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  2. Volleyball jargon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volleyball_jargon

    Double contact or Double touch: A fault in which a player contacts the ball with two body parts consecutively. A double is commonly called on a setter when making a faulty touch on the ball resulting in a quick succession of touches. However, multiple leagues such as the women's side of the NCAA have done away with this judgment call.

  3. Volleyball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volleyball

    double hit: two consecutive contacts with the ball made by the same player; four consecutive contacts with the ball made by the same team; net foul: touching the net during play; foot fault: the foot crosses over the boundary line when serving or under the net when a front row player is trying to keep the ball in play.

  4. Double (volleyball) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_(volleyball)

    A double occurs in volleyball when a player, during a match, is credited with scoring at least ten times in one (or more) of five statistical categories: aces, kills, blocks, digs, and assists. The term was apparently derived from similar basketball jargon; the expression "triple-double" was coined by former Los Angeles Lakers public relations ...

  5. Coco Gauff loses at the U.S. Open to Emma Navarro ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/grigor-dimitrov-returns-us-open...

    This is pretty much all anyone needs to know about defending champion Coco Gauff's 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 loss to Emma Navarro in the U.S. Open's fourth round on Sunday: Gauff wound up with more double ...

  6. Serve-and-volley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serve-and-volley

    On the women's side, serve-and-volley has become almost extinct at the very top level. Taylor Townsend, Karolína Muchová and Hsieh Su-wei are the only active notable (WTA elite) players that prefers to play with this style. Other players, despite not being pure serve-and-volleyers, do employ serve-and-volley as a surprise tactic.

  7. Float serve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Float_serve

    Float serves are only possible with minimal to no spin of the volleyball while it is moving in the air. [1] Unlike a topspin serve, which uses the spin of the ball to create a constant difference in pressure that drives the ball downward at a high speed, the float serve can be affected in any direction by the random forces of the air and pressure (drag, lift, drag crisis, turbulence) because ...

  8. Volleyball offensive systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volleyball_Offensive_Systems

    Volleyball offense is how a team can attempt to score a point by causing the ball to land on the opposing teams side of the court. Generally, this is done by first receiving the ball from the other side in the form of either an attack or serve, having the ball set to an attacker, and then having a player jump and attack the ball. Once the ball ...

  9. Beach volleyball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beach_volleyball

    A beach volleyball referee determines if a fault has been committed. A fault is committed when a referee judges that a team has made a playing action that violates the rules. When a team commits a fault, the opposing team receives a point and gains the right to serve. If both teams commit a fault simultaneously, the point is replayed. [21]