In my opinion, volleys are situational and depend on:
1) Type of ball you are receiving - hard or soft, line drive or more arc.
2) Court position - close to net or further away.
3) Objective of volley - finish the point or hurt your opponent. Are you trying to be offensive (add pace), neutral (maintain pace) or defensive (take away pace).
4) Contact point - close, medium or in front.
5) Footwork will vary depending on these factors
Examples:
When close to the net and hitting a hard drive, volley with your hands. Grip pressure is important. Firm grip to block volley and maintain pace. Soft grip to have touch and take pace away. To add pace, relax the grip, let the racquet get behind the hand, then squeeze right before impact with the bottom 2 fingers (power fingers of the hand). Contact is more in front if you want to add or maintain pace, closer contact to take pace away.
High mid-court volleys, if the ball is high (arc) and softer and you want to add pace, you'll swing more and use your elbow. Keep your elbow up, to keep the motion more level and add slight supination of the forearm (BH volley), as you swing forward. The swing becomes more high to low when you let the elbow drop (losing pace). You are trying to develop racquet head speed before impact. Aggressive footwork
Low mid-court volleys, volley from the shoulder. Hard ball - use the pace of opponents shot with firm grip and move forward with control. Contact is closer. Slower ball - maintain pace and you can control the height/speed/distance by using side spin. Contact more in front.
1) Type of ball you are receiving - hard or soft, line drive or more arc.
2) Court position - close to net or further away.
3) Objective of volley - finish the point or hurt your opponent. Are you trying to be offensive (add pace), neutral (maintain pace) or defensive (take away pace).
4) Contact point - close, medium or in front.
5) Footwork will vary depending on these factors
Examples:
When close to the net and hitting a hard drive, volley with your hands. Grip pressure is important. Firm grip to block volley and maintain pace. Soft grip to have touch and take pace away. To add pace, relax the grip, let the racquet get behind the hand, then squeeze right before impact with the bottom 2 fingers (power fingers of the hand). Contact is more in front if you want to add or maintain pace, closer contact to take pace away.
High mid-court volleys, if the ball is high (arc) and softer and you want to add pace, you'll swing more and use your elbow. Keep your elbow up, to keep the motion more level and add slight supination of the forearm (BH volley), as you swing forward. The swing becomes more high to low when you let the elbow drop (losing pace). You are trying to develop racquet head speed before impact. Aggressive footwork
Low mid-court volleys, volley from the shoulder. Hard ball - use the pace of opponents shot with firm grip and move forward with control. Contact is closer. Slower ball - maintain pace and you can control the height/speed/distance by using side spin. Contact more in front.
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