Pickleball tips to improve your game | in 3 Simple Steps

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  • Опубліковано 6 сер 2024
  • Pickleball tips to improve your game | Pickleball Tips: How to Improve in 3 Simple Steps | Improve Your Pickleball Game: 3 Key Techniques
    Watch until the end to get your 3 Beginner Steps GUIDE to bring with you next time you play!
    Embark on your pickleball journey with three invaluable tips tailored specifically for beginners. In this video, we delve into the fundamentals that can elevate your game from the get-go. By analyzing pro gameplay footage, we break down the crucial 'what' and 'when,' offering insights that are easy to grasp for newcomers. You'll gain a comprehensive understanding of strategic moves, positioning, and shot selections, laying the groundwork for immediate improvement in your pickleball skills. As a bonus, we provide a helpful guide at the end of the video-a screenshot-ready resource to reinforce your learning and set you on the path to pickleball mastery.
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    🛒 Paddle Equipment:
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    Chapters:
    00:00 INTRO
    00:42 TIP 1
    03:36 TIP 2
    05:59 TIP 3
    08:11 GUIDE
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 76

  • @johncincolapickleball
    @johncincolapickleball  6 місяців тому +6

    What part of your pickleball game are you wanting to improve?

    • @AnnMitt
      @AnnMitt 6 місяців тому

      Please see my comment in this video comment section

    • @rosborne2055
      @rosborne2055 6 місяців тому

      I'm trying to improve my shot selection and court position mostly. Always trying to improve consistency and precision, but that's just endless. Your observations on improving court position while my shot is traveling (before it's landed) are spot on.

    • @sbcreative108
      @sbcreative108 5 місяців тому

      I'd love to be able to do an overhead smash despite my right shoulder not being strong (old injury) OR learn aother good shot to use in those cases. Thanks for all your awesome tips. Just found your channel today.

    • @ThePaddlewan
      @ThePaddlewan 5 місяців тому

      John, I want to improve my court positioning, especially off the ball.
      Nice Video !

    • @wafarris
      @wafarris 5 місяців тому +1

      Court positioning in doubles.

  • @melisamelisa8929
    @melisamelisa8929 Місяць тому +17

    Thank you! Very helpful video! Anyone here using an Oliver-Sport paddle? I love it!

  • @anti1448
    @anti1448 6 місяців тому +7

    Love that little summary card at the end. Super useful for remembering the content of the video!

  • @johnmacneill6403
    @johnmacneill6403 6 місяців тому +5

    John, I always enjoy your videos, you always make a lot of sense and I can tell you put a lot of thought into what you are saying. Thanks very much for your wisdom.

  • @jasonenyart1773
    @jasonenyart1773 16 днів тому +1

    I appreciate your help so much. A frustrated novice here.

  • @MichaelEverheartt
    @MichaelEverheartt 6 місяців тому +5

    Always the best! Thank you so much. Will send this to my friends. Keep the beginners focusing on the right things

  • @laurenzeringue629
    @laurenzeringue629 2 місяці тому +2

    The why clicked for me. Thank you so much for sharing this! So helpful!

  • @veronicaqueralt1761
    @veronicaqueralt1761 4 місяці тому +1

    Thank you, I’ll put them in practice on my next game!!!

  • @metapickleball
    @metapickleball 6 місяців тому +2

    the "V" is a great tip John! ty

  • @debbiepepin2241
    @debbiepepin2241 6 місяців тому +1

    Great tips ! Will work on them tomorrow. thank you !

  • @rosborne2055
    @rosborne2055 6 місяців тому +1

    You produce excellent training videos. For my style of play I think your perspective and analysis has helped me more than any other source. Thank you.

  • @thephotoguy439
    @thephotoguy439 6 місяців тому +2

    Thanks John love 💕 this as all of your helpful tips you shared with us. California Bill

  • @tmclbnk
    @tmclbnk 6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for sharing your tips, while making it simple with the cheat sheet you provided.🙏

  • @mikeoliver861
    @mikeoliver861 6 місяців тому +2

    Great tips! You are the bomb! I'm going to share this with my group. You are smart to provide tips for low-level players because there are way more of them than there are high-level players. Seems like most gurus give high-level tips, which is fine, but that audience is smaller.

  • @JasonFu-ws6rf
    @JasonFu-ws6rf 4 місяці тому

    Great tips, thanks

  • @markcastro776
    @markcastro776 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for these tips and all you do to help us getter better. Appreciate your efforts.

  • @kimgill2021
    @kimgill2021 6 місяців тому +1

    good video . limited items -thanks-- but with many applications . a keeper . short and sweet !

  • @Pllban
    @Pllban 3 місяці тому +1

    The Why. appreciate that so much! that is how I learn

  • @trishnichols4485
    @trishnichols4485 6 місяців тому +1

    I really appreciate your method of explaining.

  • @jimbernard8964
    @jimbernard8964 4 місяці тому

    Thanks.

  • @robertthrailkill1368
    @robertthrailkill1368 3 місяці тому +1

    Very excellent points and advice

  • @malouzarate1498
    @malouzarate1498 3 місяці тому +1

    Great tips!

  • @user-db6od9ee5p
    @user-db6od9ee5p 6 місяців тому

    Love your videos. Best practices for instruction include engaging students and getting them active as you are teaching the "what, how, and why". Your students' readiness and needs play heavily into how much content to cover in a lesson (your students may be former athletes or they may have had little to no prior sport/ game experience). That said, this video will be a great review for some of my students after a class ot two. I would encourage other instructors out there to stay current re: best teaching practices and brain- based learning. We now know so much more about how people learn.

    • @johncincolapickleball
      @johncincolapickleball  6 місяців тому

      great comment! yes you are very right, everyone has a different way of learning and im glad this resonates with you

  • @MrLowRight
    @MrLowRight 2 місяці тому +1

    I wish every player started by watching this video. I know some 3.5 players who need to watch it!

  • @robinstewart6820
    @robinstewart6820 6 місяців тому +1

    Great tips- thanks so much! Would love to see a tip on defending mid-court shots.

  • @christiandelapena8623
    @christiandelapena8623 3 місяці тому

    Do you guys use the Eastern forehand grip to create topspin in PB?

  • @IRWE905
    @IRWE905 6 місяців тому

    All Great Tips. Your next Teaching Moment can be Anticipation ('How to Read the Game')

  • @lazyhusband
    @lazyhusband 6 місяців тому

    What do you think about gripping further down so the pinky is almost off or completely off? Jaume suggested this to Ed Ju in his video. This loosens the wrist.

    • @afterthesmash
      @afterthesmash 6 місяців тому +1

      With your paddle forward in the kitchen (but keeping your elbow relatively close to your waist) before the opponent's ball strike, position your paddle on an imaginary straight line between your dominant shoulder, a spot just above the net, and the position of the ball at point of ball strike. If the ball travels on a lower path it will hit the net. If it travels on a higher path there's a good chance it flies out of bounds. You'll still have to react left-to-right, but your most problematic target, your dominant shoulder, is defended without you doing much more than turning the face of your paddle toward the ball.
      When the ball is hit slower, your paddle will need to sink down, but you will have more time to do this. When your shoulder is on this line, your eye position is also low to the net which makes reading the spin of the ball a lot quicker and more accurate, since you can track lateral motion against the net cord to an accuracy of inches.
      Footwork is a team skill with many factors, but generally, the more you have the ball directly in front of your dominant shoulder, the better you are guarding the shortest and most dangerous path (the path of least time).
      Also, the closer your dominant shoulder is to the ball when the opponent strikes the ball, the more angles you cut off with less hand motion. You'll still have to learn to react fast. But gradually you will learn to sense the general direction from the opponent's back swing. It gets easier with practice.
      The nice thing about being really close is that you don't need any backswing at all. The kitchen is 7 feet deep. Most players can reach in about 2 feet. The shortest path paddle-to-paddle, directly ahead, is roughly 10 feet, or 20 feet round trip (except for Ernies). A brisk attack might be 15 mph (22 feet per second). Even with a bump return at half the speed, the opponent only has 1.5 seconds to handle their own heater coming back at him, which isn't much time at all while they are still in recoil from having hit the heater that hard in the first place.
      It seems hard at first, but as soon as you succeed with some of these bump returns, it quickly gets very hard for your opponent, too. High pace is low percentage on both sides. If you prevail in 60% of these exchanges you'll win most games.
      I've given you a consistent method to try out. You will learn faster on the basis of anything you decide to do consistently. So that's what I did as I became a 3.25 player. When sensing this kind of danger, I put my toes up against the NVL, leaned my shoulder into the kitchen as directly in front of the ball as possible, got my paddle pre-positioned on the most direct path between ball strike and my vulnerable shoulder (fast balls coming back super tight to the net cord) and then I took my lumps for a couple of months.
      A year later, my hand gets in front of most of these balls almost subconsciously, even if I have to stab my arm sideways to cut off a weird angle.

    • @johncincolapickleball
      @johncincolapickleball  6 місяців тому

      wow this is an amazing contribution. the level of detail is spot on. you hit the nail on the head. anticipation plays a large part especially if you are familiar with the people you are playing against.
      thank you for your great comment!!

  • @mra2424
    @mra2424 5 місяців тому +1

    Paddle position during a back swing can be confusing because you didn't mention a back swing on a drive and/or serve.

  • @AnnMitt
    @AnnMitt 6 місяців тому

    Excellent tips.
    Please, for future video, how can a novice player defend when their opponent is aiming a fast ball at our body or feet? Is it possible to defend these body shots as a beginner, or should we just slide out of the way and give up the point?

    • @user-db6od9ee5p
      @user-db6od9ee5p 6 місяців тому +3

      Read, react, ready- I teach my beginners to anticipate - Read-where is the ball going off your hit ( high, low), watch your opponent's position and paddle. If you pop a ball up or see your opponent's paddle is up to attack, "split and low is how you go!" ( Like a volleyball player getting ready to dig a spike- back up a bit if time, but you must get low as they are about to hit- watch Allyce Jones if you can, she's amazing)

    • @AnnMitt
      @AnnMitt 6 місяців тому

      @@user-db6od9ee5p Thank you!!!

    • @johncincolapickleball
      @johncincolapickleball  6 місяців тому

      great point!

  • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
    @CanadianPermacultureLegacy 6 місяців тому

    0:24 you definitely used the wrong picture there. The guy at your local pickleball group that knows everything (even though everything is wrong) is 100% a baby-boomer named John or Bill. LOL

  • @JeffLandauer
    @JeffLandauer 5 місяців тому

    Thumbs up for picture of Zane.

  • @MrAshi40
    @MrAshi40 6 місяців тому

    Что это за херня?

  • @Ty-dy3ym
    @Ty-dy3ym 5 місяців тому

    The old folks game. People under 50 look ridiculous playing.

    • @jaehititfirst2009
      @jaehititfirst2009 5 місяців тому

      you probably play tennis

    • @vortexaris
      @vortexaris 5 місяців тому +4

      @@jaehititfirst2009i play both and they both are bangers

    • @robertw4196
      @robertw4196 5 місяців тому

      ​@@vortexarissame

    • @robertw4196
      @robertw4196 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@jaehititfirst2009 actually more and more tennis players are beginning to respect pball. Probably just a bro who hates on both.

    • @lw7028
      @lw7028 5 місяців тому +1

      This person plays for what people may think, this person doesn't play for the fun of the sport.
      I play badminton, squash and pingpong. I just started pickleball because there's something fun I want to experience from the sport.