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An easy guide to the rules and play of Tennis
Aim of the Game
To get the ball over the net (before it bounces twice) and landing in the court of your opponent’s side.
General Rules
1. In singles, two people play, one on each end of the court. In doubles, two players at one end play against two players at the other end.
2. To start a match, the players will spin a racquet to decide one of four options:
i) the player winning the toss can choose to serve
ii) the player can choose to receive serve
iii) the player can choose which end to play from in the first game
iv) the player can give up the choice and make the opponent choose first (but you won't see this happen very often).
NB. A player can't pick two things: you can't choose to serve and choose the end you will start.
Serving
To start the game, one player (the server) stands behind the baseline, just to the right of the centre service mark (no standing on the line-that's called a foot fault.) The server hits the ball across the net into the service court on the opposite side of the centre service line. If the first serve doesn't land in the service court, it's a fault and the player gets one more chance. If this second serve is also a fault, the server loses the point (a double fault). If either of those two serves is "good" (lands in the correct service court) the receiver has to hit the ball back over the net.
If the ball touches the net when it is served but still bounces into the correct service court, a let is called and the server gets to try that serve again. If the ball hits the net and then lands outside the correct service court, the serve is a fault.
Playing the point
Play continues until one player hits the ball into the net or outside their opponent's court, or until one player hits a shot so well that the opponent can't reach it. (This is called 'hitting a winner")
After each point in singles, the server and receiver change sides (not ends-just left to right or right to left). In doubles, the server changes sides but the receivers stay where they are and receive alternate points.
After the serve, all balls must land on or inside the baseline. They must also land on or inside the singles sideline (in singles) or the doubles sidelines (in doubles). You can hit the ball after one bounce or before it bounces (except on a return of serve, when you have to let it bounce). You must hit it before it bounces twice. Just be sure you don't reach over the net before the ball crosses onto your side-if you do, you lose the point.
Scoring
Scoring in tennis starts at zero (love). The first point is 15, the second 30, then 40, then game. If you've won two points and your opponent has won one, the score is 30-15 if you are serving, 15-30 if you are receiving (the server's score is always called first). If the score goes to 40-40(40-all), it's called deuce. From deuce, one player must win two points in a row to win the game. The player who wins the first point after deuce is said to have the ad (advantage). The score will be called as "advantage server" (ad in) or "advantage receiver" (ad out). If the player with the ad loses the next point, the score goes back to deuce, but if the player with the ad wins the ad point, game is scored.
Players change ends of the court whenever the total of the games played is an odd number (1-0, 4-3, 5-2, 1-4, for example). A set of tennis is won when one player reaches 6 games with a lead of at least 2 games. From a game score of 5-5, a player can win the set by a score of 7-5
The Tiebreak
If the score goes to 6-6, a tiebreak is usually played: The aim here is to win 7 points with a lead of at least 2 points. (If the score gets to 7-6 or 7-5, the tiebreak keeps going until one player is 2 point ahead 12-10, for example.) The player who does that wins the tiebreak and the set with a game score of 7-6.
Most matches are best of three sets, so the player winning two sets wins the match.
Sportmanship
1.At the end of a the game shake hands with our opponent
2. If in doubt ‘don’t’ call it out!
3. Call out the score of the game before every service, making sure to announce the server's score first.
Ian Wright Memorial Open DayIn memory of Ian Wright and in partnership with Bexley Lawn Tennis Club, there will be an open day at Bexley LTC on
FRIDAY 29TH MAY. Please come along, bring a friend and have a great day out at a very friendly and welcoming club. More details to follow.
Playmoresport.org Junior Tennis ClubIn partnership with The Parklangley Club, playmoresport.org will be piloting a Weekly Junior Tennis Club. Look out for news of dates and venues.