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Long Strokes Lose Points

August 24, 2011 in Competitive Pickleball, How to Play Pickleball, Pickleball Tips

When I am playing pickleball competitively, there is nothing I like better than to look across the net during warm up and seeing that one or both of my opponents is returning shots with the telltale long strokes of a tennis player. Once I see that, I know exactly what to do.

Long strokes may lead to winners on tennis courts, but they can lead straight to lost points on the pickleball court. I say “can” because that is not always the case. If you play with a long stroke and your opponents don’t recognize it or don’t know what to do with it, you may do fine. You may even win a lot. But the moment you face an opponent of equal level who understands the liabilities of long stroke pickleball, you are more likely to lose than to win.

As with every stroke pattern, there are pros and cons to long strokes. On the pro side, long stroke players tend to have more power and more directional control at lower levels. At the lowest levels they will even be able to blast balls through opponents and win a lot of points. And as a added bonus, long stroke players who want to can develop an enormous amount of impressive top spin which will certainly WOW spectators and opposing flat-ballers.

Unfortunately, that’s where it all ends for long stroke players at about the intermediate level.

Intermediate and advanced short stroke players know that long strokes break down the moment side-to-side spin is introduced. So they hit the ball over the with spin and keep it short. They force long-strokers to move forward and to the side or back and to side on every possible shot.

Long strokes are designed for balls that are moving more or less north and south through the hitting zone when the striker is able to adjust his/her positioning to take the ball consistently at waist height. They are not at all good strokes for balls that are moving east-west or northeast-northwest. Long-strokers who are able to hit balls moving this way have tremendous eye-hand coordination. They do exist, but they are representative of tiny fragment of the gene pool and tend to be few and far between.

The other disadvantage to long strokes is that they are fairly easy to read. By the time a long stroke player lines up his feet and shoulders and then gets his racquet prepared to hit the ball, the receiving team or player has a pretty good sense of the direction the ball will be traveling in. Unlike short-strokers, who can disguise their shot until the last possible moment, long-strokers who are preparing to hit a slice or a drive will make that clear up to 0.5 seconds before their paddle actually strikes the ball.

And to make matters worse, there are genuine health risks associated with long stroke pickleball that every player and coach should keep firmly in mind, including RSI damage to rotator cuffs, elbows and wrists.

As someone who coaches both tennis and squash and who watches players from both sports competing on the pickleball court, I have to say that short-strokers have an enormous advantage over long-stokers — especially on the backhand. In fact, I see this advantage as so utterly complete that I no longer recommend or teach long strokes to pickleball players at any level.

Apike: How Hard is Too Hard?

August 22, 2011 in Competitive Pickleball, How to Play Pickleball, Pickleball, Pickleball Paddles, Pickleball Tips

Apike Pickleball Paddle

Apike Pickleball Paddle

A lot has been made over the past two years about the additional power that the Apike paddle offers to top-level pickleball players. In fact, some of the claims made regarding Apike have been so exaggerated that they have bordered on the absurd.

The truth is that Apike pickleball paddles are popular with top Canadian players primarily because they are the best overall paddles for soft shots such as dinks, drops and slices. None of the top players I have spoken to use Apike pickleball paddles for the 5 to 10 per cent of additional power this paddle can potentially add to their shots.

To get a better sense of this, I have deliberately monitored my own game over the past three weeks to determine how often I swing with full power and thereby achieve maximum swing velocity.

Granted, this is not very scientific. It is purely anecdotal and purely for my own interest and the interests of my readers. But I think my observations are interesting and worth sharing with the rest of the pickleball world.

Over the past three weeks, I have played in 46 matches using a variety of pickleball paddles with our club here in Calgary, both indoor and out. Of these, 41 matches were played as part of doubles teams during which our win-loss record was 39-2. Six of these matches were singles matches during which I was undefeated.

Not once in any of these matches did I swing at a ball with full (100%) power. Even on overhead smashes, which are typically my hardest shot, I never went beyond two-thirds of my fastest possible swing.

On most shots throughout these 46 matches, in fact, my average swing speed was probably around 40% of my maximum velocity and many placement shots were below even this.

Over this three week period I hit dozens of lobs, dinks, drops, slices, bumps, curls, fades and defensive volleys. Nobody with any brains would hit any of these shots with full power. Even drives and offensive volleys are off limits for full power shots in my opinion – because they are apt to go out.

The only shot that even came close to getting the maximum amount of my power during this 46 match period were my overhead smashes. And on these shots I used no more than two-thirds of my maximum swing speed because that is all I needed to do the job. Any more than that and I would risk causing unnecessary damage to my rotator cuff and/or Anconeus complex.

So while the Apike pickleball paddle may offer a potential increase in power to players at my level, the reality is that this power will rarely come into play because good players are too smart to use 100% of their power on any shot.