I thought when players talked about a dead dink it was usually a weak, arcey, purposeless dink that bounced higher and gave your opponent the initiative to hit aggressively or even attack.
Agree with other comments about terminology (I generally also call these reset dinks but get that they are sort of dead). If it didn't come off clearly, the main point of this drill is to get comfortable getting everything back to the middle of the court as opposed to the l or r sides where a player is usually standing....simple... But something rarely drilled on with this amount of intention
I thought when players talked about a dead dink it was usually a weak, arcey, purposeless dink that bounced higher and gave your opponent the initiative to hit aggressively or even attack.
and this neutralising dink was just called a reset with a positive valence rather than the negative 'dead dink'
Look forward to doing this drill. Thanks James!
Needed this 📝
That video literally didn't provide much of anything
Agree with other comments about terminology (I generally also call these reset dinks but get that they are sort of dead). If it didn't come off clearly, the main point of this drill is to get comfortable getting everything back to the middle of the court as opposed to the l or r sides where a player is usually standing....simple... But something rarely drilled on with this amount of intention