Social Sciences, asked by bargurjar, 1 year ago

what are the rules of Badminton I will give you rate and likes ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

Scoring System

A match consists of the best of 3 games of 21 points.

Every time there is a serve – there is a point scored.

The side winning a rally adds a point to its score.

At 20 all, the side which gains a 2 point lead first, wins that game.

At 29 all, the side scoring the 30th point, wins that game.

Answered by Anonymous
3

The rules of badminton are-

A player must wait until his opponent is ready before serving. If the opponent attempts a return then he is ruled having been ready.

A player must wait until his opponent is ready before serving. If the opponent attempts a return then he is ruled having been ready.The feet of both players must remain in a stationary position until the serve is made. Your feet can not be touching the line at this time.

A player must wait until his opponent is ready before serving. If the opponent attempts a return then he is ruled having been ready.The feet of both players must remain in a stationary position until the serve is made. Your feet can not be touching the line at this time.It is not a fault if you miss the shuttle while serving.

A player must wait until his opponent is ready before serving. If the opponent attempts a return then he is ruled having been ready.The feet of both players must remain in a stationary position until the serve is made. Your feet can not be touching the line at this time.It is not a fault if you miss the shuttle while serving.The shuttle cannot be caught and slung with the racket.

A player must wait until his opponent is ready before serving. If the opponent attempts a return then he is ruled having been ready.The feet of both players must remain in a stationary position until the serve is made. Your feet can not be touching the line at this time.It is not a fault if you miss the shuttle while serving.The shuttle cannot be caught and slung with the racket.A player cannot hold his racket near the net to ward off a downward stroke by his opponent or to interfere with his racket.

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