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Yeah, sometimes, these analogies don't work because they miss the essence of the problem. In fact, the police often do get a search warrant for one reason and find evidence that incriminates related to something else and it is then a legal issue over whether that other evidence is relevant to anything or not, so this is a timescale problem.Then the umpire shouldn't call fault on specifics, just call fault serve. Make things consistent across the board. Call
fault serve, check serve on all the rules, and there's the result.
Imagine a police officer halting you for crossing a double line, then checking the camera footage only to see you didn't cross the double line even if you did 200 km/h in a 100 zone... No, they'll halt you and then find out what they can charge you with![]()
In this case, determining what is wrong with a serve happens so fast and its relation to TTR is very specific and the funny thing about illegal serves is that many of them can be fixed by higher tosses (not all of them) as height is related to exit angle, height makes backward tossing harder to control etc. so one can focus on height even when other things are really the issue. But maybe these umpires have gotten lots of training and I am the one who is ignorant and cutting them too much slack.