Love the serving fan & having the passer furthest away from the server to play up a little shorter. First time I’ve ever heard that & I’ve been playing for over 30 years. Great stuff! Love the short & to the point videos.
If your team is made of good skill players and in pretty stable formation, sure this is a very good. Otherwise, applying this would cause more confusion.
There’s no perfect solution, especially when you take into account the serve and your personnel. We do have to prioritize the pass quality over a couple feet of approach though. If you have a libero next to the OH you can have the lib take more. Or if the OH isn’t a very good passer, you can hide them closer to the line and make them pass on their body and to the sideline while the passer to their right takes more.
This makes sense... because most serves come from zone 1 at low levels, do you talk about where the setter is so the passers are facing the setter? Does it matter that they face the setter?
Don't teach this to new learners, too complicated! I would rather stick to the right hand principles: A player is responsible for the seam to the right side of her, unless the ball is within one step from the left of the other player.
New learners should be aware of this but maybe they just focus on facing the server and being in their curve. Your seam suggestion would be just as complex for a new learner though. Their special awareness and experience with the ball’s flight paths wouldn’t be great so adding seams of any nature to a novice would be a difficult concept to grasp, especially while the ball is in the air and they have to make a decision.
@@fourathletes4But new learner would naturally ask the question about seam responsibility: When in doubt, who should take the duty while not crashing into each other. A coach have to give them some concept to start with. The right hand principle is lot less complex than what you are teaching because it would be applied at all situation, even in defense.
@@fourathletes4Besides, the right hand principle can be easily applied in unorganized playing: A group of random players get together to play for fun, sometimes there are only 4-5 players in a team. A lot less communication is required and a lot less frustration happens.
Interesting take. I like it! Definitely having progressions and different cues/concepts helps round us out as players and coaches. Thanks for the responses!
@@fourathletes4I love your channel. Short and get to the point. Use many of them on myself, playing and coaching. Thank you very much. Hope you don't mind I have different opinion on this one.
Hey guys! Keep up the good work. I just recently found your channel and I am loving it so far. The detail and editing is great
Thank you! Will do!
Love the serving fan & having the passer furthest away from the server to play up a little shorter. First time I’ve ever heard that & I’ve been playing for over 30 years. Great stuff! Love the short & to the point videos.
Glad you enjoy it! There’s infinite moves the Serve Receivers can do. But they need to be based on information/odds/scouting
I need to send this video to my teammates so they stop blaming each other for balls that are their resposability🤣 good video as usual
Hahaha that’s why were here. To keep the peace 😂
If your team is made of good skill players and in pretty stable formation, sure this is a very good. Otherwise, applying this would cause more confusion.
this makes so much sense, thank you
You’re welcome!
So when you pass seems right and your leftside is in front row, you want her to pass that seem and then still get out to hit?
There’s no perfect solution, especially when you take into account the serve and your personnel. We do have to prioritize the pass quality over a couple feet of approach though. If you have a libero next to the OH you can have the lib take more. Or if the OH isn’t a very good passer, you can hide them closer to the line and make them pass on their body and to the sideline while the passer to their right takes more.
This makes sense... because most serves come from zone 1 at low levels, do you talk about where the setter is so the passers are facing the setter? Does it matter that they face the setter?
If they do serve from zone 5 you would flip it. The common rule is face the server/hitter, use your platform to angle.
Super
Thanks
Don't teach this to new learners, too complicated! I would rather stick to the right hand principles: A player is responsible for the seam to the right side of her, unless the ball is within one step from the left of the other player.
New learners should be aware of this but maybe they just focus on facing the server and being in their curve. Your seam suggestion would be just as complex for a new learner though. Their special awareness and experience with the ball’s flight paths wouldn’t be great so adding seams of any nature to a novice would be a difficult concept to grasp, especially while the ball is in the air and they have to make a decision.
@@fourathletes4But new learner would naturally ask the question about seam responsibility: When in doubt, who should take the duty while not crashing into each other. A coach have to give them some concept to start with. The right hand principle is lot less complex than what you are teaching because it would be applied at all situation, even in defense.
@@fourathletes4Besides, the right hand principle can be easily applied in unorganized playing: A group of random players get together to play for fun, sometimes there are only 4-5 players in a team. A lot less communication is required and a lot less frustration happens.
Interesting take. I like it! Definitely having progressions and different cues/concepts helps round us out as players and coaches. Thanks for the responses!
@@fourathletes4I love your channel. Short and get to the point. Use many of them on myself, playing and coaching. Thank you very much. Hope you don't mind I have different opinion on this one.