
THE SPORT BADMINTON
Badminton is a setback game that is played with a badminton racket and a shuttlecock. The players try to hit the ball over a net so that the opponent cannot hit it back. It can be played as a single, double or mixed. It is played in the hall. Badminton is competitively run by over 14 million players worldwide in more than 160 nations (source wikipedia).
Badminton puts high spiritual and physical demand on the players. Speed, strength, endurance and cardiovascular systems are used during a game, while concentration as well as responsiveness are trained and developed during a competition. In addition, badminton aids flexibility, stamina and burns large amounts of fat. This versatility makes badminton a hard and demanding competition sport.
However, badminton is also an excellent leisure sport. Approx. 80% of the worlds population play in leisure centres, on the street, on vacation, on the beach. A court is not always necessary, as long as you have a shuttle and rackets you can play. Central issue, it is great fun and everybody moves.
BADMINTON AS A LEISURE SPORT
Badminton is an excellent recreational sport. Approximately 80% of the population plays at least irregularly in the hall, on the street, on vacation, on the beach or on the meadow. A playing field is not always necessary, it doesn't matter where the ball comes from. The main thing is that it is fun and you move.
TO PLAY
BADMINTON
In badminton, the team consists of men and women.
Tennis and squash are declining in many areas, but badminton is booming. Getting fit with badminton is the trend - because badminton trains body and mind!
THE
BADMINTON
COURT
BADMINTON RULES
PLAYER
In singles 1 player on each side.In doubles and mixed there are 2 players on each side.
DRAW
The side of the pitch is drawn by throwing a shuttlecock on the edge of the net or a coin. The winning side chooses either the right to serve or to play on a particular side first. The losing side chooses the remaining option. The ball is hit back and forth alternately by the serving and the receiving side until a point or a mistake is made. The side that wins a set begins serving in the next set. The game is played for 2 winning sets.SERVICE = AUFSCHLAG
With correct service the serving and receiving players stand within diagonally opposite service areas // the ball is hit below the waist of the person serving // the ball falls into the service area of the receiving player // the entire racket head is below the waist of the serving player at the moment of contact
COUNT
With the "rally point counting" method, one point is awarded for each rally. In all disciplines, two winning sets up to 21 points per set are played, whereby a lead of at least two points must be achieved at the end of the set. At 21:20, for example, play continues until one party has a two-point advantage, but no more than 30 points. At 29:29 the next point leads to a set or game win.REPLAY
If there is a "replay", the player who served last serves again. A "replay" can be given for any unforeseen event that interrupts the game, e.g. if the serving player serves before the receiving player is ready, or if the ball from another court disturbs the game.BREAKS
If the leading party reaches 11 points in a set, there is a one-minute break in which the player is not allowed to leave the field of play. Between each set there is an additional two-minute break in which the player may leave the field of play and its surroundings.CHANGE OF SIDE
At the end of a sentence and when the point-of the leading side in the 3rd set has reached 11.IT'S A MISTAKE
if the serving player misses the shuttle on serve // if any object other than the shuttle touches the net // if a player touches the shuttle twice in a row // if the serve is not correct // if the shuttle a) lands outside the field, b) is played through the net or under the net, c) is not hit by the player on his side of the fieldPOSITION IN THE SINGLE
If your own score is even, the serve is from the right, if it is not even, from the left. The first right to serve is drawn by lot.POSITION IN DOUBLE
Basically, as in the singles, the serve is opened from the right if the score is even, from the left if it is odd. Each team has only one right to serve.
Point winning serve: If the serving party wins the rally, the serve continues to serve. He then switches to the other service area and serves to the partner of the first return player. If several points are won, he always switches between the right and left service area as in the traditional counting method.
Point winning returners: If the returning party wins the rally, it receives one point and the right to serve. The positions of the players remain unchanged and they serve again from the right (if their own score is even) or left (if their own score is odd).
Position: The field from which the player who is next in line after the cube's right to serve is served is determined by the last position the players were in. A change of positions has not taken place despite winning points, as this only takes place after a point is won on the player's own serve. The players have to remember where they were last and not - as in the traditional counting system - where they were both standing at zero.
BADMINTON AS A SCHOOL SPORT
Badminton plays an active role in many school curriculums. Because of this, the BWBV in Germany for example, trains up to 80 teachers in this sport every year in cooperation with the government.

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