrant, repeated or persistent offences under Law of Continuous Play, Misconduct, Penalties.



- If, on service, the shuttle is caught on the net and remains suspended on top, or, on service, after passing over the net is caught in the net.
2016-02-28 08:18:11 UTC
Badmington rules, like tennis, serving is done from the opposite half of the opponent. A correct server must: 1.Be diagonal to their opponent. 2.Be on the right side on even number points and vice versa for left side. 3.Land the shuttlecock on the diagonal side 4.Not delay the opponents in any way. 5.Only serve when the opponents are ready to receive. 6.Hit the shuttlecock with the middle of the racquet, not the tip. 7.Land the shuttlecock on or inside the boundary lines. If the server hits the bird and it hits the top of the net but still goes over, into the opposite and diagonal. Doubles play features a short and wide court, and in singles, a long and narrow court is used. In tennis, two service trials are allowed per inning, in badmington rules, only one service trial is allowed. These only apply when you make a mistake hitting the shuttlecock, such as ‘wooding’ it, not when you completely miss it. A fault in tennis is just like a fault in badminton, nothing changes here. But in badmington rules, there are lots of ways to receive a fault, they include: 1.A players racquet stretches over into the other side of the net. 2.A player touches the net with any part of their body or equipment. 3.When the player ‘woods’ the serve. 4.Server is not in correct half of court when serving, ex: on left side when points are of an even number. 5.A player misses the shuttlecock completely. 6.A player enters the opponents court. 7.The players serve does not fall inside the boundaries. A fault made by the player results in a service over in singles. A fault made by a team in doubles results in either a service over or second service. ANY fault results in a lost of serve, or a point for the other team, depending on who was serving.
Track911
2009-11-10 11:01:28 UTC
here, all you need to know about badminton



www.badmintonbible.com

~and~

www.youtube.com/bojanglesbadminton
2009-11-10 03:36:45 UTC
i dont know i think you should try google


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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