Key
Rules for Unofficiated Matches
Most high school tennis matches are not officiated by USTA-certified umpires, and therefore, young players are on their own to call their own lines, interpret unclear rules and otherwise police themselves.
In addition to the official rules of the game, the USTA has produced a code of conduct which governs unofficiated matches.
Below are highlights of some of the key rules from The Code.
Warm Up is Not a Practice
A player should provide his
opponent a five-minute warm-up (10 minutes if there are not ball
persons). If a player refuses to warm up his opponent, he
forfeits his right to a warm-up. Some players confuse warm-up and
practice. A player should make a special effort to hit his shots
directly to his opponent. If doubles partners want to warm each
other up while their opponents are warming up, they may do so.
Out Calls Corrected
If a player mistakenly calls a
ball out and then realizes it was good, the point
shall be replayed if he returned the ball within the proper
court. Nonetheless, if the player's return of the ball results in
a weak sitter, the player should give his opponent
the point. If the player failed to make the return, the opponent
wins the point. If the mistake was made on the second serve, the
server is entitled to two serves.
Foot Faults
A player may warn his opponent
that the opponent has committed a flagrant foot fault. If the
foot faulting continues, the play may attempt to locate an
official. If no official is available, the player may call
flagrant foot faults. Compliance with the foot fault rule is very
much a function of the player's personal honor system.
Service Let Calls
Any player may call a service let.
The call shall be made before the return of serve goes out of
play or is hit by the server of his partner. If the serve is an
apparent or near ace, any let shall be called promptly.
Obvious Faults
A player shall not put into play
or hit over the net an obvious fault. To do so constitutes
rudeness and may even be a form of gamesmanship. On the other
hand, if a player believes that he cannot call a serve a fault
and gives his opponent the benefit of the close call, the server
is not entitled to replay the point.
Receiver Readiness
The receiver shall play to the
reasonable pace of the server. The receiver should make no effort
to return a serve when he is not ready. If a player attempts to
return a serve (even if it is a quick server), then
he (or his team) is presumed to be ready.
Delays During Service
When the server's second service
motion is interrupted by a ball coming on the court, he is
entitled to two serves. When there is a delay between the first
and second serves:
the server gets one serve if the was the
cause of the delay;
the server gets two serves if the delay was caused by the
receiver or if there was outside interference.
The time it takes to clear a ball that comes onto the court between the first and second serves is not considered sufficient time to warrant the server receiving two serves unless this time is so prolonged as to constitute an interruption. The receiver is the judge of the whether the delay is sufficiently prolonged to justify giving the server two serves.
Disputes
Disputes over the score shall be resolved by using one of the
following methods, which are listed in the order of preference:
count all points and games agreed upon by
the players and replay only the disputed points or games;
play from a score mutually agreeable to all players; spin a
racket or toss a coin.
Talking During a Point
A player shall not talk while the ball is moving toward his
opponent's side of the court. If the player's talking interferes
with his opponent's ability to play the ball, the player loses
the point. Consider the situation where a player hits a weak lob
and loudly yells at his partner to get back. If the shout is loud
enough to distract his opponent, then the opponent may claim the
point based on a deliberate hindrance. If the opponent chooses to
hit the lob and misses it, the opponent loses the point because
he did not make a timely claim of hindrance.
For a complete, low-cost copy or copies of The Code for your team members, contact the USTA.