Tip of the Week
May 25: How To Return Different Serves.
Weekend Coaching and Long Pips
I did both multiball and live hitting with players in our junior training sessions. I did a lot of drills that focused on transitioning from looping a backspin to attacking the follow-up block. At the beginning to intermediate level, after a heavy push forces the opponent to lift the ball, a follow-up quick block that makes them move often leads to them lifting their next shot off the end. This is especially true if you block to the wide forehand, where a player tends to lower their shoulder when reaching wide, leading to going off the end.
I did a little experiment. When feeding multiball with younger kids, I watched them do footwork and how focused and intent they were. They mostly mindlessly do the movements. Then I put my water bottle on the table and ordered them to not to hit it. (They know when I say that it means to hit it.) Their eyes light up and the mindlessness is gone, and their shots get better and better. Guess which method helps them improve more?


Photo by Donna Sakai




