Top 10 Most Actionable Pickleball Tips For Aspiring Advanced Players

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • If you’re an intermediate player looking to break in to the the level of play that will make you a regular on the top courts then you need to ramp up your skills all while keeping an eye on what’s working in the modern game and where things are headed.
    In this video, we get into the 10 most actionable tips for those aspiring to be advanced level pickleball players. I think some some of the things I’m going to cover today are going to surprise you. Let’s get into it!
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Комментарии • 73

  • @denisehouck1970
    @denisehouck1970 6 месяцев назад +3

    Nicole, THIS!! You have made a video, put into words, what I have suspected is wrong with my game. You have laid out a plan for improvement going forward. Thank you!!!❤

  • @alohaleslie9407
    @alohaleslie9407 Месяц назад +1

    I have been doing lobs as far back as a few years ago, when it was poopooed by everybody as low skill level shot. LOL Not anymore! I have a pretty consistent lob and use it often. I am not called the "Lobster." :) Great video, Nicole. Lots of great advice, as usual.

  • @ranadalaughlin7226
    @ranadalaughlin7226 Год назад +6

    Love the focus on what WE can improve (instead of focusing on partners, etc.) Work on those fundamentals when frazzled!

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад

      Thanks! Yes, ultimately you only have control over yourself. That’s where to focus.

  • @jimkazmarek5302
    @jimkazmarek5302 Год назад +4

    Speed with a purpose! Power with precision. Footwork and balance. And PRACTICE.
    Thanks Nicole, you nailed it!

  • @BGK2223
    @BGK2223 Год назад +2

    Great tips, and very well described with both your words and the people demonstrating. Thank you!!

  • @bretwallach9863
    @bretwallach9863 Год назад +4

    Your videos are just getting better and better and better!
    As usual I have a couple of comments... 😀
    On "Dominate with your Forehand" I certainly hit significantly more shots with my forehand because my backhand tires out my shoulder much faster due the bio-mechanical advantages that you mentioned the forehand has. However, if I want to hit a really fast ball that's really accurate with moderate top spin I run around my forehand to hit my backhand. I believe that for accuracy the bio-mechanical advantage is with the backhand because your shoulder is leading your body instead of trailing your body and being a large male I can still hit my backhand more than hard enough. My observation is that my opponents are more likely to miss one of my hard hit backhands than hard hit forehands (admittedly I think that's partly because few expect a backhand to come rocketing at them). For me that was true in tennis too - my backhand has always been my most accurate wing though I could not hit a tennis backhand quite as hard as a tennis forehand.
    Regarding "Fusion 3rd Shot," I loved it! I'm doing that more and more and it really works well when the service return is hit deep to me. I'm trying to optimally modulate speed and spin and what's holding me back most at the moment it better awareness of what my opponents are doing. I'm focused (often too focused) on just watching the ball and not dedicating any focus to where my opponents are. I feel so stupid when I hit a drop shot and look up to see that my opponent would not have made it to the net if I had hit a "fusion" drive.

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад +1

      Always love your insightful and thoughtful comments! Yeah, the fusion is a real problem for your opponents. Tough to dig those shots off your shoelaces in transition. My backhand has historically been my more reliable wing as well but that just tells me I have more work to do on my forehand. All the best players (in both sports) have great forehands that they generally run around to hit as much as they can. They have good backhands too but if they have a choice, they’re going with the FH. Part of the reason you can hit with more power on FHs is because the shoulder is in the back at the start of the stroke and you have room to rotate with it which is not available to you on the BH side.

  • @soosieyoutube3510
    @soosieyoutube3510 Год назад

    You are so inspiring. Awesome tips that you are willing to share 😊

  • @loricharvat
    @loricharvat Год назад

    Love this lesson, Nicole! Thank you !

  • @HelenHomann
    @HelenHomann 5 месяцев назад +1

    Always look forward to your videos Nicole.

  • @jaycohen5482
    @jaycohen5482 Год назад

    Outstanding, thanks for posting.

  • @kbotelho27
    @kbotelho27 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, great job with this instruction! I'm saving it to share with my students. I recognize my bucket leaks around your point #3. I don't practice handling pace enough. I'll be working on maintaining my fundamentals when things get sped up.

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  10 месяцев назад

      Glad you liked this video and thanks for sharing. Fundamental work 👏👏👏. love it!

  • @steveguinsler4451
    @steveguinsler4451 Год назад +2

    Good stuff well presented!

  • @rayhebert3522
    @rayhebert3522 10 месяцев назад

    Video was definitely helpful and shared it with two of my playing partners.

  • @afterthesmash
    @afterthesmash 5 месяцев назад

    I've watched many of Nicole's videos and I always get something out of them, but this is the first one I've actually loved.

  • @BikerTechTC
    @BikerTechTC Год назад

    NIcole, your videos are ones of the best out there.

  • @galaxy_mosaic3587
    @galaxy_mosaic3587 Год назад

    such great tips. thanks! I was feeling like my fundamentals were getting sloppy and had to skim review videos recently (that tip was on point)...

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад +1

      😎 Yes, don’t sleep on the fundamentals. They’ll come back to bite you. Good catch.

  • @Magoo71
    @Magoo71 Год назад

    Thanks PT love your thoughts on improvement! Middle Middle solves the riddle!

  • @admranger
    @admranger Год назад

    Thanks for another great video!

  • @lizlemon9632
    @lizlemon9632 Год назад

    Brilliant. Thank you.

  • @pttrainer212
    @pttrainer212 Год назад

    Great tips on improving your game. There is always room to improve

  • @romanhernz3839
    @romanhernz3839 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you! Nicole.

  • @anthonyt0808
    @anthonyt0808 Месяц назад

    Thanks!

  • @JBird2ful
    @JBird2ful Месяц назад

    EXCELLENT!

  • @ronicrum
    @ronicrum 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the kick in the butt...I need to practice the fundamentals.

  • @carolzanoff5628
    @carolzanoff5628 Месяц назад

    Sure wish you would do some camps-totally following these tips!!

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Месяц назад

      Thank you! I hope to get back on court for coaching one day.

  • @tristeele9457
    @tristeele9457 3 месяца назад

    Nicole, I am a newish player. Everything you are pointing out here is helping. Bad ass!

  • @mddale
    @mddale 5 месяцев назад

    I wish I could remember this stuff during play!

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  2 месяца назад

      Focus on one at a time until they become automatic one by one.

  • @micahfaas
    @micahfaas Год назад +1

    What are your thoughts on switching hands (hitting a forehand with your non-dominant hand) for groundstrokes as opposed to a 2-handed backhand?

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад

      If you’re on the stretch maybe. I wouldn’t recommend it as a staple shot that’s used point in and point out.

    • @daveharter6469
      @daveharter6469 Год назад

      My guess is that if switching hands is a normal thing, it may be saying your footwork is slow, I have seen a few older people switch hands and was surprised how good they were at it. Age changes everything, dought a coach would teach switching hands to a 55 --. If a 60 + is doing it, maybe it's hard to change?

    • @downieduck2414
      @downieduck2414 10 месяцев назад

      @@daveharter6469 i am doing it, basically to strengthn my left arm (I am right handed) as it is the power on a two handed back hand, not your right hand -

  • @sandracarlson6381
    @sandracarlson6381 Год назад +1

    I love the way YOU teach this game!

  • @AlphaTennisinPittsburgh
    @AlphaTennisinPittsburgh 9 месяцев назад

    Pickleball is America's fastest-growing sport and we like it #Pickleball

  • @daveharter6469
    @daveharter6469 Год назад

    All good stuff. I am a formula guy. find the formula, and it works in many different scenarios . also noticing people are not hitting to the open court, amazed at people hitting the ball hard back to the base line, getting it returned, where a dink in the kitchen wins the point outright.

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад

      I’m a formula fan too! 🙌

    • @ScottT109
      @ScottT109 Год назад +1

      Yes, hitting a drop/or cut volley shallow into the kitchen can be a winner when it’s unexpected and the players are slow. But if it’s done repeatedly your quick, agile opponents will simply get your invitation to the neutral zone which is where they want to be anyway so you’ve helped them out. It takes a ton of practice to slow the heck out of a hard hit ball and drop it for a winner in the kitchen. I’m a much bigger fan of keeping my opponents back away from the kitchen and as uncomfortable as I can make them as they try to hit drops/resets.

    • @afterthesmash
      @afterthesmash 5 месяцев назад

      I turned 60 last summer, and I certainly don't brag about the speed of my first step. But at 6'5" and still using my bicycle as a primary form of transportation, my second step eats half the court. I get many of these-from almost all the way back-when they are completely unexpected, and almost all of them once I suspect it's a routine element. Now you have my nearly unlobable condor-like wingspan patrolling 12 feet of the net front. Pat yourself on the back for a job well done.
      Edit: I make a point of tapping my paddle on the court floor before every service return to help me get my paddle under the ball with only an inch to spare. Muscle memory for the floor gives me another tenth or two tenths of second on a routine basis for fetching the dribblers.

  • @claudetteleger5836
    @claudetteleger5836 16 дней назад

    Bravo! Très très intéressant mais je préférerais la traduction française ou vidéo similaire en français, merci!

  • @brianpolet4043
    @brianpolet4043 Год назад

    I had an instructor tell me that you don't have to look at the ball hitting the paddle. Yet, when I watch the pros, it appears to me that they visually watch the ball hit the paddle or at a minimum keep their head down. What should be done here? Should I see the ball hit my paddle? Does it improve my game?

    • @primetimepickleball
      @primetimepickleball  Год назад +2

      Up at the NVZ line it’s not possible to maintain you eyes on your contact and still keep up with the next shots coming to you. You will have to rely on your peripheral vision a lot more. However, when you’re back or they’re back then you have more time and try to keep your eyes on the ball in to contact as much as you can. Keeping your head still will also help the stability of your shot.

  • @RogerGauthier-qy6oq
    @RogerGauthier-qy6oq Месяц назад

    Merci !

  • @ronicrum
    @ronicrum 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks!