@@JoshJPickleball I'm trained as a systems theorist, so when you say "adjustment" it translates into my professional vocabulary as "feedback control loop". In doubles, you have four separate players, each with their own private feedback control loop. Lately I've been cranking on Michael Levin during kitchen chores, weilding a Sabatier peeler in my dominant hand. Imagine a world where pickleball paddles were sold under maker's mark of Thermoformed, which looks like a brand, but actually includes everyone from Amazon fly-by-nights all the way to Proton. The French are different, so this remains possible. In any case, my Costo special-issue Sabatier peeler performs more like a Proton and less like Amababa, so I guess I got lucky. Levin is very smart, but he strikes me as a bit of a nutter in his open-mindedness to analyze all systems as hierarchies of intellect. In his view, every cell in your body has its own tiny agenda and its own tiny mind. He's a leading expert in bioelectricity, and he claims to have demonstrated how cells connected by open ion channels begin to behave like an ensemble, rather than purely out of self-interest. His vocabulary is weird, because every second sentence sounds like he is writing a competitive essay on the theme Teleology is Underrated. Translating that back to pickleball, two pickleball players on the same side of the net need an open ion channel, or their independent adjustments will trip all over each other. You don't want to find yourself in an amplifying loop where you are adjusting to your partner's adjustments to your adjustments, and this loop becomes non-convergent. Part of what makes doubles pickleball so endlessly fascinating is the tricky boundary between the individual and the dyad. Maybe it is too tricky for cogent explication. If not, I would sure love someone out there to pick up the gauntlet. To make this more tangible, my partner dinks to a central location. From the left side, I have shaded middle and my opponent hits an aggressive ball angled outside my left shoulder, which I let fly, because odds. However, it actually lands in bounds, by a hair, and not for the first time. Simultaneous, I decide to update my foot positioning four inches further to the left if that situation recurs, while my partner decides to update his dink target six inches further into the center, for next time. Either of these alone might solve the problem of taking away that precise angle. Both together might actually be giving something up elsewhere that doesn't pay for the overkill. Adjustments in response to adjustments has two stories. First, the usual _Art of War_ competitive iterations that dates back to Sun Tsu and beyond. But second, there are also the collaborative adjustments that date back to the admission of Synchronized Swimming to the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. "The US, Canada and Japan were initially the strongest nations in the sport. From 2000 to 2020, Russian athletes competing as either Russia or under the Russian Olympic Committee flag won all twelve gold medals contested. ... Male athletes were permitted to enter this event from Paris 2024, however no male athletes have yet competed in this event." Leave it to Russia to perfect making collaboration mandatory, starting with the women looking good. Leave it to France not so see any pressing problem with this agenda.
To be honest, a lot of this went over my head but I do appreciate your response and found your questions. A simple look into the gauntlet would be communicate pattern outcomes that are or are not working in your favor. A singular event doesn't always require an "adjustment", however a pattern should lead to a shift and be discussed.
Hey, I have watched everyone else for the last 4+ years and while I like "hints and tips," your progression of teaching, feedback at the moment, and higher-level thinking is so very welcome. Thank you...and keep up the great work, man.
Thank you for watching and the feedback. Always happy when someone walks away with one or two actionable items that could help! Appreciate your passion for the game.
Josh - this is fantastic content. You really gave us some great takeaways and got the viewer focused on proper form, movements and percentages. Just excellent!
Fantastic! This material isn't covered by Tanner, Kyle, Ed Ju, Tyson or Cincola. It fills in an entire missing puzzle piece from my previous diehard diet.
Best video I have seen on this topic. Great way to focus in on what to look for and how to do it. Well done. To me, this is the skill that separates so many players
This is one of the best pieces of content posted like this and I consume a lot of it. Thank you so much! I've been wanting to improve on hand speed and counters. This single handedly explained high level thinking and all
Ram’s favorite ball is a ball going out 👀 But seriously I love the pre-turn of the core. And it’s only possible if you’re anticipating and covering the right angles.
I know that feeling of hitting out balls. 4.0 here and it is honestly one of the biggest things I want to work on. The first 5 min of this video is so me.
If people can get one little nugget out of my videos and I am always pumped! If 5 minutes resonated, that is great! Let me know how it works out for you!
Wow. Awesome video and very informative. I like the concept of give and take. You take away your opponents that shot and make them hit a difficult shot to stay in.
Totally agree. I absolutely love this video - sir heavy in the shot they’re likely to hit and has high margins so you’re ready to attack and leave the shot with low margins and if they hit a great shot well then so be it! Love it!
Why the hell have I only discovered your channel? Man there is a serious lack of higher level content on youtube. I really only watch briones these days to get some higher level tips and rules of thumb. This was a great find!
Great, thanks! Am I noticing correctly that when you did a speed up that you “jumped” back off the NVZ line? It seemed you backed up to handle the counter - so you could better (hands) battle. Am I right? I didn’t see your student do that ever, but you didn’t tell him to either…
Ngl I think keeping the elbow tucked and not clearing the rib cage is the opposite of what you should do. If you look at most of the guys with the best counters on both wings like Gabe tardio, christian alshon, matt right, hayden patriquin, ben johns, dekel bar, etc. they don’t keep their elbow tucked. To their side but rather in front like a boxer in guard. My coach who’s also ranked inside the top 100 women on the ppa tour specifically said not to pin the elbow but for it to be able to clear your rub cage if you need it to. Very few pros keep the elbow tucked and the ones that do typically dont do it to that degree. James ignatowitch for example does have a more pronounced elbow tuck than most pros and even his elbow tuck isnt that extreme and he gets away with it because of his crazy wrist mobility and power to be able to flatten out his forehand while keeping the elbow somewhat tucked. Also from a kinesthetic perspective its also suboptimal. When your shoulders are back and your core is engaged your shoulder naturally has slight internal rotation and flexion. You can tell this by standing up with your back straight and your shoulders back and your arms naturally rest slightly forward. By pinning the elbow to the rib cage you force slightly external rotation and shoulder extension which work to disengage your anterior and medial deltoids, lats, traps, triceps, and all 4 rotator cuff muscles while only helping to engage your bicep and pectoris major and minor. All this ends up meaning is that the muscles responsible for core and hip activation, the lats, are disengaged meaning its harder to load power from your hips. Your spine and shoulder joint muscles responsible for engaging your torso movement alongside your shoulders being your traps, teres major, and lats again are also disengaged making stabilizing and remaining solid on your paddle much harder. The disengagement from your single joint shoulder muscles makes actually moving and rotating your arm as a unit, particularly in rotating your paddle from backhand to forehand, much harder and limiting tricep activation makes extending your elbow out to the ball harder. You give up all of that for more pectoral and bicep activation but since both of those muscles typically work in shoulder internal rotation and the bicep works in elbow flexion this makes it biomechanically most natural on the forehand to let the ball get behind you and then pull your arm and elbow back towards your body to generate power. That sucks for all the obvious reason. Anyways thats my dissertation and I have a lot more I can say on the subject
I appreciate the response and conversation. I would say the extreme of no elbow tucking would be Tyson, which is very hard for a player that isn't getting top level play consistently to be effective with. When I am trying to get my students elbow in closer to his body I am not looking for him to pinching his elbow to the side of his ribcage. Elbows in and sure, slightly more anterior than posterior, with a tracking of ball should put the player in the best position to counter and block. When ball is up and out and you're looking for a put away or offensive volley, that changes things slightly. Most of the players you mentioned actually have a ready position with two hands on the paddle or their off hand is very central, in almost all cases their elbows are along the side of their body. Meaning if you looked at them from the side, you wouldn't see space between their elbows and body and you probably wouldn't even opposite elbow as it would be blocked by their bodies. Look again at Ben, Collin, or even Anna Leighs ready position. Happy to chat more if you want to email me: josh@joshjpickleball.com The last thing I will say, if you're conscious about where your paddle is when up at the kitchen, that is already giving you a headstart over everyone else and will produce results.
@@JoshJPickleball yea definitely you are 100% correct about this but I think the issue comes in the wording and phrasing of keeping the elbow into the body or pinning the elbow I cant remember your exact phrasing as I’m writing this. The best analogy I have found to use is that if you have ever been boxing it’s like that ready position. Your elbow is in tight enough to the body to guard against body shots but its not actually touching your body. Telling someone to do this also rotates their shoulders into the correct position
Good chat, I like the boxing analogy. I often tell students to pretend they’re being handed something heavy in doing so the elbow get close to the body. A big thing with this format of video where I am teaching a student and not the masses. I’m able to make manual adjustments with him and speak directly to his tendencies thanks again for the chat, you’re appreciated!
Wonderful stuff, especially about letting those angled balls fly out, but I am puzzled. I have seen from others that your student would cover his line and that his partner would cover center, yet you have him covering center. Help!!!
If straight on, he would cover line and partner would cover middle. Just he needs to cover left and right of his body if ball is directly in front of him. More so a focus on why to speed up straight ahead than who covers what in that instance
I really enjoy this coaching session but how does a 5.0 not know to not hit the outballs hit from the middle to the side? That seems more like something a 4.0 would struggle with
Look at his shots dude, he is incredible at resets and his main issue is trying to be ready for everything. He wasn’t missing out balls, he was assuming that the player could hit a 10% shot from middle to outside corner and was putting himself in position to get those. The coach is telling him to get ready for middle and body shots and to LET them try and hit the 10% winner to the corner. If you set your body up for everything else, you can capitalize on them and be a better player.
Something better players struggle with is as they advance, they think that the people they're playing hit such good shots, that every ball they hit is in. So they feel a need to hit any and everything. It's similar to thinking a major league pitcher is so good, they only throw strikes. While they can throw strikes, they can also bait you to swinging at bad pitches or in pickleball, hitting out balls. So anytime you can focus in on a smaller target and be aware of what you're doing, you will improve. Ram is a REALLY good player, fast and powerful hands. We just need a little discipline and he will be climbing the ranks!
Known Ram for a few years and he is one of the few players I know that plays better when a bit heated, he is a good sport and isn't afraid to give it back to me! (when the camera is off). He also has a few hand battle victories to his name now!
Amazing line! You have to find the right way to motivate each individual, cause they don't all respond to the same coaching styles. And some players want their buttons pushed to get in the zone!
Definitely need Scorpions. I am actually not that great at them, I usually go too early and use too much wrist. Will have to get one done by CJ or Dekel.
A coach trainer…. Who’s talks shit!,,,, while teaching!!!!!!! I love it!!!! I love this guy!!!! Pay up young man … $40 bucks to the shit talking coach…. Ouch!!!!
He said I know you gotta be getting nervie as his student is in motion and contact of the ball. 😅Literally talking smack the whole time. This strategy of unnerving your opponent by using banter is called gamesmanship and many weaker athletes use this because their athletics may be weaker 😅😅😅
Your student would have beat you 10 4 if you shut up a little. I mean you talked during ,before and after his shots but he was respectful and calm. I would call impedance on you at 9 8 and I still win.
Love this content! And I love that it’s from a higher level player who wants to get better at something specific, keep em coming
Thank you! Anything in particular you need work on?
@@JoshJPickleball I'm trained as a systems theorist, so when you say "adjustment" it translates into my professional vocabulary as "feedback control loop". In doubles, you have four separate players, each with their own private feedback control loop.
Lately I've been cranking on Michael Levin during kitchen chores, weilding a Sabatier peeler in my dominant hand. Imagine a world where pickleball paddles were sold under maker's mark of Thermoformed, which looks like a brand, but actually includes everyone from Amazon fly-by-nights all the way to Proton. The French are different, so this remains possible. In any case, my Costo special-issue Sabatier peeler performs more like a Proton and less like Amababa, so I guess I got lucky.
Levin is very smart, but he strikes me as a bit of a nutter in his open-mindedness to analyze all systems as hierarchies of intellect. In his view, every cell in your body has its own tiny agenda and its own tiny mind. He's a leading expert in bioelectricity, and he claims to have demonstrated how cells connected by open ion channels begin to behave like an ensemble, rather than purely out of self-interest. His vocabulary is weird, because every second sentence sounds like he is writing a competitive essay on the theme Teleology is Underrated.
Translating that back to pickleball, two pickleball players on the same side of the net need an open ion channel, or their independent adjustments will trip all over each other. You don't want to find yourself in an amplifying loop where you are adjusting to your partner's adjustments to your adjustments, and this loop becomes non-convergent.
Part of what makes doubles pickleball so endlessly fascinating is the tricky boundary between the individual and the dyad.
Maybe it is too tricky for cogent explication. If not, I would sure love someone out there to pick up the gauntlet.
To make this more tangible, my partner dinks to a central location. From the left side, I have shaded middle and my opponent hits an aggressive ball angled outside my left shoulder, which I let fly, because odds. However, it actually lands in bounds, by a hair, and not for the first time.
Simultaneous, I decide to update my foot positioning four inches further to the left if that situation recurs, while my partner decides to update his dink target six inches further into the center, for next time. Either of these alone might solve the problem of taking away that precise angle. Both together might actually be giving something up elsewhere that doesn't pay for the overkill.
Adjustments in response to adjustments has two stories. First, the usual _Art of War_ competitive iterations that dates back to Sun Tsu and beyond. But second, there are also the collaborative adjustments that date back to the admission of Synchronized Swimming to the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.
"The US, Canada and Japan were initially the strongest nations in the sport. From 2000 to 2020, Russian athletes competing as either Russia or under the Russian Olympic Committee flag won all twelve gold medals contested. ... Male athletes were permitted to enter this event from Paris 2024, however no male athletes have yet competed in this event."
Leave it to Russia to perfect making collaboration mandatory, starting with the women looking good. Leave it to France not so see any pressing problem with this agenda.
To be honest, a lot of this went over my head but I do appreciate your response and found your questions. A simple look into the gauntlet would be communicate pattern outcomes that are or are not working in your favor. A singular event doesn't always require an "adjustment", however a pattern should lead to a shift and be discussed.
@@JoshJPickleball maybe strategy once we’re at the kitchen? Patterns that lead to winning more points?
Hey, I have watched everyone else for the last 4+ years and while I like "hints and tips," your progression of teaching, feedback at the moment, and higher-level thinking is so very welcome. Thank you...and keep up the great work, man.
Thank you so much! Really appreciate it. If there is anything else you need tips on, please let me know and we will try and make it happen!
Thoroughly enjoyed this. A few really nice tidbits I hadn’t considered before. Nice work!
Thank you for watching and the feedback. Always happy when someone walks away with one or two actionable items that could help! Appreciate your passion for the game.
"lock in" count for the video was 6
Chris Olson dialing in before the UA-camrs matchup?!? 👀
can you share the tidbits you're referring to?
only 5 minutes in and i felt like ive already learned a lot of things i need to improve on. great video!
Josh - this is fantastic content. You really gave us some great takeaways and got the viewer focused on proper form, movements and percentages. Just excellent!
Fantastic! This material isn't covered by Tanner, Kyle, Ed Ju, Tyson or Cincola. It fills in an entire missing puzzle piece from my previous diehard diet.
Spot on!
Much better than Ed Ju.. dude focuses too much on promoting paddles
@@150byAug28thto be fair, Ed Ju has no where near the experience as Josh.
Definitely a tricky topic that’s hard to nail down! But Josh did it perfectly 👌🏼
@@kosanmr2 how objective are the paddle reviews when you are pushing ambassador discount codes ?
This is teaching what most of the time can’t be taught. This is pickleball IQ.
I love his resets! And the entire video.
That was fun. You could see Ram improving noticeably throughout the video. I would easily pay $40 for that. Good job, Josh.
Best video I have seen on this topic. Great way to focus in on what to look for and how to do it.
Well done. To me, this is the skill that separates so many players
This is one of the best pieces of content posted like this and I consume a lot of it. Thank you so much! I've been wanting to improve on hand speed and counters. This single handedly explained high level thinking and all
Thank you Tracy! Let me know how you're progressing and if there are any other lessons that could help you out!
Awesome. "What are you trying to do? Catch that?" - Thats a t-shirt right there.
This is great content. It’s the little reminders that keeps one centered.
Tuck the elbow in and keep it there!!!!
💯
one of the better vids ive watched as a 3.9 to 4.0 player. this really helped me understand the left side better!!!
Thank you! We need to do one on the right side soon!
You’re a fantastic teacher. Love the way he changed and got so much better!
Thank you so much!!
This is some of the best content I’ve seen to help us recognize higher level patterns. So helpful.
Patterns are huge in this game. Glad to hear this will help!
Ram’s favorite ball is a ball going out 👀
But seriously I love the pre-turn of the core. And it’s only possible if you’re anticipating and covering the right angles.
haha that is insider information Sam!
I know that feeling of hitting out balls. 4.0 here and it is honestly one of the biggest things I want to work on. The first 5 min of this video is so me.
If people can get one little nugget out of my videos and I am always pumped! If 5 minutes resonated, that is great! Let me know how it works out for you!
Wow. Awesome video and very informative. I like the concept of give and take. You take away your opponents that shot and make them hit a difficult shot to stay in.
Working on counters not only makes your counters better but also helps inform you on where and how to attack!
Totally agree. I absolutely love this video - sir heavy in the shot they’re likely to hit and has high margins so you’re ready to attack and leave the shot with low margins and if they hit a great shot well then so be it! Love it!
Why the hell have I only discovered your channel? Man there is a serious lack of higher level content on youtube. I really only watch briones these days to get some higher level tips and rules of thumb. This was a great find!
This is incredibly well taught and edited. Nice job!
Thank you! I have an amazing editor that actually knows pickleball. Makes me look good!
LMAO when you starting talking smack and getting in his head, I love it...
Amazing lesson … I suck at hand battles cuz I keep preparing late this one gave me some stuff to try
Thank you! Hopefully this will help, limit your hittable zones and you should improve quickly!
wow, these long-form instructional videos are insanely valuable. Thank you!
Thank you! Hopefully lots more coming your way!
What a lesson. This is amazing. Can't be taught any better.
Wow! Love to hear it! Let me know what else I can do to help your game!
Your videos are the best and most detailed. Thank you!
Thank you! Have a new episode dropping soon!
Great, thanks! Am I noticing correctly that when you did a speed up that you “jumped” back off the NVZ line? It seemed you backed up to handle the counter - so you could better (hands) battle. Am I right? I didn’t see your student do that ever, but you didn’t tell him to either…
excellent trash talk. Coaching was pretty good, too. Thanks
Valuable content!
I didn’t know I needed this great content thank you
You're welcome- working on getting you some more!
Ngl I think keeping the elbow tucked and not clearing the rib cage is the opposite of what you should do. If you look at most of the guys with the best counters on both wings like Gabe tardio, christian alshon, matt right, hayden patriquin, ben johns, dekel bar, etc. they don’t keep their elbow tucked. To their side but rather in front like a boxer in guard. My coach who’s also ranked inside the top 100 women on the ppa tour specifically said not to pin the elbow but for it to be able to clear your rub cage if you need it to. Very few pros keep the elbow tucked and the ones that do typically dont do it to that degree. James ignatowitch for example does have a more pronounced elbow tuck than most pros and even his elbow tuck isnt that extreme and he gets away with it because of his crazy wrist mobility and power to be able to flatten out his forehand while keeping the elbow somewhat tucked.
Also from a kinesthetic perspective its also suboptimal. When your shoulders are back and your core is engaged your shoulder naturally has slight internal rotation and flexion. You can tell this by standing up with your back straight and your shoulders back and your arms naturally rest slightly forward. By pinning the elbow to the rib cage you force slightly external rotation and shoulder extension which work to disengage your anterior and medial deltoids, lats, traps, triceps, and all 4 rotator cuff muscles while only helping to engage your bicep and pectoris major and minor.
All this ends up meaning is that the muscles responsible for core and hip activation, the lats, are disengaged meaning its harder to load power from your hips. Your spine and shoulder joint muscles responsible for engaging your torso movement alongside your shoulders being your traps, teres major, and lats again are also disengaged making stabilizing and remaining solid on your paddle much harder. The disengagement from your single joint shoulder muscles makes actually moving and rotating your arm as a unit, particularly in rotating your paddle from backhand to forehand, much harder and limiting tricep activation makes extending your elbow out to the ball harder.
You give up all of that for more pectoral and bicep activation but since both of those muscles typically work in shoulder internal rotation and the bicep works in elbow flexion this makes it biomechanically most natural on the forehand to let the ball get behind you and then pull your arm and elbow back towards your body to generate power. That sucks for all the obvious reason.
Anyways thats my dissertation and I have a lot more I can say on the subject
I appreciate the response and conversation. I would say the extreme of no elbow tucking would be Tyson, which is very hard for a player that isn't getting top level play consistently to be effective with. When I am trying to get my students elbow in closer to his body I am not looking for him to pinching his elbow to the side of his ribcage. Elbows in and sure, slightly more anterior than posterior, with a tracking of ball should put the player in the best position to counter and block. When ball is up and out and you're looking for a put away or offensive volley, that changes things slightly. Most of the players you mentioned actually have a ready position with two hands on the paddle or their off hand is very central, in almost all cases their elbows are along the side of their body. Meaning if you looked at them from the side, you wouldn't see space between their elbows and body and you probably wouldn't even opposite elbow as it would be blocked by their bodies. Look again at Ben, Collin, or even Anna Leighs ready position. Happy to chat more if you want to email me: josh@joshjpickleball.com The last thing I will say, if you're conscious about where your paddle is when up at the kitchen, that is already giving you a headstart over everyone else and will produce results.
@ i’ll give this a read and a real response in a bit when I get the time but regardless I really appreciate the thoughtful response
Great discussion, guys. Love the level of detail.
@@JoshJPickleball yea definitely you are 100% correct about this but I think the issue comes in the wording and phrasing of keeping the elbow into the body or pinning the elbow I cant remember your exact phrasing as I’m writing this. The best analogy I have found to use is that if you have ever been boxing it’s like that ready position. Your elbow is in tight enough to the body to guard against body shots but its not actually touching your body. Telling someone to do this also rotates their shoulders into the correct position
Good chat, I like the boxing analogy. I often tell students to pretend they’re being handed something heavy in doing so the elbow get close to the body. A big thing with this format of video where I am teaching a student and not the masses. I’m able to make manual adjustments with him and speak directly to his tendencies thanks again for the chat, you’re appreciated!
Wonderful stuff, especially about letting those angled balls fly out, but I am puzzled. I have seen from others that your student would cover his line and that his partner would cover center, yet you have him covering center. Help!!!
If straight on, he would cover line and partner would cover middle. Just he needs to cover left and right of his body if ball is directly in front of him.
More so a focus on why to speed up straight ahead than who covers what in that instance
@@JoshJPickleball Thanks so much for the clarification. I really enjoy your teaching.
Excellent pointers to move to next level
Moving on up!
Really good content. Good coaching!
Thank you! Been working hard, let me know if there is any other content you'd like to see!
Great content! Very informative!
Thank you! More ocming!
GREAT STUFF!!!
Hi Coach Josh where can I take a lesson with you?
Let me know when you're in maryland!
When you say hit harder at the net, do you mean flick it ?
This is so good
The trash talk is amazing 😂😂
Awesome content, even better roasting 😂
Haha content > roasting! But always fun when both are on point! Thank you!
Top tier trash talk. Nailed the condescension
I really enjoy this coaching session but how does a 5.0 not know to not hit the outballs hit from the middle to the side? That seems more like something a 4.0 would struggle with
Look at his shots dude, he is incredible at resets and his main issue is trying to be ready for everything. He wasn’t missing out balls, he was assuming that the player could hit a 10% shot from middle to outside corner and was putting himself in position to get those. The coach is telling him to get ready for middle and body shots and to LET them try and hit the 10% winner to the corner. If you set your body up for everything else, you can capitalize on them and be a better player.
Something better players struggle with is as they advance, they think that the people they're playing hit such good shots, that every ball they hit is in. So they feel a need to hit any and everything.
It's similar to thinking a major league pitcher is so good, they only throw strikes. While they can throw strikes, they can also bait you to swinging at bad pitches or in pickleball, hitting out balls. So anytime you can focus in on a smaller target and be aware of what you're doing, you will improve. Ram is a REALLY good player, fast and powerful hands. We just need a little discipline and he will be climbing the ranks!
@@JoshJPickleball so well said!!!
Ayoooo at 18:40 “pick up the balls with your mouth” is WILD! 😂😂😂
haha whoops!
@ 😂😂
Josh we need video on drives with top spin
We are working on this video! Thank you for the feedback.
awesome wrist dinks
"For someone as bad as you, this was good"😂
The trash talking was too funny.
Known Ram for a few years and he is one of the few players I know that plays better when a bit heated, he is a good sport and isn't afraid to give it back to me! (when the camera is off). He also has a few hand battle victories to his name now!
Too good.
Thank you Bill!
Hey there fellow Josh J
Also really great video. I know I play too many balls hit to my backhand up at the kitchen. Will try working on drilling it.
So the reason you are coaching him to leave the attacks to the outside alone is because most of those land out?
Correct, force your opponents to play closer to the sidelines with less margin. Typically means good things for you!
biết bao giờ mình mới Drink được như này
What I learned from this video: if you find yourself 4 points behind, just start talkin mad shit
“You’re a half inch away from being an alpha male.” I’m going to use that 😅
Haha forgot I said that. Ram is full Alpha!
Amazing line! You have to find the right way to motivate each individual, cause they don't all respond to the same coaching styles. And some players want their buttons pushed to get in the zone!
that was funny when you started trash talking ha
Why don’t you all practice with multi balls? Just wondering.
"Someone as bad as you, that's good"???
I'm laughing, but my wife says I don't need to watch vids to learn any more trash talk.
20:10 LMAO
you should have included scorpions to complete the video. Good nonetheless.
Definitely need Scorpions. I am actually not that great at them, I usually go too early and use too much wrist. Will have to get one done by CJ or Dekel.
A coach trainer…. Who’s talks shit!,,,, while teaching!!!!!!! I love it!!!! I love this guy!!!! Pay up young man … $40 bucks to the shit talking coach…. Ouch!!!!
He also seems to be scared to move his feet
He said I know you gotta be getting nervie as his student is in motion and contact of the ball. 😅Literally talking smack the whole time. This strategy of unnerving your opponent by using banter is called gamesmanship and many weaker athletes use this because their athletics may be weaker 😅😅😅
LMAO, we've played against this kid.
Love the trash talking 😂
My boy needs to invest in some looser shorts
Your student would have beat you 10 4 if you shut up a little. I mean you talked during ,before and after his shots but he was respectful and calm. I would call impedance on you at 9 8 and I still win.
He is too flat on his feet. He should be jumping before you hit to him.
I like quiet feet but on the balls of the feet so you can move quickly but stable enough for when you're volleying. Two firm contact points are ideal.
1st
Good 💩! Even better 💩talking! BUT where's Crew 🦮??!! I'll be working on my "Boom! Right there" this week. Thanks, Josh J Pickleball!
Thank you Mrs Van-Park!
The trash talk is amazing 😂😂