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AN IDIOTS
GUIDE TO THE NEW RULES
by Ted Wallbutton
After
eighteen months of intensive study by the select Rules Sub-Committee,
and thousands of e-mails, the 2001 Rules were approved at the WSF
AGM in November.
The full text, with changes
highlighted, was published in early 2001 ready for 1 May implementation,and
appears in full on the WSFs website http://www.worldsquash.org/rules/contents.html
But if, like me, you are an average player
(I wish), with a less than perfect knowledge of the Rules, here
is an idiots guide to the major changes.
Play on
We all want to see top Squash
with minimum lets. The new Rules encourage this. Not only do they
revert to the previous wording demanding players make
every effort to get to and play the ball, but in future
lets will not be awarded for minimal interference.
If any interference or contact is so slight that it does not affect
your sighting of the ball, or your freedom to get to and play it,
then play on. Stop - and you will get a No Let. If Jonah
Lomu can score tries with five players hanging from his shirt and
80,000 spectators roaring their heads off surely we can ignore a
racket brushing our opponents clothing on the way through
to the ball.
Another good new rule is the one which allows for
a stroke to be given against you if you distract your opponent
when he or she is about to make a winning return. There go another
few points a game for me.
Safety is paramount
Dangerous play is still outlawed and
in future, if your opponent is too close and has prevented (important
word) your reasonable swing, or would have been hit by it if you
had continued, you will get a stroke. If you stop the swing because
of slight contact with an opponent who is trying to clear, or because
the opponent is uncomfortably, but not too, close you will get a
let. But, be warned, if you stop and your opponent is well clear
- No Let is the result. Also, a stroke will not be awarded
to a player who causes interference with an excessive swing.
Another change that flows from the Pro Tour is
in the turning rule. The new Rules dictate that if a player
turns unnecessarily, to avoid playing a tricky ball rather than
in an attempt to try to play it, No Let is the decision.
To reinforce this, if you turn and hit your opponent with the ball
you lose the stroke, rather than getting a let as previously.
In the re-written eye protection appendix
the WSF now recommends that all Squash players use purpose-made
eye guards at all times. Not a popular change for some people (watch
the SquashPlayer
letters section), but eyes are important things and we idiots
have a greater potential for damage than most.
Spectator control
Heres a Rule, previously only
a guideline, that definitely doesnt affect me. If the behaviour
of any spectator, official, manager or coach is disruptive or offensive
the Referee can suspend play or tell the offending person to leave
the court area. In my case, the rest of my team abuse me and then
leave voluntarily. Not only the players, manager and coach, but
the ref too.
Easier to read
If you want to go through the whole
Rules, a recommended procedure, then you will find them much easier
to follow. The Rules have now been reorganised in a much more logical
fashion and are written in the active voice, rather than the passive
as previously. The myriad notes in the past editions have now been
absorbed into the main text as sub-rules. And best of all the Service
Rule now defines what is a good serve, rather than the old rules
which told us what was bad, in great detail. The Rules Sub-Committees
sterling work has not been in vain; they have done a really good
job.
But for idiots, the major change is that
the whole Rule book now starts with a four page Abbreviated
Guide to the Rules http://www.worldsquash.org/rules/new_page_1.html.
This is simply written from a players viewpoint and gives
the basics, with simple links to the detailed Rules later in the
book.
Phewwww.
Reprinted from the World Squash Federation
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