Originally posted by tennis_chiro
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It's a great shot if you can hit it anywhere in half the court not closer than 8' from any line and be rewarded with an outright winner,... I'd even say it's a necessary shot for today's player.
But what position does it leave you in after the shot if you are playing an accomplished player with a really fast pair of sneakers?! Against that player, the target area has to shrink considerably.
The more we go back and forth on this here in the forum, the more I think this is a lost skill that could still be effective today. Someone who knows how to hit the kind of "drive volley" (with underspin or almost flat and with an extended backswing on a normal volley stroke), can move to the ball very quickly and execute an effective "close" on a floater and still power the ball 50 to 60 mph to a spot within 3' of the lines on a consistent basis. I don't think you can generate that much more speed with the topspin swinging volley and you are going to miss too many of them when you start trying to hit smaller targets. (Missing that target includes hitting the ball too short and giving your opponent to run the ball down and pass you because you are out of position.)
Granted, today's players don't have the shot I am advocating and they have no choice but to hit a swinging volley, the only thing they know. I am convinced the lack of this essential transition element contributes greatly to the lack of enthusiasm for going to the net. Whether you are serving and volleying (rare these days) or trying to approach behind a forcing shot (less rare, but still infrequent) or trying to sneak into the net on a high ball or as a change of pace (still infrequent), you need to be able to switch to overdrive on the fly and close in a hurry and knock off a floater if you are lucky enough to get one; much harder to do with a swinging volley.
A topspin swinging volley tends to land relatively short. When a ball lands short that means it goes through that 40% deceleration on impact with the ground before it has traversed that last 15 feet behind the service line (hitting to 3' from the lines with a good drive volley). That could mean one or even two additional steps for your opponent to run down the ball; and the topspin will make the ball bounce higher and stay in the air longer.
The more I write, the more I am convinced I have to get my students to master the shot I am talking about.
don
But what position does it leave you in after the shot if you are playing an accomplished player with a really fast pair of sneakers?! Against that player, the target area has to shrink considerably.
The more we go back and forth on this here in the forum, the more I think this is a lost skill that could still be effective today. Someone who knows how to hit the kind of "drive volley" (with underspin or almost flat and with an extended backswing on a normal volley stroke), can move to the ball very quickly and execute an effective "close" on a floater and still power the ball 50 to 60 mph to a spot within 3' of the lines on a consistent basis. I don't think you can generate that much more speed with the topspin swinging volley and you are going to miss too many of them when you start trying to hit smaller targets. (Missing that target includes hitting the ball too short and giving your opponent to run the ball down and pass you because you are out of position.)
Granted, today's players don't have the shot I am advocating and they have no choice but to hit a swinging volley, the only thing they know. I am convinced the lack of this essential transition element contributes greatly to the lack of enthusiasm for going to the net. Whether you are serving and volleying (rare these days) or trying to approach behind a forcing shot (less rare, but still infrequent) or trying to sneak into the net on a high ball or as a change of pace (still infrequent), you need to be able to switch to overdrive on the fly and close in a hurry and knock off a floater if you are lucky enough to get one; much harder to do with a swinging volley.
A topspin swinging volley tends to land relatively short. When a ball lands short that means it goes through that 40% deceleration on impact with the ground before it has traversed that last 15 feet behind the service line (hitting to 3' from the lines with a good drive volley). That could mean one or even two additional steps for your opponent to run down the ball; and the topspin will make the ball bounce higher and stay in the air longer.
The more I write, the more I am convinced I have to get my students to master the shot I am talking about.
don
Kyle LaCroix USPTA
Boca Raton
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