Proposed Smaller Changes
Date: 2008-12-18
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This page contains many proposed "smaller" changes. Sections affected by changes have been underlined. The main area affected is the doubles rules that have been merged with the main document, which has made it possible to remove some text while instead referring back to the general section.
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The Rules of Racketlon
Date: 2008-xx-xx
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For the revision history see end of document.
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Introduction

Racketlon is the sport in which you play your opponent in each of the four racket sports table tennis, badminton, squash and tennis. A Racketlon match contains four sets, one in each sport. The winner is the best all round racket player.

This document contains the official rules of Racketlon according to the International Racketlon Federation.

General Rules

Definition of Racketlon

The following three principles need to be fulfilled in order for a sport to qualify for the term Racketlon:

Any sport that fulfils the three principles above is Racketlon. Any other sport involving the combination of several racket sports might be termed "multi racket sport" - but is not Racketlon.

Set Order

Scoring

Serving & Ends of Court

Time Intervals & Continuous Play

Conduct on Court

For any act of misconduct (as judged by the umpire) such as swearing, threatening behaviour, racket abuse, delaying or dangerous play, etc, the player shall be penalised as follows:

Line Judging:

Injury

Recommendations

All other aspects of the game are regulated by the rules of the individual sports. See the following links:

The Rules of Table Tennis (according to the International Table Tennis Federation)
The Rules of Squash (according to the World Squash Federation)
The Rules of Badminton (according to the Badminton World Federation)
The Rules of Tennis (according to the International Tennis Federation)

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Doubles Specific Rules

The rules of each sport and the general Racketlon rules above regulate most aspects of the doubles game. But some additions are necessary. These are the Racketlon rules specific to the doubles game:

1. Players on Court
Both players of each pair must be on court for the table tennis, badminton and tennis. The exception is squash, which is played as singles.

2. __________
<<removed in full>>

3. Serving
a) Definitions:
The examples below refer to a match between Pair A (containing players A1 and A2) and Pair B (containing players B1 and B2), where the digit 1 denotes the players serving and receiving first respectively.

b) Tossing. As in singles there is one single toss done before the match deciding which team starts to serve in each set and which team gets to decide what end to start playing on. Specific to the doubles it is the team that starts serving that, in each set, decides which of the two players should start serving. Likewise, it is the receiving side that decides which of the two players starts receiving. The receiving side can make their choice after they know who will serve.

c) 2 serves. As in singles each serve game contains 2 serves, meaning that each server gets to serve twice before the right to serve moves over to the next server. With the exception of the extension after 20-20. Then it is

d) Right then left. As in singles the first serve in each serve game is always from the right and the second from the left. Except in table tennis where the serves are always from the right as in standard table tennis doubles.

e) Table tennis. The order of serving/receiving rotation in table tennis starts with A1 to B1, B1 to A2, A2 to B2, B2 to A1 and this cycle repeats itself until 11 is reached. At that stage the two players on the receiving side switch positions with each other and the cycle changes into A1 to B2, B2 to A2, A2 to B1, B1 to A1. (Note that the position switches only occur after each serve game and only on the side which has just been serving.)

f) Badminton. The cycle for badminton serving is simply A1 - B1 - A2 - B2 throughout the set. The receiving is guided by the badminton rules that suggests that the players keep their positions except the serving side when the server moves to serve from the left side after having served from the right. This gives the following cycle: A1 to B1 then A1 to B2, B1 to A2 then B1 to A1, A2 to B2 then A2 to B1, B2 to A1 then B2 to A2. Which repeats itself without change until the end of the set.

g) Tennis. As in badminton the cycle for serving in tennis is simply A1 - B1 - A2 - B2 throughout the set. As regards the receiving each team choose which player returns on the forehand and which player returns on the backhand side and this stays the same until 11 at which time it is changed for the rest of the set.

4. ________
<<removed in full>>

5. Squash change player at 11
The squash will be played as a singles in two parts up to 21 as normal with the additional
rules below: -
a) The player with the highest World (singles) Ranking in the pair will play as the No1 player
against the other pairs No1 up to 11 points first then the No2 players take over to finish the
set etc. If any of the pairs play out of the ranking order, the offending pair will automatically
lose the squash to zero and the opponents will register a win with the full allocation of point's.
b) If one of the pairs, does not have a World (singles) Ranking then that player will have to
play No 2 at the squash. The ranked player will play No 1 in the pair.
c) In the case when both players in the pair do not have a World (singles) Ranking, then the
pair will decide themselves who plays first, but this order counts for the whole tournament.
d) In Mixed Doubles, the women play each other first and then men take over to finish the set.

6. Gummiarm Tiebreak
As in singles there is a Gummiarm tiebreak if the pairs have exactly the same number of points after four sets. Specific to doubles the serving side may decide who will serve within the pair. Similarily, the receiving side may decide who will receive within the pair.

7. Seeding _________
<<removed in full>>

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Revision history:
2001-08-01: first version
2002-05-17: margin-of-two (22-20) counting introduced (see
discussion); links added to rules
2002-12-03: gummiarm tiebreak introduced (see
discussion)
2004-05-27:
Clarified that this document contains the official rules of the IRF.
Added a definition of Racketlon.
Added a note to clarify that group play might require that matches are played to the end eventhough they are already decided.
Modified the description of the single point tie-break to clarify that the winner of the lot might also choose which side to play on. (Same thing clarified for the tossing at the beginning of each set).
Added rules about breaks (at 11 and between sports) according to IRF decisions.
Added a recommendation about protective glasses according to an IRF decision.
2004-09-27:
Added rules on Time Intervals, Conduct on Court, Injury and Line Judging according to IRF suggestions (see
analysis.doc)
2005-02-17:
Changed the order of sports so that squash and badminton switched place into tt-ba-sq-te - according to an IRF decision. (see
analysis)
2007-01-01
Two format changes according to AGM decisions in Vienna 2006-11-25 (see
newsitem):
-The serve games shortened from 5 to 2 serves.
-A single toss rule introduced implying alternating "start-to-serve" advantages.
2007-07-31
Updated the links to the rules of the individual sports
Clarified the rule on the "Gummiarm Tiebreak"

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