History of Volley Ball
History of Volley Ball
History of Volley Ball
Origin of volleyball
On February 9, 1895, in Holyoke, Massachusetts (USA), William G. Morgan,
a YMCA physical education director, created a new game
called Mintonette as a pastime to be played (preferably) indoors and by any
number of players. The game took some of its characteristics
from tennis and handball. Another indoor sport,basketball, was catching on in
the area, having been invented just ten miles (sixteen kilometers) away in
the city of Springfield, Massachusetts, only four years before. Mintonette was
designed to be an indoor sport, less rough than basketball, for older
members of the YMCA, while still requiring a bit of athletic effort.
The first rules, written down by William G Morgan, called for a net 6 ft. 6 in
(1.98 m) high, a 25 ft. 50 ft. (7.6 m 15.2 m) court, and any number of
players. A match was composed of nine innings with three serves for each
team in each inning, and no limit to the number of ball contacts for each
team before sending the ball to the opponents' court. In case of a serving
error, a second try was allowed. Hitting the ball into the net was considered a
foul (with loss of the point or a side-out)except in the case of the first-try
serve.
Introduction to volleyball
Rules of volleyball
The court dimensions
A volleyball court is 18 m. (59 ft.) long and 9 m (29.5 ft.) wide,
divided into 9 m 9 m halves by a one-meter (40-inch) wide net.
The top of the net is 2.43 m (8 ft. 0 in) above the center of the
court for men's competition, and 2.24 m (7 ft. 4 in) for women's
competition, varied for veterans and junior competitions.
The minimum height clearance for indoor volleyball courts is 7 m
(23 ft.), although a clearance of 8 m (26 ft.) is recommended.
A line 3 m (9.84 ft.) from and parallel to the net is considered the
"attack line". This "3 meter" (or "10-foot") line divides the court
into "back row" and "front row" areas (also back court and front
court). These are in turn divided into 3 areas each: these are
numbered as follows, starting from area "1", which is the position
of the serving player:
After a team gains the serve (also known as siding out), its
members must rotate in a clockwise direction, with the player
previously in area "2" moving to area "1" and so on, with the
player from area "1" moving to area "6". Each player rotates only
one time after the team gains possession of the serve; the next
time each player rotates will be after the other team wins
possession of the ball and loses the point.
The team courts are surrounded by an area called the free zone
which is a minimum of 3 meters wide and which the players may
enter and play within after the service of the ball. [ All lines
denoting the boundaries of the team court and the attack zone
are drawn or painted within the dimensions of the area and are
therefore a part of the court or zone. If a ball comes in
The Ball
FIVB regulations state that the ball must be spherical, made of
leather or synthetic leather, have a circumference of 6567 cm, a
weight of 260280 g and an inside pressure of 0.300.325 kg/cm2.
[17]
Other governing bodies have similar regulations.
playing
Scoring
When the ball contacts the floor within the court boundaries or an
error is made, the team that did not make the error is awarded a
point, whether they served the ball or not. If the ball hits the line,
the ball is counted as in. The team that won the point serves for
the next point. If the team that won the point served in the
previous point, the same player serves again. If the team that
won the point did not serve the previous point, the players of the
serving team rotate their position on the court in a clockwise
manner. The game continues, with the first team to score 25
points by a two-point margin is awarded the set. Matches are
best-of-five sets and the fifth set, if necessary, is usually played to
15 points. (Scoring differs between leagues, tournaments, and
levels; high schools sometimes play best-of-three to 25; in
the NCAA matches are played best-of-five to 25 as of
the 2008 season.)[19]
Before 1999, points could be scored only when a team had the
serve (side-out scoring) and all sets went up to only 15 points.
The FIVB changed the rules in 1999 (with the changes being
compulsory in 2000) to use the current scoring system (formerly
known as rally point system), primarily to make the length of the
match more predictable and to make the game more spectatorand television-friendly.
The final year of side-out scoring at the NCAA Division I Women's
Volleyball Championship was 2000. Rally point scoring debuted
in 2001 and games were played to 30 points through 2007. For
the2008 season, games were renamed "sets" and reduced to 25
points to win.
Outfit of volleyball
Volleyball stadium
Indoor
Outdoor