Rules Of The GameTHE TEAMTeams will be made up of 6-10 players. Six (6) players will compete on a side; others will be available as substitutes. Substitutes may enter the game only during timeouts or in the case of injury. THE FIELDThe game may be played indoors or outdoors. The playing field shall be a rectangle at least 50 ft long and at least 30 ft wide, divided into two (2) equal sections by a center-line and attack-lines 3m from, and parallel to the centerline. IDEAL MEASUREMENTS: 60’ x 30’ – Identical to a volleyball court. THE EQUIPMENTThe official ball used in tournament and league play will be an 8" rubber-coated foam ball. THE GAMEThe object of the game is to eliminate all opposing players by
getting them "OUT". This may be done by: THE OPENING RUSHGame begins by placing the dodgeballs along the center line – three (3) on one side of the center hash and three (3) on the other. Players then take a position behind their end line. Following a signal by the official, teams may approach the centerline to retrieve the balls. This signal officially starts the contest. Teams may only retrieve the three (3) balls to their right of the center hash. Once a ball is retrieved it must be taken behind the attack-line before it can be legally thrown. TIMING AND WINNING A GAMEThe first team to legally eliminate all opposing players will be declared the winner. A 5-minute time limit has been established for each contest. If neither team has been eliminated at the end of the 5 minutes, the team with the greater number of players remaining will be declared the winner. In the case of an equal number of players remaining after regulation, a 1-minute sudden-death overtime period will be played. Details on overtime can be found in the NADA Rule Book. TIME-OUTS & SUBSTITUTIONSEach team will be allowed one (1) 30 second timeout per game. At this time a team may substitute players into the game. 5-SECOND VIOLATIONIn order to reduce stalling, a violation will be called if a team in the lead controls all six (6) balls on their side of the court for more than 5 seconds. More details can be found in the NADA Rule Book RULE ENFORCEMENTDuring pool play or regular-season matches, rules will be enforced
primarily by the "honor system"*. Players will be expected
to rule whether or not a hit was legal or whether they were legally
eliminated. All contests will be supervised by a court monitor*.
The court monitor’s responsibility will be to rule on any
situation in which teams cannot agree. THE COURT MONITOR’S
DECISION IS FINAL – NO EXCEPTIONS.
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Last Updated January 4, 2006


