Seems like the ball can bounce twice sometimes and once other times, and maybe that's related to those 2 red lines. This game seems a little jammed to me, I prefer tennis.
Nothing to do with the red lines once in the rally - the serve just has to land behind the red line. After that, each player has to hit the front wall above the red line near the floor, but can hit the side wall first. The ball can only bounce once off the floor.
What happens if you just trip over the other dude tho. Like theyre just barely not in each others way lol wonder how specific body blocking rules are for this
you have to get out of the way of the path to the ball, the swing and cant be in the way of the front wall or else the other player gets a point. there is a ref who will make the call mostly after one of the players calls a “let” if they think the other player was in their way. the ref can award the point to either party or or call a “ let” if he feels the player had no way to get out of the way or it was borderline and in that case the point will be replayed
It's either a 'stroke' if you directly block the path of your opponent, his racquet swing, or the access to the front wall when it's his turn... or 'let' if it's a marginal block where you had no chance of moving out of the way, which means you replay that point.
An umpire and a scorer are located at the back of the court. The umpire adjudicates on instances where a player calls for a let if the opposition has impeded the shot to be played. A "let" or "no let" or a "stroke" will be given depending on how the umpire interprets the case.
The serve, from the service box, has to hit the front wall above that middle line and below the top line (out of vision but an extrapolation of the side wall lines) and then land on the floor behind the red line from wall to wall and be in the opponent's half of the court.
There are PLENTY more ridiculous games and sports. This requires precision, endurance and creativity. Which is more than what I can say about many other sports.
@@ballardboy691 as a player of both this and tennis, I'd say you can't really compare the two. Sure, you've got exertion and small breaks between points, but tennis is more endurance and squash is almost like a sprint. Suppose that depends how long your tennis matches are though..
There are badminton, pingpong, tennis. Why would people invented or even made tournaments on this games. Tired of running across the court? Afraid of hitting the net and can't get the ball to the other side of the court?
It's a game of physics, wits, reflexes and strategy more than its physicality, although it's pretty physical compared to table tennis or badminton. Your mind has to play at top speed to outwit your opponent.