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Impact of the second-contact rule change on Setter performance, referee home advantage, and rally dynamics in NCAA volleyball

(Auswirkungen der Änderung der Zweikontaktregel auf die Leistung der Zuspieler, den Heimvorteil der Schiedsrichter und die Dynamik der Ballwechsel im NCAA-Volleyball)

Purpose This study evaluates the impact of the NCAA`s 2024-25 rule change eliminating most ball-handling error (BHE) calls on second contacts directed to a teammate, testing its effects on overall BHE frequency, setter-specific risk, home-court asymmetry, and rally continuity. Methods Using a stable panel of 33,220 matches spanning the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons (over 5.2 million rallies), we fitted interrupted time-series and difference-in-differences regressions - with match fixed effects and cluster-robust SEs - to estimate post-rule changes in BHE/point, Setter vs non-Setter rates, visitor - home BHE gaps, and attacks-per-rally as a rally length measure. Results Model-estimated effects show a Setter shift from committing 0.0016 more BHE/point than all other positions combined to 0.0003 fewer, a shrinkage of the visitor - home BHE gap by 0.000384 BHE/point, and an increase of +0.0152 attacks/point in rally length, while non-setter BHE declined more modestly and scoring balance remained unchanged. Conclusions The rule change curtailed discretionary referee calls, markedly reduced Setter ball-handling infractions - the position most vulnerable before the change - and modestly extended rally continuity, while scoring distributions remained broadly similar to 2023-24.
© Copyright 2025 Journal of Sports Sciences. Taylor & Francis. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Schlagworte:
Notationen:Spielsportarten
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Sports Sciences
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2025
Online-Zugang:https://doi.org/10.1080/02640414.2025.2567806
Jahrgang:43
Heft:23
Seiten:2977-2987
Dokumentenarten:Artikel
Level:hoch