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Post by wilbur on Apr 7, 2024 14:51:22 GMT -5
What is the latest inside info on the FIVB adopting the rule that serve receive double contacts can be called?
Is it only used in the current age division international tournaments? I heard this is a trial basis to study impact. What do people see as the results so far? When will FIVB release reaults?
I think it hurt our U19 team. Korea and France seemed to have figured out how to use it to their advantage and keep USA out of system while USA servers couldn't figure out the deep float that made the USA SR uncomfortable.
Will it go worldwide after Paris?
When will the NCAA mens adopt it?
Are college coaches recruiting with this in mind?
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Post by gofaster88 on Apr 7, 2024 15:16:28 GMT -5
Older players will remember when everything was taken with a platform for serve receive. I think it developed better passers overall. But we also didn't have to face float serves, maybe the intention is to make teams eliminate the 20+ serving errors a match.
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Post by wilbur on Apr 7, 2024 15:25:25 GMT -5
Older players will remember when everything was taken with a platform for serve receive. I think it developed better passers overall. But we also didn't have to face float serves, maybe the intention is to make teams eliminate the 20+ serving errors a match. The goal, as I understand it, is to make the game more entertaining for the average fan. The average fan does seem to get annoyed at the quantity of missed serves in the current mens game. Back in the day there were more float servers than today, just not many jump float servers. There were a few but that jump float serve was an early undeleoped ancestor to what is the standard today. The standing deep float from the back of the playing area targeting the back few feet of the court was common. There were no Liberos and the sterotype for at least one OH was focused on a solid platform passer who would pass 2/3 of the court in a 2 man serve recieve against the deep floaters.
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Post by gofaster88 on Apr 7, 2024 15:29:43 GMT -5
Older players will remember when everything was taken with a platform for serve receive. I think it developed better passers overall. But we also didn't have to face float serves, maybe the intention is to make teams eliminate the 20+ serving errors a match. The goal, as I understand it, is to make the game more entertaining for the average fan. The average fan does seem to get annoyed at the quantity of missed serves in the current mens game. Back in the day there were more float servers than today, just not many jump float servers. There were a few but that jump float serve was an early undeleoped ancestor to what is the standard today. The standing deep float from the back of the playing area targeting the back few feet of the court was common. There were no Liberos and the sterotype for at least one OH was focused on a solid platform passer who would pass 2/3 of the court in a 2 man serve recieve against the deep floaters. Yes, the 40mph jump float serve is what I meant. Honestly watching some of the women doing it on the lower net is scarier than men doing it.
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Post by frieswiththat on Apr 8, 2024 2:17:20 GMT -5
Wait, so FIVB is maybe adopting NO double contacts allowed on serve receive, but NCAA (just women's or also men's?) IS allowing double contacts on the second contact?
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