![]() ![]() However, in my experience, the setter gets a good amount of say in what she is calling in-game, this is especially true for the experienced setters. Same idea here with the setter during a long rally.Īfter scouting and watching film, most of the time a coach and setter have worked out prior to the game or during a time out what sets to make in each rotation. During a hurry up scenario, say, a two-minute drill, after a few scripted plays it may be the wide receiver or tight end who says, “I’m open down the seam”, or whatever. Side note: If the rally goes on for multiple times across the net, these roles can switch as it becomes the hitters who are then normally calling out, or making audible calls of what set they want. ![]() Each hitter gets a hand signal to tell them what set she will give them off the first pass. She will hide them from the other team with her shirt as she makes signals to each hitter. Here’s a tip: Watch the setter’s hands when her team is about to receive serve. The setter also calls the plays for the team, something she’ll do prior to the serve. ![]() This follows nicely with the quarterback comparison who receives the snap (second contact), then chooses which offensive player to throw or hand off to, based on what the defense is doing. The setter, in volleyball, touches the ball on every play (the second contact) and chooses which of the offensive options she will set. When I start to teach anyone about volleyball and we get to the setter position, I normally start with a quarterback analogy. We’ll discuss how they approach the match, what they practice and their role on the court. I’ll write about setters, middles, left side hitters, right side hitters, liberos and coaches. This is a series about volleyball written from the different perspective of each position on the court. ![]()
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