I'm new to pickleball but have played tennis for over 45 years. That little hop that you do is called the split step in tennis. In any racquet sport, that's a subtle but really important thing to incorporate. It keeps you agile and moving all the time instead of getting caught flat footed. It most importantly allows you to dash left or right if the ball is banged out of reach. You'll be able to get to the ball that much quicker. Great little tutorial. Thank you for posting.
Love this video and his no-nonsense explanations! I've watched this at least 10x. I have implemented each of these a little at a time. One thing that has really helped me is to stay calm and relaxed during play.
This is a great instructional video! A number of my intermediate player friends know the basic shots, but they don’t understand the positioning/strategy. I’m going to share this with all of them. Keep up the good work!
@@sunsioux444- basically hit/swing level. How you approach the ball both with footwork and swing, regarding a typical groundstroke, will determine how much topspin. Unless your right at the kitchen and the ball is over shoulder high, no need to hit down.
That was very well taught / explained. I've seen dozens of these videos, but i like the way you keep it simple an not over-explained or complicated. Coming from 20+ years of tennis and now starting pickleball I must say, "Well done video my friend."!!!👍
Hi Barrett. Happy New Year. I’m a beginner Pickleball player. I’ve been playing for 2 months. Ive been watching a lot of Pickleball videos to help me improve. I must say you were outstanding in this video. The information/corrections you share were very clear. I can’t wait to get on the court and implement the things that I heard, saw & wrote down.😀 Thank you very much.😀
yeah the little hop {tennis} before swinging it does improve your foot work.may seem silly BUT it gives you more of a athletic stance vs standing stright up. THANKS.
VERY EXCELLENT instructional video! I love how you explain and demonstrate the strategies and give reasons why we should or should not do the actions demonstrated. Hopefully I can remember everything you say here and apply it to my next game. I play with a lot of bangers, and their frenzy becomes contagious and I get sucked into THEIR frenzy as well. I definitely want to incorporate your response to bangers! Thank you for your very well-done video! You're the best instructor I've ever seen! ❤️
Ditto! I plan to practice with the video playing in my wireless earphones until I master these techniques. Only 2 999 more times to go. Would like more hints on racket gripping for flat positioning, follow through.
Instructions for all of us. Right to the point. Everything I saw I experience on a daily basis. Thanks for the video and thanks for the instruction. Footwork is a must.
Thanks. I applied the hitting your 3rd shot at 50% less force today and made fewer unforced errors. Next concept for me is to not let the ball get behind me. Still have trouble putting the racket out front to block to prevent balls from being put in the middle. Thanks for all the reminders.
Interesting that you mentioned footwork as number 1. I feel the same about my game. My footwork is decent but still too often I feel “planted” stretching and lunging for shots I should have moved to address. I need to hop more or something to keep my feet moving.
Yes, that is huge. “Feet first; swing later” has been my mantra for years now. It’s a good thing you notice that because now you’ll be able to put all that into practice
We were being coached this week on how to move up from the baseline to the kitchen but not the reason behind it , thank you so much , you are very clear and precise , great instructor
I love the talk about the footwork and how it relates to imagined control of what is going on with the ball on the other side of the court. That is very key! Thank you!
Excellent instruction! So glad I found this video. Thank you for the clear direction. I have been playing for 4 months, and am doing well, and gotten a lot of instruction from the 3.5-4.0 crowd. But it hasn't been this clear. One production note as a videographer/photographer: Move your stuff from against the fence and put them elsewhere so they don't clutter up your scene. 😁
Great instruction! I can’t wait for my next game to work on my foot work. I catch myself moving and hitting the ball at the same time and it does not always work out so well.
You give such SOLID advice! There is always some part of my game that feels like it needs a revisit of tuning. I cycle through these various issues about three times a year it seems. Lately it has all been about the footwork especially at the baseline. Great pointers!
Very good explanation. Taking the ball at the highest possible point allows for the player more margin of error and based on physics will be coming from a higher trajectory. Which means even over a short distance the ball has more distance to travel and more time to accelerate. The faster the shot, the less time the opponent has to react even for a pickleball, that is slower compared to other racquet/paddle sports
Well done...your instruction is simple( in a very good way) and to the point. So easy to understand and I do make all these mistakes, thanks for explaining how to fix them. Excellent!!
Great video! I laugh inside when players duff a shot and then look at their paddle. The paddle is the last point in a chain of what is considered a good shot. Every good shot starts with footwork, body positioning and balance. Fix the footwork and the actual hitting the ball gets consistent which leads to less errors.
Regarding blocking and not trying to do so much... once you get better, you then have to understand that you need to throw that advice out, and you have to attack in firefights, or you will just be in defensive mode in perpetuity. Beginners/intermetiates should know that this advice is for them, right now, but as you get better at these volley battles, you need to start top-rolling and punching the volley wars.
Definitely going to review this before my next week play. I’m so intimidated with bangers and this video really gives me great suggestions on dealing with that type of play. Thank you!
I so appreciate your videos! How do I limit the amount of "antsy" footwork at the kitchen line? I sometimes find myself inadvertently drifting forward into the kitchen at times.
great pointers and many things to work on in my own game. Love the comment about not overworking your swing against bangers and keeping things short and simple. You were in a much better and calmer posture to respond to the return.
Hey, nice job, I really enjoyed this video and took some notes. I see you are playing with the Gearbox ProPower and I have the same! Thanks for sharing
You can vary your blocks too as you improve. The flat blocks you're demonstrating sit up high and land right in the transition zone. The next ball from a banger will be harder, faster and directly at you. Try slice blocks that stay low or blocks with a looser grip and NO swing that land in the kitchen or near the kitchen line. One-dimensional bangers hate those as it forces them into a kitchen battle.
barrett, how do you hit a "soft high ball" to your back hand with power and effectiveness? it's easy for forehand. but, i have such an issue with soft high balls to my back hand side?????? help.
You either need to do a backhand 1h slap, or you need to learn the 2h backhand volley. This will depend on how high the ball goes. If it's too high, then it's probably best to go 1h. Considering your background, start with the 2h volley. Ball machine at baseline, you at kitchen line, drill that over and over.
Awesome tips! I play with bangers who hit ball as hard as possible every shot. Unfortunately I am 5 feet tall and when a 6 foot banger smashes ball at me at kitchen it is coming at my face! Any suggestions for short people?
Don’t tee the ball up so high to them because this places the ball in their kill zone…. Hit the ball low and to the opponents feet or angled low, out wide.
I like watching all these instructional videos and I do try to use much of what they are teaching but I would say that I almost never play games where the shots played seem as soft as the shots in these videos. Just in my short 2.5 years of playing it seems that much of what I was taught in lessons has changed, the game is evolving as so many people want to play like the pros, a hard hitting, fast and topspin oriented power game. Maybe I’m wrong but that’s my observation lately.
It's evolving quickly as pros improve, paddle technology improves and more high level tennis players enter the sport. That together forces improvement throughout all the levels.
@@sbinsdca I just purchased a new raw carbon paddle on a Black Friday sale. I’ve played about 10-12 hours with it so far and I would say I can truly feel the difference but not all good. Although I try to play with control first and power second (unlike many folks that I play with), my technique and skills need further improvement to get the most out of the technology. Unfortunately the tech enhances both the good and the bad. I’ll just keep working on the control and soft game and let the power grow organically.
I switched to the control version. I may put out a short video about this, but as usual, I don't take paddles too seriously. So currently I'm on the Power Control Fusion.
On the Block Bangers section you showed "paddle down" then demoed every shot paddle up. LOL ...p.s. those where not bangs! not even close...Still I enjoyed your video and gave it a thumbs up.
Why do people feel they have the right to (anonymously) be so negative and critical? Do you not remember the old adage, “if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all”?
I'm new to the game (three group lessons in)...but isn't the goal to win the point? Here it seems like you're suppose to keep the rally going as long as possible.
If you catch the ball that deep at the kitchen line, assuming you're able to get it back over the net and low enough not to be put away, you'll be off balance after the shot. Recognize the depth sooner and pivot or back up a half step.
As a tennis player having to hit a 3rd shot drop kills me. I serve, they return and I go deep with pace on a ball down the middle that barely gets over the net. Two Intermediate players watch it go right between them.
Simply blocking a banger's drive is exactly why bangers bang - they get a return that's easy to handle, giving them a great advantage for their next shot.
His FH looks SW, even dinking. BH continental. Coming from tennis, I use the same two grips FH and BH. Serving also SW. Overheads continental. I tried switching to a continental FH at the kitchen but the speedups (basically a FH) are SW. Couldn't make the speedups or flicks work using a continental grip. SW FH dinks are fine and makes topspin FH dinking + speedups easier.
@@PickleballKitchen elongated or fusion? I am roughly a 4.5 player. Pretty good combination of control and power. I play with the 6.0 dbd now. I like to be able to reset and want a nice sweet spot, so I am thinking control also but not sure about getting elongated. I also want to make sure I have good hand speed as well. I use to play with the Pro Drive paddle and liked that for the sweet spot and resets, volleys. By the way I really appreciate and like watching your videos. Thanks.
Fusion. You will have less hand speed with the elongated. In general, you should focus on whether you actually need the power or not and if you know for sure that it'll help out in some way. If not, of if you're unsure, just go with the fusion for the hand speed. I don't noticed any differences between sweetspots.
Ah yes, few things here: I mention halfway through that segment that the shots were going a bit high, thus I had to angle the paddle down a bit more. Also, I should have been more clear on this, but it's not always going to be perfect. This is especially the case for any kind of drive that ends up curving below the height of the net. Naturally, your face will have to be open a bit for those types of drives. With bangers, the ball is typically going to hit higher up on your body because the velocity isn't giving gravity time to bring it down, thus this specific technique. But if you're dealing with drives that have more topspin, but less speed, then that's a different story and your face may need to be a bit more open to clear the net. Those can be tougher to deal with depending on who's on the other side of the net.
Hops are great or you’ll get flat footed and then you’re screwed. Ask any linebacker that’s late to the party Good video, god knows I need to be better
I see you open your paddle face a bit on balls the just clear the net, use a neutral face on slightly higher balls and a slightly closed face for any ball that's higher.....
I follow your videos and generally glean good info. However, just blocking a bang back (even these creampuff strikes) only tell the banger that I am not a threat so banger can keep banging.
You are not angling the paddle down at all! Watch up to 12:54 block bangers. Your psddle face is always up. You may be doing some cutting at the same time but that ball is not going down off it either. It pops up. And that is a kill shot for the opponent.
I'm new to pickleball but have played tennis for over 45 years. That little hop that you do is called the split step in tennis. In any racquet sport, that's a subtle but really important thing to incorporate. It keeps you agile and moving all the time instead of getting caught flat footed. It most importantly allows you to dash left or right if the ball is banged out of reach. You'll be able to get to the ball that much quicker. Great little tutorial. Thank you for posting.
We call it a split step in Pickleball too
If you are slow you have to run through the shot to make it to the kitchen. One step is the difference between winning and losing in pball.
@@scriptwriter1268it’s a tennis callout not a pickleball callout
THank you
I'm making every mistake you pointed out. However, I love this video. You're an excellent instructor. 👏
I do too! So no worries
Me too! Great video!
I make all of these mistakes as well....good footwork is sooo hard for me
There are thousands of p'ball videos available. I rank this in the "top 10" for content, relevance and insight. Nicely done.
Thanks so much!
Love this video and his no-nonsense explanations! I've watched this at least 10x. I have implemented each of these a little at a time. One thing that has really helped me is to stay calm and relaxed during play.
This is a great instructional video! A number of my intermediate player friends know the basic shots, but they don’t understand the positioning/strategy. I’m going to share this with all of them. Keep up the good work!
Great tips!
I once had a tennis coach tell me “don’t hit down, hit out”.
Solved so many issues.
I transferred that over to pickleball as well.
hit out?? pls explain
@@sunsioux444- basically hit/swing level. How you approach the ball both with footwork and swing, regarding a typical groundstroke, will determine how much topspin. Unless your right at the kitchen and the ball is over shoulder high, no need to hit down.
That was very well taught / explained. I've seen dozens of these videos, but i like the way you keep it simple an not over-explained or complicated. Coming from 20+ years of tennis and now starting pickleball I must say, "Well done video my friend."!!!👍
Really good information. Thanks so much. You demonstrated and told at the same time which kept me interested unlike others I’ve watched. Very helpful.
Hi Barrett. Happy New Year.
I’m a beginner Pickleball player. I’ve been playing for 2 months. Ive been watching a lot of Pickleball videos to help me improve. I must say you were outstanding in this video. The information/corrections you share were very clear. I can’t wait to get on the court and implement the things that I heard, saw & wrote down.😀
Thank you very much.😀
yeah the little hop {tennis} before swinging it does improve your foot work.may seem silly BUT it gives you more of a athletic stance vs standing stright up. THANKS.
I learned so much from youth Barrett! I'm a beginner , just learning, great instructor you are!
VERY EXCELLENT instructional video! I love how you explain and demonstrate the strategies and give reasons why we should or should not do the actions demonstrated. Hopefully I can remember everything you say here and apply it to my next game. I play with a lot of bangers, and their frenzy becomes contagious and I get sucked into THEIR frenzy as well. I definitely want to incorporate your response to bangers! Thank you for your very well-done video! You're the best instructor I've ever seen! ❤️
Ditto! I plan to practice with the video playing in my wireless earphones until I master these techniques. Only 2 999 more times to go. Would like more hints on racket gripping for flat positioning, follow through.
Instructions for all of us. Right to the point. Everything I saw I experience on a daily basis. Thanks for the video and thanks for the instruction. Footwork is a must.
Thanks for watching!
Sooo good. Especially footwork for those who've never played tennis, especially.
Thanks. I applied the hitting your 3rd shot at 50% less force today and made fewer unforced errors. Next concept for me is to not let the ball get behind me. Still have trouble putting the racket out front to block to prevent balls from being put in the middle. Thanks for all the reminders.
Interesting that you mentioned footwork as number 1. I feel the same about my game. My footwork is decent but still too often I feel “planted” stretching and lunging for shots I should have moved to address.
I need to hop more or something to keep my feet moving.
Yes, that is huge. “Feet first; swing later” has been my mantra for years now. It’s a good thing you notice that because now you’ll be able to put all that into practice
We were being coached this week on how to move up from the baseline to the kitchen but not the reason behind it , thank you so much , you are very clear and precise , great instructor
I love the talk about the footwork and how it relates to imagined control of what is going on with the ball on the other side of the court. That is very key! Thank you!
Excellent instruction! So glad I found this video. Thank you for the clear direction. I have been playing for 4 months, and am doing well, and gotten a lot of instruction from the 3.5-4.0 crowd. But it hasn't been this clear. One production note as a videographer/photographer: Move your stuff from against the fence and put them elsewhere so they don't clutter up your scene. 😁
Thanks for watching! And yes you’re right!
Great instruction! I can’t wait for my next game to work on my foot work. I catch myself moving and hitting the ball at the same time and it does not always work out so well.
Your very explanation for each unit move will enable me to start my improvement practices. Thank you!
One of the better videos for intermediate players. Very common sense oriented. Thank you.
You give such SOLID advice! There is always some part of my game that feels like it needs a revisit of tuning. I cycle through these various issues about three times a year it seems. Lately it has all been about the footwork especially at the baseline. Great pointers!
Thank you very much. Footwork is enormous and especially these days since people are getting really good
Great video. I’m still a beginner. Learning every bit of it from you. Thank you!!!
Agree with everyone ... fantastic instruction (coming from over 45 yrs tennis ... 4 mos. of pickleball!).
Great teaching loved the footwork tips and quickly resetting my footwork(split steps) after each stroke. Thankyou
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for your instructional video, I have improved my game a bunch especially the foot work,
Very good explanation. Taking the ball at the highest possible point allows for the player more margin of error and based on physics will be coming from a higher trajectory. Which means even over a short distance the ball has more distance to travel and more time to accelerate. The faster the shot, the less time the opponent has to react even for a pickleball, that is slower compared to other racquet/paddle sports
Well done...your instruction is simple( in a very good way) and to the point. So easy to understand and I do make all these mistakes, thanks for explaining how to fix them. Excellent!!
Great video! I laugh inside when players duff a shot and then look at their paddle. The paddle is the last point in a chain of what is considered a good shot. Every good shot starts with footwork, body positioning and balance. Fix the footwork and the actual hitting the ball gets consistent which leads to less errors.
Great tutorial. if you could have a summary page at the end that would be superb!
Amazing great tips. I am a beginner and your guidance will help me tremendously. Thank you very much
Thanks for this! I sure need to work on my footwork as I learn this game!
Watched this video shot live and I gotta say I love the info! Glad I hit that subscribe!
Thanks for watching and subscribing!
Thank you. All excellent suggestions that will help me improve my game.
My pleasure, thanks for stopping by.
Regarding blocking and not trying to do so much... once you get better, you then have to understand that you need to throw that advice out, and you have to attack in firefights, or you will just be in defensive mode in perpetuity. Beginners/intermetiates should know that this advice is for them, right now, but as you get better at these volley battles, you need to start top-rolling and punching the volley wars.
Practicing kitchen drills is invaluable to developing consistency. Muscle memory becomes your best friend on the court.
Definitely going to review this before my next week play. I’m so intimidated with bangers and this video really gives me great suggestions on dealing with that type of play. Thank you!
My pleasure, thanks for stopping by
Hi this is my favorite vidéo so far for a pickle ball lesson. It is simple and well explained. Thank you:)
I so appreciate your videos! How do I limit the amount of "antsy" footwork at the kitchen line? I sometimes find myself inadvertently drifting forward into the kitchen at times.
great pointers and many things to work on in my own game. Love the comment about not overworking your swing against bangers and keeping things short and simple. You were in a much better and calmer posture to respond to the return.
Thanks for watching!
Hey, nice job, I really enjoyed this video and took some notes. I see you are playing with the Gearbox ProPower and I have the same! Thanks for sharing
Great video! I needed this.
This was absolutely perfect! Thank you so much - have subscribed.
Thank you!
Thus is the BEST video - exactly what I needed. Never burger the basics!!!
You are an excellent trainer! Do you have more videos?
You can vary your blocks too as you improve. The flat blocks you're demonstrating sit up high and land right in the transition zone. The next ball from a banger will be harder, faster and directly at you. Try slice blocks that stay low or blocks with a looser grip and NO swing that land in the kitchen or near the kitchen line. One-dimensional bangers hate those as it forces them into a kitchen battle.
I am making all the mistakes you.mentioned.Good video👍
Great video with a lot of great tips. Thanks! 👍
barrett, how do you hit a "soft high ball" to your back hand with power and effectiveness? it's easy for forehand. but, i have such an issue with soft high balls to my back hand side?????? help.
You either need to do a backhand 1h slap, or you need to learn the 2h backhand volley. This will depend on how high the ball goes. If it's too high, then it's probably best to go 1h. Considering your background, start with the 2h volley. Ball machine at baseline, you at kitchen line, drill that over and over.
Oh man. Thanks
You bet!
This is so well presented and explained...
Great video and advice! Thank you.
Good job, no stupid over acting this time! Thank you!
Thank you for explaining it in simple terms
My pleasure, thanks for watching.
footwork boring? No!! I have been playing about four years and I’m not sure what my feet are doing so this is a great reminder .
15:52 is an underrated piece of advice.
Great advice. Love it.
Thanks for watching!
simple but amazing advice
Thanks!
Good stuff, thoroughly covered.
This is an AWESOME video!! Thanks so much!!
I love pickleball - thank you for the tips.
Awesome tips! I play with bangers who hit ball as hard as possible every shot. Unfortunately I am 5 feet tall and when a 6 foot banger smashes ball at me at kitchen it is coming at my face! Any suggestions for short people?
Don’t tee the ball up so high to them because this places the ball in their kill zone…. Hit the ball low and to the opponents feet or angled low, out wide.
I like watching all these instructional videos and I do try to use much of what they are teaching but I would say that I almost never play games where the shots played seem as soft as the shots in these videos. Just in my short 2.5 years of playing it seems that much of what I was taught in lessons has changed, the game is evolving as so many people want to play like the pros, a hard hitting, fast and topspin oriented power game. Maybe I’m wrong but that’s my observation lately.
It's evolving quickly as pros improve, paddle technology improves and more high level tennis players enter the sport. That together forces improvement throughout all the levels.
@@sbinsdca I just purchased a new raw carbon paddle on a Black Friday sale. I’ve played about 10-12 hours with it so far and I would say I can truly feel the difference but not all good. Although I try to play with control first and power second (unlike many folks that I play with), my technique and skills need further improvement to get the most out of the technology. Unfortunately the tech enhances both the good and the bad. I’ll just keep working on the control and soft game and let the power grow organically.
Wow”@ thanks for the lesson! I learned something!
Glad to hear! Thanks or stopping by again.
Thanks for these great tips !!
Another good video. How you liking that new Gearbox Power Pro E? Mine should be here next week.
I switched to the control version. I may put out a short video about this, but as usual, I don't take paddles too seriously. So currently I'm on the Power Control Fusion.
@@PickleballKitchen Are you still using both the GB Pro Control & Power Integra/Fusion paddles...or the new Ultimate?
Thought video was about BLOCKING ???
Great tips! Thank you.
Thanks for stopping by!
On the Block Bangers section you showed "paddle down" then demoed every shot paddle up. LOL ...p.s. those where not bangs! not even close...Still I enjoyed your video and gave it a thumbs up.
Great lesson tips. Thx
Great advice 😊
Thanks, I’m glad it was helpful!
Why do people feel they have the right to (anonymously) be so negative and critical? Do you not remember the old adage, “if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all”?
Bangers can only bang when you set it up. Pop it up…hit at their feet!
Great tips
Love it !! Thank you!
I'm new to the game (three group lessons in)...but isn't the goal to win the point? Here it seems like you're suppose to keep the rally going as long as possible.
It seems like the hopping in your footwork uses extra energy even though it keeps you loose. It seems less efficient.
For the “letting the ball bounce go behind you” topic does that still apply when you are at the kitchen line?
Absolutely!
Gotta hold that line. Take the ball as early as possible. Volleying gives opponent less time to read, react.
If you catch the ball that deep at the kitchen line, assuming you're able to get it back over the net and low enough not to be put away, you'll be off balance after the shot. Recognize the depth sooner and pivot or back up a half step.
“STEPPING TO THE LEFT” is an inside-out forehand (opened stance)
thank you!
Awesome video!
Thanks for watching and subbing!
Excellent, thanks!
Thank you!
You got me thanks
As a tennis player having to hit a 3rd shot drop kills me. I serve, they return and I go deep with pace on a ball down the middle that barely gets over the net. Two Intermediate players watch it go right between them.
Haha yeah 😆
Shouldl be required viewing for every intermediate players!
Haha, thank you!
Simply blocking a banger's drive is exactly why bangers bang - they get a return that's easy to handle, giving them a great advantage for their next shot.
Duck. At the intermediate level, most banger's shots fly long 😉
Are you using a western grip?
His FH looks SW, even dinking. BH continental.
Coming from tennis, I use the same two grips FH and BH. Serving also SW. Overheads continental.
I tried switching to a continental FH at the kitchen but the speedups (basically a FH) are SW. Couldn't make the speedups or flicks work using a continental grip. SW FH dinks are fine and makes topspin FH dinking + speedups easier.
Good eye!
is that the PPE you are using? if so how's the sweet spot?
I'm using the Pro Control Fusion. Sweetspot is fine.
Are you using and have you switched to the new Gearbox Pro Fusion?
Yes, but I’m using the control version
@@PickleballKitchen elongated or fusion? I am roughly a 4.5 player. Pretty good combination of control and power. I play with the 6.0 dbd now. I like to be able to reset and want a nice sweet spot, so I am thinking control also but not sure about getting elongated. I also want to make sure I have good hand speed as well. I use to play with the Pro Drive paddle and liked that for the sweet spot and resets, volleys. By the way I really appreciate and like watching your videos. Thanks.
Fusion. You will have less hand speed with the elongated. In general, you should focus on whether you actually need the power or not and if you know for sure that it'll help out in some way. If not, of if you're unsure, just go with the fusion for the hand speed. I don't noticed any differences between sweetspots.
🤩👍great instruction
Blocking bangers, you said to face the paddle down a little. Then I watch you close, and your paddle is slightly facing up.
Yup, I saw it up too. Down would go into the net unless the ball was really high, in which case let it go out.
Ah yes, few things here:
I mention halfway through that segment that the shots were going a bit high, thus I had to angle the paddle down a bit more.
Also, I should have been more clear on this, but it's not always going to be perfect. This is especially the case for any kind of drive that ends up curving below the height of the net. Naturally, your face will have to be open a bit for those types of drives. With bangers, the ball is typically going to hit higher up on your body because the velocity isn't giving gravity time to bring it down, thus this specific technique. But if you're dealing with drives that have more topspin, but less speed, then that's a different story and your face may need to be a bit more open to clear the net. Those can be tougher to deal with depending on who's on the other side of the net.
Hops are great or you’ll get flat footed and then you’re screwed.
Ask any linebacker that’s late to the party
Good video, god knows I need to be better
I see you open your paddle face a bit on balls the just clear the net, use a neutral face on slightly higher balls and a slightly closed face for any ball that's higher.....
…? Working on footwork is neither boring nor silly. It’s important.
I follow your videos and generally glean good info. However, just blocking a bang back (even these creampuff strikes) only tell the banger that I am not a threat so banger can keep banging.
In these lessons they are always hitting straight at you and slow. Can you show what it looks like if the ball is moving fast and erratic?
Nice job.
Thanks
Is 3rd shot drop the servers 3rd shot or the 3rd shot of the game
So great.
Thanks for watching
You are not angling the paddle down at all! Watch up to 12:54 block bangers. Your psddle face is always up. You may be doing some cutting at the same time but that ball is not going down off it either. It pops up. And that is a kill shot for the opponent.
More, more! 👍