(This is a technique question. Not sure I chose the right forum)
There are these slow floaters that I can either volley from 10 feet inside the baseline or let them bounce and come down to a comfortable height well behind the baseline. It seems clear to me that former is the way to go if I am to improve as a player. A slow floater from the opponent should give me the advantage on the point, and that is not going to happen if I hit from well behind the baseline generating all the pace in the shot myself.
I believe the shot is called a swing volley. The problem is that when I try to hit them flat and with placement, my error rate is like 50%, even though I try and take very controlled swings. All I can do with consistency is a slow volley without placement, but this is worse than hitting a solid groundstroke from way back.
I am wondering if anyone has written an analysis of why the taking the ball in the air is so much different from hitting a ground shot. The main difference I feel is the "heaviness" on the racket, and as a result, even a small mishit seems to twist the racket and send ball in a totally different direction with a lot less pace than a clean hit would.
So, What is the mystery behind this extreme difference in the nature of volley and groundstrokes?
From what I have seen on this website, "Heavy" is usually associated with topspin , but I doubt that is the case with swing volleys, because if anything, the bounce adds more topspin to the ball.
Is it because the ball is coming down at you?
Could it be the (deceptive) pace? May be the bounce slows the ball so much that a slow volley is still faster than a fast groundshot by the time of contact?
I think understanding this question will help me improve my swing volley.
There are these slow floaters that I can either volley from 10 feet inside the baseline or let them bounce and come down to a comfortable height well behind the baseline. It seems clear to me that former is the way to go if I am to improve as a player. A slow floater from the opponent should give me the advantage on the point, and that is not going to happen if I hit from well behind the baseline generating all the pace in the shot myself.
I believe the shot is called a swing volley. The problem is that when I try to hit them flat and with placement, my error rate is like 50%, even though I try and take very controlled swings. All I can do with consistency is a slow volley without placement, but this is worse than hitting a solid groundstroke from way back.
I am wondering if anyone has written an analysis of why the taking the ball in the air is so much different from hitting a ground shot. The main difference I feel is the "heaviness" on the racket, and as a result, even a small mishit seems to twist the racket and send ball in a totally different direction with a lot less pace than a clean hit would.
So, What is the mystery behind this extreme difference in the nature of volley and groundstrokes?
From what I have seen on this website, "Heavy" is usually associated with topspin , but I doubt that is the case with swing volleys, because if anything, the bounce adds more topspin to the ball.
Is it because the ball is coming down at you?
Could it be the (deceptive) pace? May be the bounce slows the ball so much that a slow volley is still faster than a fast groundshot by the time of contact?
I think understanding this question will help me improve my swing volley.


I think you got great advice from the previous posters as to the "why" but here is some "how to" for you to try - because from your post I sense that you not only want to understand the difference in "feeling" you want to be able to hit better shots. Your contact point on your swing volley should be towards the upper end or perhaps even slightly above your "strike zone - power zone" on your groundies. Experiment a bit and find where you hit it best. If you hit through the ball and hit it with topspin you will find you have better control than if you try to hit it flat. Really hit through it (finish your swing) and try to move through the shot a bit and see what happens. Please let me know if this helps.
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