Today, we are continuing our series of tennis tips from the legends and have prepared a few more for you. Here they are:
Staying Low
A player’s overall level is often revealed by how well they deal with short, low balls. It may seem that when an opponent hits a weak, short return or an easy-to-reach drop shot, finishing the point should be simple.
In reality, this is one of the trickiest situations. The player is moving forward, the ball carries little to no speed, and it stays below net height, yet the expectation is to end the rally cleanly. This often leads to poorly executed shots.
There are many possible ways to respond, but one essential detail is frequently ignored: getting low. When a player neglects this, the only way to generate pace is by using excessive wrist action, which usually results in mistakes.
By lowering the body properly, the racquet lines up naturally with the ball. Balance improves, and attention shifts fully to clean contact. More often than not, this leads to a controlled and effective winner.
Volley Reminders
Keep the racquet head raised around chin height in your ready stance.
Position your elbows slightly in front of your torso. This helps prevent late contact on volleys.
Avoid taking the racquet back. Focus on a short, forward punching motion instead.
Keep your eyes aligned through the racquet toward the strings at impact.
Stay light on the balls of your feet just before your opponent strikes the ball so you can react quickly.
Extend forward on the forehand volley as if you were about to catch the ball.
On the backhand volley, drive the movement from the elbow and make contact out in front.
Coordinate your step and the punch of the racquet at the same time to maximize control and power.
Use a crossover step when reaching for wider balls.
Bend your knees for low shots rather than leaning from the waist.
Don’t Be Predictable
You may have faced the same opponent many times. At first, you were winning comfortably, but over time the results evened out, and now the advantage may even be shifting away from you. Even though neither of you has changed drastically, something feels different.
Most likely, your opponent has learned your patterns while you’ve stayed the same. When this happens, you need to respond:
Identify your habits: If you always hit your backhand crosscourt or place your second serve in the same spot, your game becomes easy to read. Take note of repeated patterns in your play.
Introduce variation: Once you recognize these tendencies, adjust them early in your next match. Instead of your usual down-the-line forehand, try a sharp angle or a drop shot, especially when you’re in control of the score. Mix up your volleys as well. Occasionally playing behind your opponent can disrupt their timing and anticipation.
Practice For Success
Have you ever thought about how players like Pete Sampras developed such a strong running forehand, or how Andre Agassi became so effective at returning serve? Or how Monica Seles created such sharp angles from the baseline? These abilities weren’t natural gifts. They were built through consistent, focused practice.
When training, prioritize accuracy before adding power. Use targets for every type of shot, including serves, volleys, overheads, and groundstrokes. Once you can hit your targets reliably, begin adding movement. Practice striking the ball while on the run and maintaining precision.
In real matches, the ball won’t come straight to you. You need to be ready to adjust.
Develop a solid range of dependable shots that you can rely on under pressure. No one can hand you these skills. You have to put in the work and earn them.
Good luck on the courts!
Street Arena – Game On! Move On!
Let's talk a bit about what Street Arena is actually about. Games? Teams? Playground? What is all this for? No worries! Let's talk about all these aspects and make them easy. ;)
Finding and joining games
Trying to play sports in your city shouldn’t feel this hard.
Yet finding a game, a team, or even a free playground often turns into endless chats, last-minute cancellations, and confusion about who’s actually coming.
Street Arena fixes that.
In this video, you’ll see how easy it is to find nearby games, join them in a few clicks, or create your own event using the interactive map. No chaos, no guessing, no missed updates. Just pick your sport, find a game, and play.
Watch the video to see how Street Arena helps you spend less time organizing and more time on the court.
Managing teams and communities
If you run a team or sports community, you already know the pain.
Too many chats, missed messages, last-minute dropouts, and no simple way to manage players or grow your group.
Street Arena was built to solve exactly that.
This video shows how you can create and manage your team, invite players, organize games, and keep everything in one place. Team members, events, chats, roles, and growth — all handled in a clear, simple way.
Watch the video to see how Street Arena makes managing your sports community easy and stress-free.
