When a player makes a normal foul, the opposing player is then granted possession of the puck, unless the player who committed the foul is scored upon within the same play of which the foul was committed.After a goal is scored legally, the defending player is granted possession and they have ten seconds to get the puck back into play.Legal use of possession requires the player with the puck in possession to touch the puck only with their mallet hands are not allowed.Legal possession and shooting require that the player is in their proper position, on their side of the table anywhere behind the centerline opposite of their opponent who is also supposed to be in their proper position.When that player has possession, they have seven seconds to get the puck across the center line into their opponent’s side otherwise a foul is made Legal shooting involves the player who has possession. The third condition where a goal will not count is if a player shoots the puck at their opponent's goal and they drop their mallet, and in turn, the defending player is distracted by the event.However, if it comes back out and ricochets off the defending player's hand back into their own goal the goal counts The second condition where a goal will not count is if the puck hits the back of the goal mouth and is ricocheted back out.The first condition where a goal will not count is if there was interference of some kind, or if it hits a player's hand on the way in- in a way that the puck would not have made it into the goal otherwise.Now, the player ‘hand serves’ the puck with their hand to place it in front of their mallet to resume play After a goal is scored, possession is granted to the player that was scored on.To score, a player must get the puck into the opponent’s goal - with either the puck breaking the horizontal plane of the surface, or fully falling into the retrieval slot of the goal it went into.To win, a player must be the first to score 7 points.
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