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Return of Serve
for Doubles
I would like to focus this lesson on return of serve for doubles. The
three areas I will cover are:
1. Returning serve when your opponent stays back
2. Returning serve when your opponent charges the net
3. The mind-set you should adopt when returning serve
Since the mind-set is so important let's begin there. Whether your opponent
serves and stays back or serves and runs to the net the mindset is the
same. In both cases do not try to play in what I call the hit winners
mindset (you know everything you hit has to win the point). Instead, adopt
a consistent mindset. Think in terms of getting the ball back and neutralizing
your opponents serve. Most players do too much with the ball and make
entirely too many unforced errors. This is due to faulty thinking. They're
putting too much pressure on themselves to win the point off the return
of serve. Do not fall prey to this temptation.
Okay, here's what you can do to make it more difficult on the server.
If your opponent serves and stays back you must master a deep cross court
return of serve. The key here is depth. You must keep your opponent from
coming up to the net by hitting a deep cross court return of serve. Depth
makes your opponent stay back and at the same time gives you more time
to react to the next shot. Hitting deep tilts the percentages in your
favor. You're attempting to create pressure, not win the point outright.
Now, if your opponent is serving and running to the net you must also
hit the ball cross court but, this time you should keep the ball low at
their feet. This will make your opponent hit up at the ball and possibly
give you a pop up, which you then can put away. Remember, you are trying
to create pressure, not hit a winner!
To summarize, when your opponent serves and stays back, you should return
cross court and deep. When your opponent serves and runs to the net, you
should return cross court and low at their feet. And finally in both cases
make sure you stay in the consistent mindset and not the hit-winners mindset.
Your email tennis pro,
Tom Veneziano
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