Archive for the ‘Serves & Returns’ Category
Practice your return of serve
I was at the courts yesterday and a well built middle aged man took the court next to me to practice serves. I noticed that he was pretty darn good so I immediately struck up a conversation with him with the ulterior motive to get him to let me return his serves.
When you do this, make sure you politely acknowledge that you know that sometimes people just want to be left alone to practice, but that if he/she wants, you will stay over there all day and return their serves.
If they say no, then just drop it and go about your business. I can assure you after reading this blog, that there will be times when you just want to go out and practice without being bothered.
In this case I hit the jackpot. Not only did he not mind me returning his serves he suggested that we play out the point. Whoopie! Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding. It was just the kind of practice I needed.
Also, keep in mind that it’s more difficult to get someone better than you to practice with you because most of the time they feel they are not getting better so, this was a double bonus.
This guy had a pretty consistent and hard flat first serve. When I backed up to handle the pace he promptly hit the corners and aced me. This exposed a large weakness in my game. When he hit a pretty good paced second serve that bounced high, I pounced all over it an won most of those points.
So, now I’m on a mission to get lots of return of serve practice. This is not that easy unless you know lots of people that like to practice their serve.
The message here is to jump at any chance to practice the return of serve and also to play points with someone better than you.
In the next post I’ll show you a very expensive serve ball machine that I’m dying to try out.
Serve return. Racquet ready position
When returning serve lots of people will tell you to have your racquet out in front of you and up relatively high. I agree with this if you know the ball will be bouncing high like on a second serve or when you expect a topspin or Kick serve. An example of that ready position is just below.
Let’s face it. None of us have lightning fast hand speed. What can you do to give yourself a little edge when you face big flat servers or servers who can hit low skidding slice serves.
Check out the ready position below:
Tennis Serves: Run them off the court
One of the most reliable techniques to tire out your fat opponent and get a bunch of easy points is to learn to serve wide. You don’t even have to hit the ball that hard when serving wide. In fact, it’s easier to serve wide the slower you hit. If you’ve got a crosswind on the court, serving slow and wide is even more effective because the wind effects a slower moving ball more than a fast moving ball.
The whole point is to make your opponent run 3-5 steps outside the singles court and then you hit to the open court which they will never be able to cover.
Get a bucket of balls and practive serving out wide on both the deuce and ad courts and you’ll get tons of easy points.

