I'm a bit late, but I'll answer you anyway. In beach, the ball can't spin after an overhand set. This changes a lot of the techinique, including the time that the ball stays in the hands of the setter. So, they aren't equal.
Hold on, though... The sets for indoor and outdoor will be equal. Some might, like the coach in the video, argue that they are different because of things like lighting, wind resistance, and flooring (sorry for the paraphrase). Ultimately, though, individual preference is what matters (among other things).
Search "Fast Hands vs Slow Hands" video. Indoor will usually prefer Fast Hands, because block would have much less time to react. But I almost never see that in beach volley - almost all are "Slow Hands"
Took me 5 years to find this, but it was worth the wait. Thx!
Great stuff . have been using out on the sand . Early square up and no more Flicky sets. Post more bruin beach tips Stein!
Thanks for the tips
I'm a bit late, but I'll answer you anyway. In beach, the ball can't spin after an overhand set. This changes a lot of the techinique, including the time that the ball stays in the hands of the setter. So, they aren't equal.
Hold on, though... The sets for indoor and outdoor will be equal. Some might, like the coach in the video, argue that they are different because of things like lighting, wind resistance, and flooring (sorry for the paraphrase). Ultimately, though, individual preference is what matters (among other things).
Search "Fast Hands vs Slow Hands" video. Indoor will usually prefer Fast Hands, because block would have much less time to react. But I almost never see that in beach volley - almost all are "Slow Hands"
Took me this long to learn that my problem was getting flicky, seems more flukey when I did get one that didn't spin.