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Post by haterade on Oct 7, 2022 11:38:02 GMT -5
Why is a back row left side attack not a thing?
A “10”, “Biq”, “Red” “D ball” etc to the middle of the court and the right side all seem to be a thing at various levels. Is the OH in the front just always a better option based on the way rotations are built? Or do you just have your best hitter go right after the serve to space them away form the OH and make the middle commit late?
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Post by eyeroll2021 on Oct 7, 2022 11:44:06 GMT -5
When there is a dig-to-kill, how is it recorded in the stats? Is it a dig? Is it a kill? Is it both?
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Post by Deleted on Oct 7, 2022 11:48:30 GMT -5
this dude’s one step away from calling the thread too “woke”, I bet you’re fun at parties Youre def the parent that starts the email to your DDs college coach with “im not that parent” and ends it with “please dont tell susie i emailed you…” I’m 26 and gay but sick burn
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Post by hornshouse23 on Oct 7, 2022 11:51:37 GMT -5
Why is a back row left side attack not a thing? A “10”, “Biq”, “Red” “D ball” etc to the middle of the court and the right side all seem to be a thing at various levels. Is the OH in the front just always a better option based on the way rotations are built? Or do you just have your best hitter go right after the serve to space them away form the OH and make the middle commit late? Someone smarter can probably answer this better, but I’ll take a crack. No matter the rotation, you’ll always have someone running a left side route in the front row. If your setter is upfront you won’t always have someone in the middle (run the pipe), and you won’t always have someone on the right side (run the D). Depending on what your middle does in those rotations. But you will always run into traffic so to speak if you were to set a backroads left attack. Also, that’s normally where your libero is lined up, so. There’s that also.
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Post by JT on Oct 7, 2022 11:57:26 GMT -5
The players can’t be out of order with those on their sides, or front-to-back. So in this rotation (ro1)… - - - - - - 4 3 2
5 6 1
… “4” must be to the left of “3” and in front of “5” … “3” must be between “4” and “2” and in front of “6” … “2” must be to the right of three and in front of “1” … etc (If “1” is serving, her position doesn’t matter, because she isn’t in the court when the ball is first contacted.) So, this is a completely legit positioning… - - - - - - 32 4 5 6 1
And in fact, if the Ascii-“art” allowed for it, you might have “2” behind “3” and just *barely* to the right of her. Similarly, “4” and “5” could be *almost” parallel with each other — as long as “4” is *slightly* closer to the front. Thanks, this answers a lot of my long-standing questions about positioning. One more, though: can 5 or 6 be in front of the 3 meter line as long as they are behind all of 2, 3, and 4? Or must they always be behind the line as the ball is served? Yes. Back row players can be in front of the attack line at the start of play, and anytime after as well. The restrictions only limit how they can play while up there: no attempt to hit the ball when it’s above the net, no attempt to block (even if you can’t jump high enough), no fingertip set if you’re in an odd-colored jersey. It would be stupid, but all six players could cluster together in the left-front corner of their court, as long as they were in the right positions relative to each other.
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Post by Brutus Buckeye on Oct 7, 2022 11:57:53 GMT -5
If a community has two or more college volleyball teams, are the players friends with each other? Or are they like rival gangs in a turf dispute?
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Post by mln59 on Oct 7, 2022 12:02:32 GMT -5
on serve receive, does every player have to have each foot within the court before the ball is hit? or can someone be standing out-of-bounds?
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Post by winesalot on Oct 7, 2022 12:04:13 GMT -5
Okay, if I have a 6 rotation OH, then another OH who subs out with a DS, a libero swapping out with the middles, and a double substitution with setters and Opps, is this a 6-2 or a 4-2?
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Post by pavsec5row10 on Oct 7, 2022 12:05:04 GMT -5
There's been lots of talk about switching Wenaas from OPP back to OH in the Minnesota topic.
1. In what ways is playing OPP more difficult than OH?
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Post by mln59 on Oct 7, 2022 12:06:04 GMT -5
Yes. Back row players can be in front of the attack line at the start of play, and anytime after as well. The restrictions only limit how they can play while up there: no attempt to hit the ball when it’s above the net, no attempt to block (even if you can’t jump high enough), no fingertip set if you’re in an odd-colored jersey.so a libero must always bump set?
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Post by hornshouse23 on Oct 7, 2022 12:08:51 GMT -5
Yes. Back row players can be in front of the attack line at the start of play, and anytime after as well. The restrictions only limit how they can play while up there: no attempt to hit the ball when it’s above the net, no attempt to block (even if you can’t jump high enough), no fingertip set if you’re in an odd-colored jersey.so a libero must always bump set? If they are setting in front of the 10 foot line, yes. They have to use their platform, no hands.
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Post by mln59 on Oct 7, 2022 12:09:57 GMT -5
so a libero must always bump set? If they are setting in front of the 10 foot line, yes. They have to use their platform, no hands. i am pretty sure that i never knew that.
edit: seems to be an odd rule
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Post by 2Close4Missiles on Oct 7, 2022 12:11:19 GMT -5
1) Is there any rule about which middle the libero serves for or could it be either? Like hypothetically if the libero serves for the M2 the one set could they serve for the M1 in the next?
2) This is more speaking as a fan, sometimes broadcasts/box scores show half blocks and sometimes they just say the total blocks. Is there an agreed upon use? Let's say a player has 2 solo blocks and 3 block assists and I come on VT after the game, do I say she had 3.5 blocks or 5?
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Post by hornshouse23 on Oct 7, 2022 12:11:32 GMT -5
If they are setting in front of the 10 foot line, yes. They have to use their platform, no hands. i am pretty sure that i never knew that.
edit: seems to be an odd rule
I think it’s a fairly new rule change actually. I could be wrong about that though
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Post by hornfanaustin on Oct 7, 2022 12:11:41 GMT -5
A rare call: Backrow defense.
Please define or give an example you've recently seen.
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