It‘s Grebennikov‘s reception philosophy. He‘s more comfortable with taking the serve on his side than frontal. Many coaches also prefer overhead reception on floats.
dustin has said this in one of his videoes, but passing outside midline allows for more area on your platform which is good since a float serve is meant to float and change trajectory
Floats tend to swerve around so you need a flexible platform that you can move even in the last moment. When you reveive in front of your body, all the up-and-down movement is controlled through quick footwork (moving forward and backward). This is pretty ineffective if you need to change position in the last moments when the ball has already crossed the net. If you keep your platform on the side you can move it up and down or even left and right easier and faster. Even forward and backward.
Interesting passing philosophy, I wonder if this is true only in men’s game or women’s game also. According to the stats I take, I have seen the highest pass ratings for when players pass midline and overhead
I think it's more useful in men's games. My theory is that he wants to push the ball to get a faster offense and also to put the ball tighter to the net. In men's games, the setter has a lot more options to attack the ball or run a really fast offense if the ball is tight.
Grebennikov is the genius of Libero.
Yeah but he doesn't seem to be a genius coach
@@Klickflip You have to consider the language barrier. If he spoke French then he would be able to express himself more.
there is a language barrier you see he struggled with some words in english but he still pointed out the bad attempts@@Klickflip
So is the goal on jump floats to take the ball from the side of your body and attack the ball?
seems like it
Taking the ball on the outside of your body allows you to move your platform much more easily
It‘s Grebennikov‘s reception philosophy. He‘s more comfortable with taking the serve on his side than frontal. Many coaches also prefer overhead reception on floats.
dustin has said this in one of his videoes, but passing outside midline allows for more area on your platform which is good since a float serve is meant to float and change trajectory
Floats tend to swerve around so you need a flexible platform that you can move even in the last moment. When you reveive in front of your body, all the up-and-down movement is controlled through quick footwork (moving forward and backward). This is pretty ineffective if you need to change position in the last moments when the ball has already crossed the net. If you keep your platform on the side you can move it up and down or even left and right easier and faster. Even forward and backward.
Interesting passing philosophy, I wonder if this is true only in men’s game or women’s game also. According to the stats I take, I have seen the highest pass ratings for when players pass midline and overhead
I think it's more useful in men's games. My theory is that he wants to push the ball to get a faster offense and also to put the ball tighter to the net. In men's games, the setter has a lot more options to attack the ball or run a really fast offense if the ball is tight.
what shoes is he wearing
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
👏👏👏👏☺️ buenísimo
Who is the athlete he is teaching? He looks familiar…
Mason briggs