flintdragon said:
Jack Pearson said:
flintdragon said:
as a parent of a setter, I say good riddance! It's such an ambiguous call and different refs have different interpretations. Here is what I've heard from refs: must see or hear double contact (not just spin), forward/backward rolls are ok, no doubles will be called unless egregious (from PNQ). Some just never call it. Others call it so tight that setters become frustrated. Not every setter is a superstar D1 setter.
In the end, it's just a bad set so the team is already penalized with a less than ideal attack.
Disagree. Great hands is what sets great setters apart. This just dumbs down the position and will just usher out all the under 6ft setters out there. If you want to get rid of it in the under 14-15U fine, but by 16U an above either you have the hands or you dont. The continuous play thing is ridiculous. Would be like in baseball getting rid of walks and to bring out at tee after 4 balls so the hitter can take a rip. After all, everyone just wants to see homeruns and big hits smh
I'm not saying you are wrong in your opinion at all but I'm calling out the impossible enforcement of the rule that exists today. Different refs call it different ways and I've heard from many a coach wanting the rule just removed. Different areas of the country seem to lean different directions. Even NCAA D1 you can see many doubles not called. Unless it is an obvious double contact. You have entire fan sections calling for doubles with no call from the ref.
It's just a bad set. Ask hitters if they would like to hit a spinny janky set or a perfect set with tempo, arc, location. The good setters would still be evaluated above the rest. Do you penalize a libero for shanking a serve receive? The penalty is already there as your team will probably have to free ball it over.
You all know much more than me, but as someone who knew very little about the sport until my 2 daughters started playing club 4-5 years ago, the double call has always been a head-scratcher for the reasons you mention. A better analogy would be a QB who throws a wobbly duck of a pass. Should that be a penalty?
I mean, by definition, a double isn't even an actual double hit....it's just a set with spin on it. One handed tips or tip sets that have spin aren't considered doubles. It has never made sense to me.
Now, something that DOES give an advantage (and is hardly ever called in club unless egregious) is when a setter basically brings the ball down to their nose and throws it back up which should be a lift. I've been told this "style" of set is allowed in beach and so now most club refs are letting it go (UIL refs seem less tolerant). Anyway, if anyone is worried about dumbing down setting, I would start there.