SlicerITST wrote:Al, is that shot acceptable to play when pushed out wide?
Yes, that's what she said.
SlicerITST wrote:Al, is that shot acceptable to play when pushed out wide?
Otlichno wrote:That's a bit ridiculous.
Otlichno wrote:So when both players are at the baseline and you're being pushed side to side and are on the defensive. You're not allowed to hit a defensive lob?
spencercarlos wrote:Otlichno wrote:There are certainly more fair ways to get out of trouble while being on the run, without disrupting rhythm, a slice shot or even B1+topspin shot they sometimes can find great depth and you can get back into the point.
L Sanchez MD wrote:How do you even hit short slice?
djarvik wrote:The success rate of a short slice is roughly 50%. What I mean by that is that if you play a short slice 10 times, 5 out of these 10 will result if a favorable outcome. This could be a winner or a weak reply from the opponent. Yes, it is effective, but being it is effective roughly half the time - it is acceptable. Keep in mind, moving further back when rallying increases the effectiveness of that shot, which is logical and acceptable - you make a choice to move back to cover other shots - then deal with consequences. I also noticed that going to the net after replying to this shot is a VERY viable option and suggest you guys try it.
Defensive lob's success rate is higher then that of short slice. Roughly out of 10 defensive lobs hit, 7 will restart the point. Yes, it is possible to volley this lob and even smash it at times, but most times, you will end up hitting a stroke and enter a neutral rally.
@ L Sanchez MD - indeed your video illustrates that defensive lob, a successful one. But it is a very small data sample. You need to take a full match, then isolate these situation where the player attempts in desperation to reach the ball and compare it to the successful reaches. You will then see that the success rate is really low on this shot to even be executed property or fall inside the court, let alone opponent not destroying it with a easy put-away.
The problem is not the defensive lobs themselves, they are valid shot and tactic, but rather the success rate behind them, when viewed both, from point of execution and response.
inseedious wrote:I want some "more precise" opinions:
- is FH slicing in order to change the rythm or to force an error allowed when used very often?
- is FH short slicing allowed, as a sort of "winner" or approaching to the net?
- is short slicing allowed just to make the opponent return a weak shot and then pass him?
- is moonball really fair? I think that using it during a shot without a reason is unrealistic.
- are drops or intended short shots when your opponent is at net (not to pass him, but just to make him do an error) fair? A lot of times I build up perfectly the point and then go to the net to close the point, and the opponent made a short shot or a drop on my legs, forcing me to a volley error.
- are drops used as a winner (not in drop+net or drop+pass tactics) really unfair if used more than 2-3 times a game? I think that a drop resulting in a winner is not just drop spamming, but is a smart choice to punish an opponent behind the baseline or to catch him with wrong foot.
I'd like to receive several feedbacks about these particular situatiosn, because a lot of sets changed because of strange tactics.
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