Pickleball Musings

One can often get a feel for how competitive a team or players are by viewing how they warm up.

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Few things unnerve your competition more than when your games and shots become unpredictable and they are unable to adjust.

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Marketing ploy or good advice? Replacing paddles older than one year to take advantage of new technologies to generate increased power and spin.

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Coincidence? Most winning doubles teams share long histories of competition and practice together. (Nationally: Johns Brothers, Ben and Anna Leigh, Locally: Troy and Kristin Clemmer, Manny Lai/Alex )

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Expand your game and shot selections after mastering the basic shots. Keeping improving your game by changing your game and grips. (View YouTube videos of the two handed forehand volleys and groundstrokes by Riley Newman and Troy Clemmer).

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Networking (meeting/playing new people) improves your career prospects and your pickleball game. 

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Due to the increased volley speeds generated by newer paddles, avoiding hitting “out balls” has become an “unforced error” to mindfully minimize.

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Due to the increased volley speeds generated by newer paddles, wearing eye protection is a must. (I don’t play at an advanced level generally, but I’m amazed at the increased speed of volleys and have barely avoided injuries when standing at NVZ at intermediate play. A lot of power generated from Joola and Gearbox paddle models).

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The greater pickleball player of all time is not playing yet.

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The new attempts to eliminate or revise the drop serve at the professional level seems as wise as the attempt by the NCAA in the 60s to eliminate the dunk in college basketball. (50 extra IQ points to those readers who understand this reference.)

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How to Combat a Plateau or Slump in Pickleball

Pickleball is a sport that demands skill, strategy, and continuous improvement. Whether you’re a seasoned player or a novice, everyone encounters plateaus or slumps in their game at some point. Here are some potential strategies to overcome these challenges and elevate your pickleball performance.

Note: This advice is appropriate for just about any sport or performance effort you can make.

1. Take a Break from Competition

Sometimes, the best way to overcome a plateau is to step back momentarily from competitive play. Give yourself a breather to rejuvenate both physically and mentally. This break allows you to return to the court with a fresh perspective and renewed enthusiasm.
2. Practice, Don’t Compete:
During your break from competitions, focus on deliberate practice rather than competitive play. Work on specific aspects of your game, such as refining your serve, improving your footwork, or perfecting your dinking technique. Precision in practice often translates to better performance in actual games.
3. Solicit Advice from Peers:
Engage with fellow pickleball enthusiasts to gather valuable insights into your game. Other players may notice patterns or habits that you’re unaware of, providing a fresh set of eyes to identify areas for improvement. Constructive feedback can be instrumental in refining your skills.
4. Online Research and Video Analysis:
In the digital age, there’s a wealth of pickleball resources available online. Explore instructional videos to learn new strategies, techniques, and tactics. Analyzing your favorite players’ games can provide inspiration and offer a visual guide to implement advanced maneuvers into your own play.
5. Film Your Play and Evaluate:
Recording your own gameplay is a powerful tool for self-assessment. Reviewing footage allows you to identify strengths, weaknesses, and areas for improvement. You might discover nuances in your game that are difficult to notice in real-time, enabling you to make targeted adjustments.
6. Improve Fitness Levels:
Enhancing your overall fitness, strength, and agility can have a significant impact on your pickleball performance. Incorporate specific exercises into your routine to strengthen muscles used in pickleball movements. Improved fitness not only enhances your endurance but also contributes to better on-court decision-making.
7. Lose Weight:
Maintaining a healthy weight is crucial for agility and mobility on the pickleball court. Shedding excess pounds can improve your speed, responsiveness, and overall endurance, positively influencing your game.
8. Play at a Lower Level:
Take a step back and play at a lower level to refine fundamental skills and build confidence. Working on your game against less challenging opponents allows you to focus on specific aspects without the pressure of a highly competitive match.
9. Seek Coaching from Certified Instructors:
Professional guidance can be a game-changer. Enlist the help of certified instructors to receive personalized coaching and tailored strategies. A coach can pinpoint areas for improvement, provide targeted drills, and offer invaluable insights to elevate your game.

Three Ingredients for a Successful Pickleball Partnership

As the popularity of pickleball continues to soar and tournaments and informal leagues thrive, the significance of successful partnerships on the court becomes increasingly evident. Whether you’re aiming for victory or simply seeking enjoyment, a well-matched pickleball partnership can make all the difference. In my opinion, here are the three most important criteria for a pickleball partnership.

  1. Shared Mindset

A successful pickleball partnership begins with a shared mindset, where both partners align their expectations regarding the balance between competitiveness and fun. This shared mindset will help create harmony, ensuring both partners are on the same page and working towards a common goal.

Two of my best partners: Julie Close (serving) and Anna Marie. Very skilled players. Great personalities and they put up with me.

2. Communication

Effective communication is the cornerstone of any successful partnership, and pickleball is no exception. On the court, partners must communicate their strategies, tactics, and intentions to synchronize their efforts and maximize their performance. Verbal communication is essential, but non-verbal cues, such as body language and eye contact, also play a significant role in maintaining a strong partnership. Partners should offer encouragement and support to each other, particularly during challenging moments.

3. Synergy

To elevate their game to new heights, partners should strive to achieve synergy—a state where their skills, strengths, and playing styles complement each other. One partner may excel in power shots while the other may possess exceptional finesse and precision. By capitalizing on these strengths, partners can form a dynamic duo that outmaneuvers their opponents and adapts seamlessly to changing game situations.

Conclusion:
Whether you’re aiming for victory in tournaments or seeking joy in friendly matches, embracing these key ingredients will undoubtedly enhance your pickleball experience and help you forge long-lasting partnerships that thrive both on and off the court.

Sports Break

Caitlin Clark from Iowa was the best college basketball player that I saw this year. She may be the best women’s basketball player that I have ever seen. I don’t remember another female player with her shooting range and passing ability.

Though LSU won the NCAA Women’s Tournament yesterday, I don’t think they would have beaten South Carolina.

Best Matches from 2023 WrestleMania

  1. Rhea Ripley beating Charlotte Flair for women’s title
  2. Kevin Owens and Sammy Zayn beating the Usos for tag team title
  3. Edge beating Finn Balor (The Demon) in steel cage match.

To my surprise, I enjoyed yesterday’s ESPN Pickleball Challenge featuring John McEnroe, Andre Agassi, Michael Chang and Andy Roddick.  The levels of performance got better as the four legends played. I think the telecast helped improved the pickleball brand. I enjoyed McEnroe’s antics. Great job by the young woman who was the referee!

Phillies are 0-3.Too early to panic…

I’m slightly prejudiced for being a “homer” but Joel Embiid deserves to be the NBA MVP. He rarely has a bad game and most games I watch, he dominates.

Not sure who is the biggest disappointment give their career starts: Ben Simmons or Carson Wentz?

Still prefer “old guys” Michael Wilson and Tony Kornheiser as sports commentators ahead of Colin Cowherd, Steven A. Smith, Jim Rome etc.

Pickleball 5.0: A Journey from 2.0 to 5.0 by Phil Dunmeyer(Takeaways and Review)

Serves:

Practice your serve as much as your other shots. 

Develop a variety of serves. 

The closer the serve is to  a lob the more difficult it is for your opponents to attack to serve.

Consider, keeping a very effective serve for a critical point in the game or time.

A medium high bouncing serve to your opponent’s backhand is always a challenge. Don’t hit serve too high, however, because it will give him/her time to run around the backhand, and hit a more comfortable forehand.

A player who steps onto the court from behind the baseline when his or her partner is serving, is in a seriously negative position, even if assuming a perfect stance.

Prior to serve, communicate with partner who has the middle on return.

Service Returns:

Hitting the return of serve with appropriate pace and deep enough giving you time to join your partner at your kitchen line is offensive in nature, but it puts you and your partner in the best defensive position on the court

For the intermediate to advanced players, the skill of “hitting the ball on the rise“ provides the following benefits: 

  • Returns the ball back to opponents faster, resulting in them having less time to prepare and hit the ball. 
  • Limits retreating, and moving backwards’ unforced errors. By stepping in, and hitting the ball early, you keep more angles to hit the ball into. If you back up, you lose some angles of return.

Two Handed Backhands:

If you don’t already have a two handed backhand, I recommend you use the time perfecting your one-handed backhand. The two handed backhand has much more potential use in singles.

The non-volley zone/kitchen stance

Feet wider than the shoulders. Knees bent and back straight. Center of getting gravity through the back and rear straight to the ground behind you.

Dinks:

The whole idea behind the dink is to “strike” the ball, so it drops into the opponents NVZ area. You do not hit it over the net! You push it over the net.

Players who hit their dinks, usually take a backswing of 2 inches or more, and this places far too much power into the ball when you were only trying to hit the ball 5 to 8 inches. There is no wrist movement in the dink shot. Your wrist is locked as you push the paddle forward.

Avoid hitting your dinks straight at the opponent in front of you. Instead, make him or her move laterally, keeping in mind most people have a weaker backhand dink than a forehand dink.

Avoid hitting the same dink in the same spot repeatedly. Aggressive opponents are trying to stay “in the mental zone“ and look for the right shot to attack. By changing the location of your dinks, especially to the same opponent, you minimize his or her ability to zero in on a attackable return.

Check your spacing and make sure you and your partner are staying linked together on every dink. Your opponents may be exploiting the gap/space between you and your partner because you are not staying “one step, and a reach” between you.

Hitting it back to the opponent that hit it to you is the safest way to hit it. Adding different spins to the ball, make it more difficult to hit the ball “squarely“ and straight.

Volleys:

The faster the ball is traveling towards you, the shorter the back swing. The slower the ball coming towards you the longer/greater the back swing.

Volleying while you are moving, is not productive, or a good idea. The closer you are to the net, the less the backswing.

Pickleball checklist for volley errors

  • moving while hitting the volleys; 
  • not anticipating volley hit to you; 
  • paddle face position errors; 
  • not using compact swing; 
  • getting jammed on volleys; 
  • not bending at the knees; 
  • overreaching for volleys;

Lobs:

Lobs can be a “rainbow” in your game, but they usually result in a “downpour” of unforced errors. Three things can happen when you lob: (1) the lob can be hit too long, and it goes out; (2) the lob could be hit too short and gets attacked by your opponents; (3) the lob can be the perfect rainbow arc and falls onto the court non-returnable by your opponents.

If your opponents are making your pickle ball life from lobs, miserable back up two or three steps from your no volley zone. They should convince them to try other shots such as hitting the ball at your feet, which is more possible the further you move away from the net, this, however, may be the lesser of two evils.

The best option for returning a good lob is to re-lob the good lob high and deep back over the net forcing one or both of your opponents to retreat to their baseline to reset the point/rally.

Important point: the height of your return lob is far more important than the depth. The higher, the lob, the more difficult it is for opponents to hit especially aggressively.

Strategy:

70% of points are the results of unforced errors. Unforced errors are usually offensively hit balls, not defensively hit balls.

Protecting your backhand – – from the deuce court if you are right, handed, and need to protect your backhand, stand so your left foot is only 3 feet away from the midcourt line. If you’re right handed and need to protect your backhand in the ad Court, stand 3 feet from the left side line/baseline intersection.

Reaching for the ball with arm extended, or reaching in front to hit the ball limits power.

Getting closer to the ball increases power.

If a player is moving, he or she is in the worst defensive position possible.

Give your opponent a chance to lose. By playing good defense you increase your chances of winning. 

You win more points by “playing smarter” than hitting harder. 

Force your opponents to hit one more shot.

Ball placement trumps power.

On overhead shot, turn your shoulders and body into a sideways – – facing the sideline – – position as quickly as possible.

Pickleball players are discovering an interesting fact: by a large percentage, the first team to attack the ball aggressively loses the points/rally. Don’t force the attack shot. Wait for the attack shot that has a much better chance of being not defensible.

Probably 70 to 80% of Pickleball hitting errors can be directly attributed to poor foot work. Footwork is the key factor in being in the best position to return shots.

Know the assets/liabilities of your opponents.

My Brief Review:

It is a long book (282 pages but very comprehensive). I skimmed through many of the illustrations and sections of little interest. The content is slightly dated but there are plenty of good tips and strategies for players of all levels.

Senescence Round 8


100% Eric Burleigh; 0% ChatGPT

With all due respect to Tom Brady, Michael Jordan, Muhammad Ali and others, the GOATS (Greatest of all Times) in their sports have probably not been born yet.


Wish we can transplant the spirit, unity and enthusiasm of a professional sports team fanbase to unite this fractured country.


Memories of a deceased loved, like a candle, may flicker or dim but the love continues to beat strong.


Picture by Pat Whelen from Pixels

The concentration and focus of the average American lasts midway between the time spent reading a Tweet or viewing an average TikTok reel.

How soon before we eliminate teachers, classrooms and books for a child’s education and upload knowledge and information by injection of data to their brain?


1776 Continental Congress: Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Henry, Franklin and Adams.
2023 Congress: McCarthy, Gaetz, Boebert, Greene and now George Santos.


Perspicacity of sports and political insights by friends > collective wisdoms of “talking heads and commentators” on TV.


Pickleball acts as viagra for some men of mature age. Both get the blood flowing, creates raised expectations and allows for pleasant times with the ladies.

Verbal drop shots

On Sunday, I actually watched more of the PPA Cincinnati tournament on Tennis Channel then I did pro football, including the Eagles game. What a huge difference in production value are pickleball games televised on Tennis Channel or CBS Sports network! I was pleased to see that both Tyson McGuffin and Simone Jardin won gold medals in their respective competitions. Both are being prematurely written off as serious competitors due to their age and the influx of younger players. I identify with older athletes trying to stay competitive and relevant.

I did notice that the Cincinnati crowd thinned out for the men’s singles final in Cincinnati. Possibly it was because it was a long day with five finals being decided and the men’s singles final was the last event of the tournament OR fans are just not that interested in singles competition.

I have heard some positive reviews from local players using the Selkirk Vanguard Power Air Invitka. The paddle has a steep selling price of $250 but these players seem to think that the potential results and benefits are worth the cost. They feel it provides more “pop” to their drives and touch to their third and drop shots.

Professional pickleball has not yet developed any significant rivalries like Nadal vs. Federer, Evert vs. Navratilova, Cowboys vs. Eagles or Army vs. Navy. But it is coming. On court, I don’t have any “rivalries” but I do have people I use as “measuring sticks.” These are players whose skill levels are better than mine and I contrast how competitive I am to their game. My measuring sticks include both men and women who help me improve my game.

I really am enjoying the competitive level at Berlin Intermediate meetups. The styles of play vary and I was able to play a few games last weekend that focused on the soft game including third shot drops, cross court dinks and a more cerebral approach to shot selection .