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Volleyball Terms A Study Guide for Blocking, Part 4

Posted By jameslucas On June 4, 2010 @ 2:24 pm In Blocking | No Comments

By [1] [3] April Chapple

In part four of the volleyball blocking study guide I talk about the terms the double block and using the block.

Double block - A double block is formed when two players manage to travel along the net to get in front of and form a block against a hitter in a rally. With two players blocking against a hitter, the hitter has less options for open spaces on the court to hit to and is forced to hit to the area of the court the double block is not covering.

The hitter may choose to hit down the line if the double block is covering their cross court, or they will hit hard cross court if the double block is taking away the line. Other options include the dink or the “tip”, where the hitter at the height of their jump will tip the ball softly over the block so the ball lands in an open area of the court, out of the block’s reach and away from the defense.

The hitter may also choose to aim for the “seam” of the block which is the space that’s created between the arms of the two opposing blockers, if for some reason the blockers don’t “close the block.”

The hitter can aim for a hole in the block or “use the block” which means a hitter can hit towards the hole that a blocker has created by not keeping their hands close enough to each other or close enough to their blocking partner’s hands.

Using the block - When a hitter decides to “use the block’ or “use the blockers hands” or “wipe the block” - this means they will wipe the outside hands of the blocker with the ball in order to make a point. This is a practiced skill that is very effective for smaller outside hitters who face big blockers and need a hitting option they can rely on when they can’t hit over or hit the ball past the block. “Wiping the block” technique is based on a spiker learning how to spike in a way that they aim the ball for the outside hand of the blocker who’s closest to the antenna, so when the ball is deflected off of the outside hand of the blocker it bounces outside the court.

This skill is very effective for an outside hitter to learn because it’s very hard to defend a ball that’s already on it’s way outside of the court’s boundary lines.

To avoid “being used” an outside blocker should train to go up to block in a way that their outside hand, the one closest to the antenna, is turned into the court, this way while they block and their hands penetrate the plane of the net, that outside hand is positioned to push the ball back into the opposing team’s court.

And now I would like to invite you to get Free video instruction directly from Olympic gold medalists and pro players on how to [2] become a better volleyball player. You’ll get access to free videos with instructions for indoor and beach volleyball blocking skills that you can use right away!

From April Chapple, creator of the volleyball news hub Volleyball Voices.com and author of the new ebook “86 Girls Indoor Volleyball Tips:How To Gain Confidence On the Volleyball Court.”

Article Source: [3] April Chapple

[4] Volleyball Terms A Study Guide for Blocking, Part Four


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URL to article: http://blog.volleydawg.com/2010/06/04/volleyball-terms-a-study-guide-for-blocking-part-4/

URLs in this post:
[1] April Chapple: http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=April_Chapple
[2] become a better volleyball player: http://www.volleyballvoices.com/2009/12/volleyball1on1com-delivers-video-instruc
tion-from-top-volleyball-players-and-coaches-with-new-website.html

[3] April Chapple: http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=April_Chapple
[4] Volleyball Terms A Study Guide for Blocking, Part Four: http://ezinearticles.com/?Volleyball-Terms---A-Study-Guide-For-Blocking,-Part-Fo
ur&id=4375052

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