Primary Skills

These five skills are non-negotiable. They separate recreational players from competitive ones. Focus on achieving 70%+ consistency with each before moving to secondary skills.

1

Dinking Consistency

The foundation of competitive pickleball

Why This Is Critical

The team that can dink consistently controls the pace. Dinking forces opponents to stay patient and creates opportunities when they pop the ball up. Most points at intermediate+ levels are won or lost during the dinking exchange.

KITCHEN / NVZ KITCHEN / NVZ

Key Points

  • Height control: Keep the ball just 6-12 inches over the net
  • Landing zone: Target opponent's kitchen consistently
  • Soft hands: Absorb pace, don't add it
  • Patience: Wait for your opponent's mistake rather than forcing winners
  • Footwork first: Position determines control more than paddle technique

Practice Drill

Cooperative Dinking: With a partner, aim for 20+ consecutive dinks without errors. Start stationary, then add lateral movement. Track your longest streak. Advanced: Add crosscourt angles and varying depths within the kitchen.

Watch Out For

  • Hitting too hard - most dinking errors come from adding pace
  • Standing too far back - you should be just behind the kitchen line
  • Looking at the paddle - watch the ball all the way to contact
  • Trying to end points too early - the best dink is the one that comes back
2

Third Shot Drop

The transition from defense to offense

Why This Is Critical

After serving, you're at the baseline while opponents are at the kitchen. The third shot drop neutralizes this disadvantage by landing softly in their kitchen, preventing attacks and allowing you to advance. This is the skill that separates beginners from intermediate players.

HIGH ARC Advance

Key Points

  • Arc trajectory: Ball should peak well above the net (think rainbow)
  • Contact point: Hit when the ball is dropping, below waist level
  • Paddle face: Slightly open, lifting through the ball
  • Target zone: Land in opponent's kitchen, ideally mid-court depth
  • Follow through: Move forward immediately after hitting

Practice Drill

Baseline Drop Reps: Stand at baseline with bucket of balls. Practice 50 drops, focusing on consistent arc height. Mark success rate. Advanced: Have partner at net hit your drops back for continuous rally practice.

Watch Out For

  • Hitting too flat - needs upward arc to clear net and drop into kitchen
  • Too much pace - this is a touch shot, not a power shot
  • Not moving forward after hitting - you must close to the kitchen
  • Giving up after one miss - be ready to hit 2-3 drops in sequence
3

Kitchen Line Position & Movement

Court position is half the game

Why This Is Critical

The kitchen line is the strongest position in pickleball. It gives you offensive angles and lets you cut off balls early. Moving in sync with your partner prevents gaps. Players who retreat unnecessarily get punished.

IDEAL POSITION PARALLEL POSITIONING

Key Points

  • Distance from line: 1-2 feet behind kitchen line, not in it
  • Partner sync: Move together laterally - stay roughly parallel
  • Ball follows you: When ball goes to one side, both players shift
  • Hold your ground: Don't back up unless ball is overhead
  • Split step: Small hop as opponent contacts to be ready for any direction

Practice Drill

Shadow Movement: With your partner, practice moving side-to-side without a ball. Call out "together!" as you shift. Video record to verify you're actually staying parallel. Advanced: Add random feeds to react to while maintaining sync.

Watch Out For

  • One player advancing while partner stays back - creates exploitable gap
  • Backing up on hard shots - hold the line and reset instead
  • Standing too close to partner - need 8-10 feet between you
  • Flat-footed stance - stay on balls of feet, ready to move
4

Soft Hands / Touch

Control pace, don't create it

Why This Is Critical

Soft hands enable dinks, resets, and drops - three of the most important shots. Players who can only hit hard are limited to banging. Players with touch control the pace, neutralize attacks, and create winning opportunities through placement.

Key Points

  • Grip pressure: Hold like a bird - firm enough not to drop, loose enough not to crush
  • Wrist give: Let wrist "give" slightly on contact to absorb pace
  • Compact swings: Shorter backswing = more control
  • Paddle stability: Keep paddle face stable through contact zone
  • Feel the ball: Maximize contact time - "catch and release" not "hit"

Practice Drill

Reset Practice: Have partner drive balls at you with pace from baseline. Practice "resetting" them softly into the kitchen. Focus on feeling the ball stay on your paddle longer. Track success rate. Advanced: Reset while moving laterally.

Watch Out For

  • Death grip on paddle - tension kills touch
  • Rigid wrist - needs to be firm but not locked
  • Big backswing - reduces control and reaction time
  • Pushing at the ball - think absorption, not deflection
5

Return of Serve Depth

Set up every point for success

Why This Is Critical

A weak return puts you immediately on defense. The serving team can attack or easily advance. A deep return forces them to stay back and hit a third shot drop, neutralizing their serve advantage and giving you control of the point.

TARGET: DEEP AVOID: SHORT

Key Points

  • Target zone: Back third of court, near baseline
  • Controlled aggression: Enough pace for depth, not so much you lose control
  • Depth > placement: Deep anywhere beats short anywhere
  • Move forward: Immediately advance to kitchen after returning
  • High percentage: Consistency matters more than aces

Practice Drill

Target Practice: Place cones or targets in back third of court. Practice 50 returns, tracking how many land in target zone. Aim for 70%+ deep. Advanced: Have server vary serves to practice adapting contact point.

Watch Out For

  • Hitting too short - gives opponents easy third shot attacks
  • Going for too much - winners from return are low percentage
  • Poor footwork to the ball - rushing or reaching reduces control
  • Not moving forward after - you need to get to kitchen immediately

Secondary Skills

These skills elevate your game once primary skills are solid (70%+ consistency). They add variety, power, and tactical options but won't help if fundamentals are weak.

Serve Placement & Variation

Start points on your terms

A mediocre serve with good positioning beats a great serve with poor follow-up. But once your fundamentals are solid, serve variety keeps opponents guessing and can create immediate advantages.

Key Variations

  • Deep to backhand: Most players' weaker side
  • Body serve: Jams opponent, limits options
  • Short angle serve: Pulls opponent wide
  • Pace variation: Mix hard and soft serves

Practice Drill

Place targets in different serve zones. Practice 10 serves to each target. Track accuracy by zone. Mix up pace and spin on each serve type.

Speedups & Counters

Recognize and attack high balls

When opponents pop the ball up above net level, you need to punish it. Speedups (attacking high balls with pace) and counters (defending against them) are critical for advanced play.

Speedup Principles

  • Target feet: Aim at opponent's feet or body
  • Downward angle: Hit down on the ball
  • Quick hands: Short, punchy swing
  • Stay balanced: Don't overswing and fall into kitchen

Watch Out For

  • Attacking balls that aren't truly high - patience is key
  • Hitting too hard and losing control
  • Failing to reset when the speedup comes back

Lobs

Tactical weapon for court reset

A well-timed lob forces aggressive opponents back, gives you time to reset position, and can win points outright. But overuse signals weak fundamentals.

When to Lob

  • Opponents crowding: Leaning in aggressively
  • Out of position: You need time to recover
  • Wind at your back: Environmental advantage
  • Tactical surprise: Once per game maximum for effect

Watch Out For

  • Lobbing too often - becomes predictable and signals weakness
  • Lobbing too short - easy overhead for opponents
  • Not moving back immediately after lobbing

Erne & Around-the-Post (ATP)

Advanced positioning plays

Erne: jumping around the kitchen to volley a crosscourt ball. ATP: running wide to hit a ball around the post. Both are flashy but situational - effective maybe once per match.

Execution Requirements

  • Erne timing: Must jump from outside kitchen, land outside kitchen
  • ATP angle: Ball must be hit outside the court sideline
  • Risk assessment: Only attempt when success probability is high
  • Recovery: Be able to get back to position after

Watch Out For

  • Kitchen violations on Erne - extremely common error
  • Attempting when fundamentals aren't solid - style over substance
  • Leaving partner vulnerable while attempting

Spin Serves

Legal again, but use judiciously

Topspin and slice serves are legal again. They can be effective but require significant practice. Most players overinvest here relative to the fundamentals that actually win games.

Spin Options

  • Topspin serve: Kicks up and forward after bounce
  • Slice serve: Curves away and stays low
  • Both require: Consistent ball toss and clean contact
  • Trade-off: Spin reduces control initially

Practice Drill

Master a flat, consistent serve first (90%+ in). Then dedicate separate practice sessions to spin serves. Don't mix during game practice until spin serves are also 80%+ consistent.