To begin, the ball is served from just outside the right service box into the service box diagonal from it on the opposite side of the court. The serve must be hit underhand, and contact with the ball must be made below the waist. A ball that lands on any of the lines is “in,” with the exception of the kitchen line while serving. If a serve lands on the kitchen line, it is “out” because this line is considered part of the kitchen, not just a dividing line between quadrants.
When a team gains possession of serve in doubles, the ball is always served from the right side of the court. In singles, however, upon gaining possession, the server starts on the right side when his score is even, and on the left side when his score is odd. Servers only have one chance to land their serve in the correct area, and lose serve if they fail to do so.
When a team gains possession of serve in doubles, the ball is always served from the right side of the court. In singles, however, upon gaining possession, the server starts on the right side when his score is even, and on the left side when his score is odd. Servers only have one chance to land their serve in the correct area, and lose serve if they fail to do so.
Balls may be either hit after a single bounce or volleyed out of the air. There is a exception, though: the serve and the return must both bounce once before players are able to attempt volleys. This keeps the serving team back in the court and neutralizes the server’s advantage.
Balls may be either hit after a single bounce or volleyed out of the air. There is a exception, though: the serve and the return must both bounce once before players are able to attempt volleys. This keeps the serving team back in the court and neutralizes the server’s advantage.
Non-Volley Zone
In both doubles and singles, players try to work their way up to the net and control the point from just outside the non-volley zone—or “kitchen area.” Players may not hit a volley while inside this quadrant, or allow momentum from a volley to carry them into this area. Players may enter the kitchen at will, but must re-establish footing outside the kitchen before volleying, otherwise the point is lost.
Think of the kitchen as a pool of hot lava. But even though you can’t enter it while volleying, lest you lose the point, this off-limits rectangle shapes how points are conducted. Players are forced to consider not only their shot, but how its bounce and placement will affect the resulting reply from their opponents.