When the ball contacts the floor within
the court boundaries or an error is made, the team that did not make the error
is awarded a point, whether they served the ball or not. If the ball hits the
line, the ball is counted as in. The team that won the point serves for the
next point. If the team that won the point served in the previous point, the
same player serves again. If the team that won the point did not serve the
previous point, the players of the serving team rotate their position on the
court in a clockwise manner. The game continues, with the first team to score
25 points by a two-point margin is awarded the set. Matches are best-of-five
sets and the fifth set, if necessary, is usually played to 15 points. (Scoring
differs between leagues, tournaments, and levels; high schools sometimes play
best-of-three to 25; in the NCAA matches are played best-of-five
to 25 as of the 2008 season.)
Before 1999, points could be scored
only when a team had the serve (side-out
scoring) and all sets went up to only 15 points. The FIVB changed the
rules in 1999 (with the changes being compulsory in 2000) to use the current
scoring system (formerly known as rally
point system), primarily to make the length of the match more
predictable and to make the game more spectator- and television-friendly.
The final year of side-out scoring at
the NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Championship was 2000.
Rally point scoring debuted in 2001 and
games were played to 30 points through 2007.
For the 2008 season,
games were renamed "sets" and reduced to 25 points to win.
Libero in volleyball
In
1998 the libero player was introduced internationally. The libero is a player
specialized in defensive skills: the libero must wear a contrasting jersey
color from his or her teammates and cannot block or attack the ball when it is
entirely above net height. When the ball is not in play, the libero can replace
any back-row player, without prior notice to the officials. This replacement
does not count against the substitution limit each team is allowed per set,
although the libero may be replaced only by the player whom he or she replaced.
The
libero may function as a setter only under certain restrictions. If she/he
makes an overhand set, she/he must be standing behind (and not stepping on) the
3-meter line; otherwise, the ball cannot be attacked above the net in front of
the 3-meter line. An underhand pass is allowed from any part of the court.
The
libero is, generally, the most skilled defensive player on the team. There is
also a libero tracking sheet, where the referees or officiating team must keep
track of whom the libero subs in and out for. There may only be one libero per
set (game), although there may be a different libero in the beginning of any
new set (game).
Furthermore,
a libero is not allowed to serve, according to international rules, with the
exception of the NCAA women's volleyball games, where a 2004 rule change allows
the libero to serve, but only in a specific rotation. That is, the libero can
only serve for one person, not for all of the people for whom she goes in. That
rule change was also applied to high school and junior high play soon after.
Recent rule changes
Other rule changes
enacted in 2000 include allowing serves in which the ball touches the net, as
long as it goes over the net into the opponents' court. Also, the service area
was expanded to allow players to serve from anywhere behind the end line but
still within the theoretical extension of the sidelines. Other changes were
made to lighten up calls on faults for carries and double-touches, such as
allowing multiple contacts by a single player ("double-hits") on a
team's first contact provided that they are a part of a single play on the
ball.
In 2008, the NCAA
changed the minimum number of points needed to win any of the first four sets
from 30 to 25 for women's volleyball (men's volleyball remained at 30.) If a
fifth (deciding) set is reached, the minimum required score remains at 15. In
addition, the word "game" is now referred to as "set"
Changes in rules
have been studied and announced by the FIVB in recent years, and they have released the updated rules in 2009.
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