Guidelines and Rules in Paddle Tennis

Sports & RecreationsSports

  • Author Greg Pierce
  • Published January 7, 2011
  • Word count 399

There are many similarities between paddle tennis and lawn tennis. The size of the court in paddle tennis is smaller than the lawn tennis dimensions and it is not divided into lanes for doubles. This is the only exception. While the tennis racket uses strings, paddle tennis uses a solid wooden paddle with perforations. Paddle tennis entails player agility and quicker reflexes since the court is smaller. Let's discuss the difference between the rules of both games.

Paddle tennis court's dimensions are fifty feet lengthwise by twenty feet crosswise. The distance from one service line to the opposite is 44 feet, which gives a three feet space each for the service spots on both sides. The US Paddle Tennis Association has rules regarding the paddle. It should measure nine and a half inches wide by eighteen inches in length. The paddle is perforated with a number of holes. The net to be used is measured at twenty-two feet long by two point six feet wide. Set it at thirty-one inches high from the court level and an extra length of eighteen inches from each sideline.

A paddle is used as a pointer and spun; the "chosen" player gets to pick the side of the court and who serves first to start the game. The serve is not done over the head but just about the level of the net, he can either hit the ball from the air or bounce it first unlike lawn tennis. Serving player who serves a foul ball not only loses a point but also the turn to serve. When the server misses to hit the ball or when the serve hits the net, it is considered fault service.

Stepping on the baseline is considered a foot fault and causes you to lose a point. A ball that touches the lines (line ball) is still considered "in" or "good" and still earns a point.

The tallying of the score is the same as in lawn tennis, the 1st point garners the player fifteen, the 2nd point thirty, the 3rd point forty, and the 4th point lets him win the game. To win one set, a player should lead by two games against the opponent. After each odd game, the players change courts or sides, allowing sixty seconds of break. Between the second and third set, ten-minute breaks are accorded. Tiebreakers are adjudged should the scores tie.

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