I have a problem with the standard instruction to "Step into your Volley!". I was working with a nationally ranked 14 y.o. this weekend and starting my regular routines on correcting kids volleys. He was all over the place with his shots and showed very little ability to control where the ball was going. He was not just stepping into the volley, he was lunging into it. Now I think it is paramount that the player close as much as possible on their volley when they get the opportunity, but I think it is a mistake to think you have to have your entire body going forward to have any velocity on your volley, much less lunge into it. In reality, in singles, most volleys are played as you are moving forward to the net and you rarely get to get your feet down solidly as you hit a volley. But that doesn't mean you wouldn't like to. And when someone hits a big low return (let's say 70 or 80 mph), the volleyer is going to have a hell of a time making his volley if his head is still moving when he hits the ball. I always have told my players that they have to study the pros in their most difficult volleying positions when they are looking for examples of technique to copy because the pros are so good and can get away with a lot when they get a ball above the net or hanging just a little bit.
Anyway, I really believe when a player hits a forehand volley and steps out and across to the shot with his left foot (right-hander), he should have that foot on the ground before he makes contact with the ball and with most of the weight transfer completed (maybe 90%) just before impact.
There is no question in my mind this is the right way to learn the volley, but perhaps I am wrong about advance technique (I think I am right) when every article I look at has pros demonstrating a lunge through contact with only one foot on the ground (the back one). I can find video in the stroke archive that backs up what I am saying, but the vast majority of the pro volleys back up the opposite argument that the foot is still in the air.
When someone is having trouble learning the volley (advanced players and ranked players as well) it is a great help to take the foot work away from them completely. Then I try to get them to add the footwork back. And I am a stickler for learning good footwork on the volley and developing a habit of a crossover step even as I acknowledge you sometimes have time for 0 steps! But when you are learning the stroke, the footwork can get in the way, when it is actually supposed to be a help.
Bottom line is I am convinced you should complete the step and get it down on the ground before you contact the ball (whenever you can), just as a hitter takes his step before he swings and a golfer transfers the weight before contact, and a quarterback completes the step before he makes a throw and a pitcher gets the foot down way before he releases the ball. In an advanced play, you close on the net as much as possible and this can add a little stick to a volley that has no swing (largely because you are still moving so much), but that movement is primarily to get closer to the net, not to increase the speed of the volley. In fact, the advantage of closing is so great that we sacrifice some consistency and accuracy to do so, but we really would rather be able to close and have that foot on the ground.
What do you think? I need some feedback from some other coaches who are dealing with High Performance players. Crisp, clean, even surgical volleying is becoming a lost art, except to the best of the doubles specialists. I hate to see that happening.
Anyway, I really believe when a player hits a forehand volley and steps out and across to the shot with his left foot (right-hander), he should have that foot on the ground before he makes contact with the ball and with most of the weight transfer completed (maybe 90%) just before impact.
There is no question in my mind this is the right way to learn the volley, but perhaps I am wrong about advance technique (I think I am right) when every article I look at has pros demonstrating a lunge through contact with only one foot on the ground (the back one). I can find video in the stroke archive that backs up what I am saying, but the vast majority of the pro volleys back up the opposite argument that the foot is still in the air.
When someone is having trouble learning the volley (advanced players and ranked players as well) it is a great help to take the foot work away from them completely. Then I try to get them to add the footwork back. And I am a stickler for learning good footwork on the volley and developing a habit of a crossover step even as I acknowledge you sometimes have time for 0 steps! But when you are learning the stroke, the footwork can get in the way, when it is actually supposed to be a help.
Bottom line is I am convinced you should complete the step and get it down on the ground before you contact the ball (whenever you can), just as a hitter takes his step before he swings and a golfer transfers the weight before contact, and a quarterback completes the step before he makes a throw and a pitcher gets the foot down way before he releases the ball. In an advanced play, you close on the net as much as possible and this can add a little stick to a volley that has no swing (largely because you are still moving so much), but that movement is primarily to get closer to the net, not to increase the speed of the volley. In fact, the advantage of closing is so great that we sacrifice some consistency and accuracy to do so, but we really would rather be able to close and have that foot on the ground.
What do you think? I need some feedback from some other coaches who are dealing with High Performance players. Crisp, clean, even surgical volleying is becoming a lost art, except to the best of the doubles specialists. I hate to see that happening.
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