Beat 99% of Players With These 4 Pickleball Strategies
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- Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
- Level up your Pickleball game with our video on top-notch strategies! 🏓🔝 We cover four pro strategies that 99% of players don't utilize. Master them and you'll stand among the top 1% players. This 8 minute guide covers counterattacks, identifying gaps, timing your aggression, and coordinating with your partner. Get ready to dominate the court and boost your game forever. Play smarter, not harder!
0:00 - Intro
0:14 - Strategy 1
2:26 - Strategy 2
3:25 - Strategy 3
5:30 - Strategy 4 - Спорт
Thanks for watching everyone! If you want to support us, share this and watch some other videos from our channel! Good luck on the courts this week!
that was very good, perfect amount of words, no yappi, very informative, seamless delivery.
Thank you thank you 🙌 hope it helps
Connor you're a great instructor, thanks for the videos...and the great analogies - I was just telling some friends recently when we were attacking a city together, 'no, no, no we can't just keep shooting these arrows over the wall, we have to get inside.", so that really resonated with me. 😁😉Thx!
Great vid. Thanks man and I wish you success with the channel. There’s no reason videos of this quality can’t be a massive channel which can sustain you full time and beyond.
I appreciate that! Thanks for watching 🙏
Probably the best comprehensive video of the game of pickleball. As a beginner I wish I would have had this video. 👏🏻
Wow, thanks!
Please do an instructional video where the partner is a lefty. My husband & I are trying to figure that out. I think we should learn stacking (?)
+1 for this suggestion!!!
Cover each others weakness areas. If he’s a lefty his strong return hits will be his left forehand so you need to play defensive using your right backhand if you are right handed or else the ball will drive down the middle. And you’ll look at each other and say, that was your ball! 😂
The best thing to do is to not rely on your partner so much and you both get good at hitting both forehand and backhand regardless of whether if you are left handed or right handed
Thanks great advice. With a better more consistent deep serve and return and these strategies I finally started to win games.
Great new content! I learned some more important concepts! Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
You are so good at training …. I like all your videos. Thank you 🙏
Glad you like them!
The video is so high def! The explanation of these strategies is also very clear 😊
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the great tips!
No problem!
❤ best video series I have seen! Sent you my team
Yay! Thank you!
That return hit you did at 6:06 looks easy, but it's not!!! Can you do a short video on that low paddle return? Did your paddle touch the court?
Great video-thank you!
Glad you liked it!
Beginning of the video is the nicest way of saying “everyone is trash and most likely you’re trash too” 🐐 level
Hmm…I didn’t find anything negative about the beginning of Connor’s video. You may want to reconsider that. I like the whole video.
@@lynnelucas168 I know, it was just a joke. I like the video too.
Playing lots of tennis people these days who are playing "tennis on the Pball court". Wicked hard ground strokes and of course, I pop the ball up and then they kill it. Today I just tried to drop it whenever I could (practice). Any ideas.
Great tips and strategies! I also appreciate how dense and straight to the point your videos are, which isn't always the case with online instruction. However, you might want to slow down your delivery a little so you can enunciate better.
good stuff. Thanks
You bet
Two right handed partners, how do you decide which partner should stack to the left and which to the right side?
Who leads being dynamic with your partner?
Nice video!
Thanks for the visit
Thanks! BTW, at 5:26 your subtext says “inconsistently” instead of “in consistently”.
Noted, thanks!
Pickleball is America's fastest-growing sport and we like it #Pickleball
One question I never see answered or noticed is when your opponents have a lefty and a righty. That offers a nice potential conflict when hitting up the middle. It's either two forehands or two backhands. I'd like to see some dialog on this strategy.
As the names of the strokes suggest, the forehand is hit with your dominant hand facing forward i.e. in its natural position, so one can swing harder and get more momentum into the shot.
The backhand is hit with the back of the wrist facing forward, so the shot requires a more shoulder strength to move your arm away from your torso with the wrist turned in. For this reason, on the backhand having your non-dominant hand support the racquet can help provide more stability in the take back and offer other benefits including torso rotation. This is particular useful to younger players who dont have the shoulder strength (just yet) and for amatuer players that dont have the core rotation strength, flexibility and repetition to do a full side turn.
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A full side turn is essential in generating power on the backhand since its usually hit from a “closed” position with hips facing sideways. On the forehand since the body is in a more natural, forward facing position, it can be hit with the hips in an “open” sance i.e. with hips facing forward towards the net so adequate power can be generated with a single hand.
For these reasons, you usually see single handed forehands and double handed backhands. On the professional level, its usually because most younger players start with two hands and by time they are 14 or 15 and playing competitive tournaments, they rarely switch back to one hand and start over. Pete Sampras was the most notable exception to this rule. Federer has stated he was glad he stuck to his one handed backhand despite it being a weak shot in his teens but if he were to start over today he might consider using two hands for the modern game, particularly on the service return. Most of the players who stuck with a single hander (e.g. Wawrinka, Almagro, Gasquet, Dimitrov) were very strong powerful players as teenagers who by 14 or 15 were generating adequate power from that wing to not have to consider switching. In fact, for most of them their backhand was probably their stronger shot (not so much the case for Grigor Dimitrov today but certainly the case for the other 3)
With the modern game predominantly being played on the baseline and on clay and hard, and not so much at the net, its usually more beneficial to have a two handed backhand stroke. The benefit of the single hander has easier access to the slice and the volley without much of a grip change, an advantage on fast, low surfaces like grass (the pro season on grass only lasts 4 to 5 weeks of the year). with the game moving away from grass in the last 40 years, two handed backhands are here to stay. Want more advanced tricks do visit sportypickleballonline.com/
Staking...what happens when you receive and want to keep your side ?
I'm not a Pickleball player but I've never understood why people just hit the ball back and forth straight to their opponent. My strategy would be to always hit a line drive at the feet in-between your two opponents.
I'm trying to break the habit of just blocking, taking the pace off and switch too a harder attacking shot. The one they teach you beginning than have to unlearn.
Knowing when to come up was a missing piece for me. Everyone else has told me to always run up to the kitchen after the third shot, no matter what, but intuitively that makes no sense and you just get slammed. Thanks!
You're right ! I have the same problem. I was told to run up but I got slam many times. I guess I have to learn to read my opponent before I move or stay back.
If you try to keep your serves deep, this will help when they return it- giving your more time to get into position. But watch out for that second bounce after your opponent's return shot. If you get too close to the kitchen before that second bounce return, you'll be in trouble. You can't volley on the second shot, so you're likely getting into trouble there. Come in half way, wait for that bounce, then drop the third shot into their kitchen.
And keep your returns low so it's harder for them to slam it.
I did this and how beat 99% of the people I play. Myself is the toughest opponant.
Thanks so much for this….it would be great if you could pls speak a little bit slower. Great video
Noted!
WHY is that down the middle shot so hard to return? It always just seems like such a stupid shot to miss.
creates a brief hesitation between partners leading to them hitting the ball late, from a poor position, or even not at all.
Why? Because it demands 2 people make a decision almost simultaneously.
And if their decision isn’t the Same, then Bam!
The “I got it, you had it” stares happen while the ball passes by them both.
M my
There are not just three gaps. When both opponents are back at the baseline, there is a huge gap between them and the net. That is the 4th gap, and you have 3 zones in that 4th gap - center, left and right - and you can hit a drop shot into that 4th gap into any of those three zones.
What is worse than going to a steak house with a vegan? Listening to someone talk about pickleball. They never shut up.