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The standard badminton court is a rectangular court with a length of meters, a doubles court with a width of meters, and a singles court with a width of meters.
Badminton courts.
The transverse is divided into two halves of the left and right by the midline; The longitudinal is divided into front, midfield, and backfield. The two sidelines outside the court are the doubles court lines, and the two lines inside are the singles court lines. The doubles sideline is meters away from the singles sideline, the two lines parallel to the net near the net are the front service lines, and the lines parallel to the end line are the doubles back service lines.
In badminton singles and doubles, the boundaries between singles and doubles are not the same. In the sidelines, the singles boundary is the inside line, and the doubles line is the outside line; Whereas, in the end line, the boundary between singles and doubles is the outer line; However, in the doubles serve, the court's backcourt service line is only valid in the doubles, and the opponent's serve cannot exceed this line;
In addition, when serving, the ball must be served behind the front court service line, and it must also be served past the opponent's front court service line to be effective. The middle line is set to require the singles and doubles serve to be served diagonally.
If you can't send it in the same direction, you must send it through the middle line;
When serving, it is also valid if the ball is brushed against the net, but it must cross the front line of the opponent's court.
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<> "There are two small ** on the right side of the field, which are used to measure the speed of the ball.
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The guy above has already said it very carefully.。。。
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The badminton court is divided into singles and doubles boundaries, with red representing singles and blue representing doubles. The sideline of doubles is the outermost solid line of the court, the second solid line of singles is counted from the outside, and the bottom line of singles and doubles is the outermost solid line.
There is a center line from the service line to the baseline, dividing the court into two blocks, which is what we often call the left and right halfs. The main function of the left and right halves is to play the rules of standing when serving, the odd and even service areas. In badminton matches, the position of each serve is not random standing, but there is a "single left, double right" rule, that is, when the score is odd, the left half of the serve is served, and the receiver corresponds to the left half of the ball to receive the ball.
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The boundary rule of badminton is that the bottom of the singles boundary is bounded by the outer line, and the two sides are bounded by the inner line.
The badminton court is rectangular and long, the doubles court is wide and the singles court is wide and the lines on the court are 4 cm.
The two horizontal lines closest to the net on both sides of the net are the front tee line, the horizontal line immediately after them is the back line of the doubles (these two lines only work on the doubles serve), and the outermost horizontal line is called the end line (all balls must be inside the end line to be considered valid), which is also the back line of the singles.
The vertical line in the middle is called the middle line, and the middle line divides the badminton court into left and right areas. The vertical line on the outside of the singles tee is called the singles sideline, and the vertical line on the outermost side of the doubles tee area is the doubles sideline.
In badminton singles, the boundaries (on the opponent's side) are the inside sideline, the outside baseline, the front service line and the center line. If the ball lands outside of this area, it is out of bounds. Badminton is sailed at the end of the tee, with two inside sidelines and two outside baselines.
If the ball lands outside of this area, it is out of bounds.
Badminton singles standing rules:
1. If the serving player has an even number, the serving player will stand in the right serving area to serve, and the receiving player will also stand on his right side.
2. If the score of the serving player is an odd number, the serving player will stand in the left service area to serve, and the receiving player will also stand on his left side.
3. When the serving side scores a serve, the change service area continues to be served by him in the spring. If the opponent scores, the serve needs to be exchanged.
4. Once the ball is issued, the players of both sides are no longer restricted by the service area, and can run freely in the inner sideline and outside the baseline area of their own half.
5. In the third game, when one side first reaches 11 points, the two sides exchange fields.
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1 Site & Site Equipment:
1 1 The site should be a rectangle, drawn with a line 40 mm wide (Fig. A).
The color of the 1 2 lines should be white, yellow, or other easily recognizable colors.
1 3 All lines are part of the area they define.
1 4 From the ground of the site, the net posts are 1 55 meters high. When the net is taut (Rule 1 10), the net posts should be perpendicular to the ground. Mesh posts and their supports are not allowed to protrude into the ground.
1 5 In both singles and doubles, the net posts should be placed on the doubles sideline (Diagram a).
1 6 The net should be woven from dark and high-quality string. The mesh is evenly distributed in square, with a side length of 15-20 mm.
1 7 The net is 760 mm wide above and below and has a total length of at least 6 10 meters.
1 8 The upper edge of the net is a sandwich folded in half with a white belt 75 mm wide, through which a rope or wire is passed. The upper edge of the interlayer. The rope or wire must be tightly fitted.
1 9 The rope or wire should be firmly tightened and leveled with the top of the net post.
1 10 The height of the net from the ground of the court to the top of the net** shall be 1 524 metres, and the height of the net at the edge line of the doubles shall be 1 55 metres.
1 1 1 There should be no gap between the ends of the net and the posts. If necessary, tie both ends of the net to the posts.
Note: (1) The diagonal length of the doubles court is one meter.
2) The field map shown above is suitable for both singles and doubles matches.
3) "* is the mark of the ball speed zone (Fig. B).
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The singles court is long meters, wide meters, and doubles wide meters.
Meters at both ends of the net, meters in the middle. See**.
Serve: Singles: The bottom line is the outside line and the sideline is the inside line.
Doubles: The bottom line is the inside line and the side line is the outside line.
Both singles and doubles should be served diagonally and within the front line!
After playing, the baseline and sideline of singles are the same as those of the serve, but they are not limited by the diagonal area and the front service line. The baseline of doubles is the same as that of singles, (i.e., the inside baseline is only useful at the moment of service of doubles), the sideline is still outside, and it is also not limited by the diagonal and front service lines.
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The badminton court must be at least 16 meters long, 8 meters wide, and almost 8 meters high.
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The line in the badminton court is the boundary line, which is the boundary line to judge whether the ball has scored or not.
The singles court is to remove the two outer lines of which width is on the left and right, that is, according to the inside line, and the back court to press the line behind, and the whole court is m * m.
Doubles is to press the outermost line on the left and right, that is, the whole court meter * meter.
1. The sidelines of singles and doubles are different, singles are the inside one, and doubles are the outside one.
2. The bottom line of singles and doubles is the same, which is the last one.
3. The only function of the bottom line is to limit the doubles serve.
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The line in the badminton court is the meaning of the boundary, and it is the boundary line to judge whether the ball is divided by the ruler.
1. Badminton singles and Lingjian doubles serve boundary (the border of the effective area in the figure below):
2. The boundary between badminton singles and doubles except for the serve (the border of the effective area in the figure below):
Hard Dirt (including red and green soil) Grass.