The main objective of the drop shot is to force your opponent out of his position or the variate the pace of the game. The badminton smash is considered the most powerful shot in badminton and is usually played on the forehand. It is often difficult to return because of the pace and the downward angle of the shot, think of it as a downwards drive.
It is best used when the shuttle is high in the air so that it can be angled downwards. When the shuttle comes in from a high angle, it will allow you enough time to arch and get in position to strike. At the highest point of contact, with a flick of the wrist aim the shuttle downwards in a steep gradient. You ideally want to aim for spots furthest from your opponent, but another tactic is to aim it towards his upper torso, making it hard for him to defend.
Lastly, it is always important to disguise your shots so it will not become too easy for your opponent to predict. For example, your offensive shots should look like either a drive or a drop shot until the very last second.
This will make it hard for your opponent to react. A player is not able to touch the net with any part of their body or racket. A player must not deliberately distract their opponent. A player is not able to hit the shuttlecock twice.
A 'let' may be called by the referee if an unforeseen or accidental issue arises. A game must include two rest periods. These are a second rest after the first game and a 5-minute rest after the second game. Officials The referee is in overall charge of a badminton tournament or championship s of which a match forms part, to uphold the Laws of Badminton and Competition Regulations in the BWF Statutes. He will try to reach the shuttle and send it back into your half of the court.
If you hit the shuttle instead, then the rally continues. Once the shuttle touches the ground, the rally is over. In this respect, badminton is not like tennis or squash, where the ball can bounce. You must hit the shuttle once only before it goes over the net even in doubles. In this respect, badminton is not like volleyball, where multiple players can touch the ball before sending it back over the net.
Badminton is played indoors. Some of you may be familiar with playing badminton on a beach, or in the garden. The shuttle is blown off course by even the slightest breath of wind. Setting up a badminton court. Badminton has its own nets and posts; the net is much lower than for volleyball. Ask for proper badminton posts and a badminton net. If you need to set up the court yourself, then check three things: The net covers the whole width of the court. The net is pulled tight, not slack. Badminton is played on a court marked for both singles and doubles matches.
The doubles court is 6. The net is 1. To begin a singles game, players stand in diagonally opposite service courts see diagram at right and the server then serves the shuttlecock underhand from below the waist. If the receiver thinks the serve is a fault , meaning it will land outside the receiver's service court, he or she can leave it and win the point if it does go out.
But if the receiver thinks the serve is good, he or she must return it before it bounces. If the return is good, a rally begins. The rally continues until someone wins it by hitting a good shot which their opponent cannot return, or until someone loses it by hitting a fault. Faults include hitting the shuttlecock into the net, hitting it outside the court, or hitting it twice with two separate shots before it goes over the net.
Whoever wins the rally earns one point, and serves to start the next point. Players can use a range of shots during a rally, including drop shots, drives, clears, smashes, kills, net shots and push shots. Top players learn to disguise their shots, and try to trick the opponent into thinking they're about to hit one type of shot, but then hit a very different type of shot, hoping to win the point by surprising the opponent.
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