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Racquets are used in the racquet sport of badminton to hit shuttlecocks across a net.

The most popular


game varieties are "singles" (with one player on each side) and "doubles" (with two players on each
side), though it can also be played with larger teams. Although casual games are played on a four-sided
indoor court, badminton is sometimes described as an outdoor activity that may be done in a garden or
on the beach. By striking the automobile with a racquet and putting it in the opposing side of the court,
points are earned. Before the automobile crosses the goal line, each team may hit it once.

When the car strikes the ground or if the referee, referee, or (in their absence) signals a foul on the
opposing side, the game is over.

Unlike the ball used in many other sports, a shuttlecock is a winged object or (in informal sports) a
plastic projectile that flies differently. Particularly, the drag from the feathers is greater, causing the
plane to fly faster. Additionally, shuttlecocks move considerably more quickly than balls and other
racquet sports. The game's distinctive personality is derived by how the steering wheel moves.

Battledore and steering wheel, a previous game, served as the inspiration for this one in British India.
The Danish later dominated the European game, while the Chinese have recently won Asian
championships, where the game is becoming more and more popular. Men's, women's, men's and
women's doubles competitions made up badminton's inaugural Summer Olympic sport lineup in 1992;
[2] was doubled four years later. High-level sports demand athletes to be in top physical shape because
they need to have endurance, strength, power, speed, and precision. Additionally, it is a technical game
that calls for the development of dexterous racket motions and fine motor coordination.[3]

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