6-2 Volleyball — Rotation 6
In a 6-2, rotation 6 gives you three front-row attackers: one setter sets from the back row while the other plays the right side. The middle blocker serves. The diagrams below show the legal serve-receive formation, the base positions, and the switch to attack.
- Server
- middle blocker
- Setter
- back row · zone 5
- Front attackers
- 3
- Passers
- the middle blocker and the two outside hitters
Coaching notes for this rotation
- At serve contact every player must be positioned legally: within each row the left-to-right order holds, and each front-row player stays closer to the net than the back-row player behind them. The serve-receive diagram shows a formation that keeps all of that legal.
- The setter's first job is to release from the back row to the net target as soon as the ball is served — start legal, then go. Watch the switch diagram for the path.
- The middle blocker and the two outside hitters pass in this rotation; the front-row middle releases to hit and does not pass.
Frequently asked questions
- Who serves in the 6-2 rotation 6?
- The middle blocker serves from zone 1 (back right) in this rotation.
- Where is the setter in 6-2 rotation 6?
- The setter is in the back row (zone 5). They penetrate to the net to set after the serve.
- How many front-row attackers does this rotation have?
- 3. All three front-row players are hitters.