What do badminton line judges wear




















For Junior Circuit Tournaments Umpires must be provided for all matches, Service judges are only required for semi-finals and finals. For U17 Circuit Tournaments Umpires must be provided for semi-finals and finals, Service judges are not required. The Organisers are responsible to cover the accommodation expenses for the Umpires as well as for providing them with meals or daily allowance. Line judges for Championships. The number of Line judges required for each type of Championships differs per event and per stage.

Line judges for Circuit tournaments. For Elite Circuit tournaments Line judges must be provided for the whole tournament main draw and qualification. All Line judges officiating at the same BEC Elite Circuit tournament are required to wear the same colour of uniforms. At least two Line judges must be provided per match, preferably working in two shifts.

Line judges must be minimum 14 years old. For Junior Circuit tournaments Line judges must be provided for semi-finals and finals.

Events Manual. Section 1 - Events options and how to apply. Section 2 - Securing the event. Section 4 - Finance. Section 5 - Communication. Section 6 - Marketing and Promotion. Section 7 - Sponsorship. Section 8 - Accommodation. The line judge is placed at each line of badminton court to look after if a shuttle landed is in or out of the court near the line you are appointed to look after.

As mentioned in the beginning, the number of line judges can be different in different matches. Some tournaments have 10 line judges, while some may have 8. A midline judge on both sides of the court determines whether the serve is in the wrong zone. A baseline judge on both sides determines whether the shuttle is out of the line and whether the doubles make a long serve. They should sit on the line being assigned to him.

The best position is to face the umpire. The actual sitting distance between the line judges with the court is about 2. If the shuttle is landed within the line boundary, the line judges only need to point to the line with their hands. If the eyesight of the line judge is blocked, they need to use both hands to cover their eyes immediately to signal the umpire they miss the eye judgment.

BWF issues no course or certification to the training of line judges. Therefore, the path to becoming a qualified line judge will with different for many countries. Since the position is not as important as umpire or service judge, thus, most of the requirement for someone to become a line judge is rather lenient. It used to be the line judges who would have the final judge if a shuttle landed inside or outside the line in a badminton match.

The technical principle is not complicated, and it is exact. The system consists of 8 or 10 high-speed cameras, four computers, and a large screen.

The system consists of 10 cameras that track the flying tennis ball and feedback information to the connected computer, calculating the simulated trajectory. Once you are qualified to be a line judge, you will not need any additional training. The line judge can accumulate their judging skill and experience by taking part in more important tournaments. A badminton umpire calls decisions on service faults, lets, and any other player faults. Throughout the game, the umpire must announce the match score to the players and to any watching audience.

The umpire will track and announce the score of the game after each and every point. The score of the serving team will always be called first. In casual badminton games, fair play refers to players being honest in admitting that the shuttle has landed inside or outside the court boundaries.

Umpires who are at a sufficient level and experience may then be assessed to become accredited or certificated at the continental level. The referee is in overall charge of a badminton tournament or championship s of which a match forms part, to uphold the Laws of Badminton and Competition Regulations in the BWF Statutes. The umpire sits atop a high chair next to one end of the net. The service judge sits on a low chair on the other end of the net.



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