TennisOne Lessons
Singles Strategy
How to Play High-Bouncing Mid-Court Balls, Part One
By Monty Basnyat, TennisONE Associate Editor
Question
How do you play high-bouncing mid-court balls?
Answer, Part One: Going For The Winner
First, let's start
with defining the mid-court area. Mid-court is the area starting from a
couple of steps inside the baseline to the area just inside the service
line. The mid-court playing area is not where the ball lands but rather
the area you are positioned when executing the mid-court shot.
When positioning yourself for a mid-court ball, you can
expect two things. First, your opponent ususually on the defensive and possibly
out of position. Secondly, because your opponent is generally on the defensive,
his mid-court ball will tend to float (if the ball had any pace, you would
be hitting it from or behind the baseline.).
Now you have two basic options for handling this mid-court
shot: play a winning shot or set yourself up to win on the next shot.
Part One, Going for the Winner
If your confident,
the obvious thing to do is pick a target and go for it. There are four basic
targets you can choose from. Which one you choose, depends on your opponent's
court position and your stroke preferences (some people prefer going to
an in-side out forehand, for example, while others much have a greater comfort
level going cross-court).
The four target areas are the two baseline corners (where
the sideline meets the baseline), and the two service box corners (where
the sideline meets the service line). The keys to hitting the high bouncing
mid-court ball for a winner are to hit the ball when it's still above the
net and to flatten out your stroke and hit a penetrating shot. The idea
is choose the right target area and end the point with one blow. However,
to cover the remote chance your opponent will return your devastating mi-court
shot, keep moving to the net to close out the point.
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