Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. FOUL/ FAULT – A violation of the rules. FOUR‐TWO – A 6‐player offensive system using four hitters and two setters. FREE BALL – A ball that will be returned by a pass rather than a spike. This is usually called aloud by the defense instructing players to move into serve receive positions.

  2. FREE BALL – A ball that will be returned by a pass rather than a spike. This is usually called aloud by the defense instructing players to move into serve receive positions. HELD BALL – A ball that comes to rest during contact resulting in a foul. HIT – To jump and strike the ball with an overhand, forceful shot. HITTER

  3. Foul Ball Definition. The foul lines and foul poles are used to demarcate fair territory and, thus, determine what constitutes a foul ball. Any batted ball that first contacts a fielder while the ball is in foul territory is considered foul.

  4. Volleyball has so many unique terms, statistics, and abbreviations, you can easily get lost in all the vocabulary. Many of the expressions used have multiple meanings and some may be regional meanings or variations in a particular geographic area. The following is an alphabetical list of volleyball terminology and acronyms.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Foul_ballFoul ball - Wikipedia

    In baseball, a foul ball is a batted ball that: [1][2] Touches the person of an umpire or player, or any object foreign to the natural ground, while on or over foul territory. By interpretation, a batted ball that touches a batter while in his batter's box is foul regardless of whether it is over foul territory.

  6. Foul: Any violation of volleyball rules of play. Free Ball: A ball that will be sent over the net via pass rather than attack. This alerts the defense to drop back into passing positions, as no spike is coming.

  7. This document defines many common terms used in volleyball. It provides definitions for positions on the court like setter, hitter, and blocker. It also defines types of plays such as serves, attacks, blocks, and digs.

  1. Ludzie szukają również