Volleyball

Origin of Volleyball

On February 9, 1895, in Holyoke, Massachusetts (USA), William G. Morgan, a YMCA physical education director, created a new game called Mintonette as a pastime to be played (preferably) indoors and by any number of players. The game took some of its characteristics from tennis and handball. Another indoor sport, basketball, was catching on in the area, having been invented just ten miles (sixteen kilometers) away in the city of Springfield, Massachusetts, only four years before. Mintonette was designed to be an indoor sport, less rough than basketball, for older members of the YMCA, while still requiring a bit of athletic effort. The first rules, written down by William G Morgan, called for a net 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) high, a 25 ft × 50 ft (7.6 m × 15.2 m) court, and any number of players. A match was composed of nine innings with three serves for each team in each inning, and no limit to the number of ball contacts for each team before sending the ball to the opponents’ court. In case of a serving error, a second try was allowed. Hitting the ball into the net was considered a foul (with loss of the point or a side-out)—except in the case of the first-try serve. After anobserver, Alfred Halstead, noticed the volleying nature of the game at its first exhibition match in 1896, played at the International YMCA Training School (now called Springfield College), the game quickly became known as volleyball (it was originally spelled as two words: "volley ball"). Volleyball rules were slightly modified by the International YMCA Training School and the game spread around the country to various YMCAs.

Rules of volleyball

  1. There can only be 6 players on the court at a time
  2. The same person can not hit the ball two times in a row
  3. The team has three touches on the ball before they have to send it to the other side
  4. The three players in the back row can not jump and attack the ball to the other side of the court
  5. A game is played to 25 points and the winner must win by 2 points
  6. The 6 players on the court must rotate clockwise
  7. One team must win 2 out of 3 or 3 out of 5 sets to win the match

Things you need to play volleyball

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Volleyball Actions

BUMP:

SET:

SPIKE:

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Top 25 College Volleyball Rankings

  1. Stanford
  2. Texas
  3. Florida St.
  4. Washington
  5. North Carolina
  6. Wisconsin
  7. Florida
  8. Illinois
  9. Penn St.
  10. Oregon
  11. Kansas
  12. Colorado St.
  13. Nebraska
  14. Kentucky
  15. Iowa St.
  16. Arizona
  17. BYU
  18. UCLA
  19. Texas A&M
  20. Oklahoma
  21. Duke
  22. Southern California
  23. Kansas St.
  24. Creighton
  25. Marquette
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