The rules of tennis are
quite simple.
Rule 1. Opponents stand on opposite sides of the court. The player who
delivers the ball to start the point is called the server. The player
who stands opposite and cross-court from the server is the receiver.
Rule 2. The right to serve, receive, choose your side, or give the
opponent these choices is decided by a toss of a coin or racquet. If the
choice of service or receiver is chosen, the opponent chooses which side to
start.
Rule 3. The server shall stand behind the baseline on the deuce court
within the boundaries of the singles court when playing singles and within the
doubles sideline when playing doubles. See The
dimensions of tennis court below.
All even points are
played from the deuce court and odd number points played from the advantage
court. The server shall not serve until the receiver is ready. Serves are made
from the deuce court to the opponents service box on the deuce court. Advantage
court to advantage box. If the server misses his target twice, he loses the
point. If the ball hits the net and goes in the correct service box, another
serve is granted. If the server steps on the baseline before contact is made,
the serve is deemed a fault.
Rule 4. The receiver is deemed ready if an attempt is made to return the
server's ball. The receiver can stand where he likes but must let the ball
bounce in the service box. If the ball does not land in the service box, it is
deemed a fault and a second serve is given. If the ball is hit by either
opponent before the ball bounces, the server wins the point.
Rule 5. The server always calls his score first. If the server wins the
first point, he gets a score of 15. Scoring is done like a clock. See example
below. Love means zero in tennis. The second point is called 30. The third
point is called 40 and game is won when the score goes back to love. If the
score is 40-40, also known as deuce, one side must win by two points. Advantage-In
means if the server wins the next point, he wins the game. Advantage-Out
means the receiver has a chance to win the game on the next point.
LOVE 15-30-40
Rule 6. After the game, the opponents serve. Games equal 1. The first to
win 6 games, by two, wins the set. The first to win 2 sets wins the match. If
the score is 6-6, a tie-breaker is played. This is scored by one's. The first
team to score 7 points winning by two wins the set. The tiebreaker continues
until one side wins by two. Hence, Game-Set-Match.
Rule 7. If the ball goes into the net, or outside the boundaries of the
court, the player who hit that ball loses the point. If the ball hits the net
during the point and goes into the opponents court, the ball is in play. A
player loses the point if he touches the net, drops his racquet while hitting
the ball, bounces the ball over the net, hits a part of the surroundings such
as the roof, or a tree, the ball touches him or his partner, he deliberately
tries to distract the opponent.
Rule 8. A let is called during the point if a ball rolls on the
court or there is a distraction from someone besides the players on the court.
Rule 9. A ball that lands on the line is good.
Rule 10. If players serve out of turn or serve to the wrong person or
court, the point or game will stand and order will be resumed following the
point or game