Tennis Cruz
TENNIS ARTICLES
TENNIS SERVE
SERVICE RETURNS
VOLLEYS
BACKHAND SLICE
FOREHAND
BACKHAND TOPSPIN
PASSING SHOTS
OVERHEAD SMASH
TENNIS TRAINING
COLLEGE TENNIS
TENNIS EXERCISES
INTERVAL TRAINING
PLAYER - AGENTS
LINKS
CONTACT
PRIVACY
WEB DIRECTORIES
SUPPORT SITE
DISCLAIMER
PARTNERS
USER AGREE
Write For Us
Login Form
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
No account yet? Create one
Tennis Cruz arrow TENNIS VIDEO LESSONS arrow Volley Forehand arrow How to master your tennis forehand volley!
How to master your tennis forehand volley! PDF Print E-mail

The tennis forehand volley can be one of the most challenging strokes in tennis.  Very few throughout the  tennis history mastered the stroke to the point of installing fear on their opponents, from what I remember John Newcombe (Australia) was one of the few. His high forehand volley was so good, that everyone had the jitters when they hit the ball slightly high above the net.

One of the advantages of having a good/excellent volley is that you pressure your opponents to keep the ball low above the net and the result is often  a missed passing shot into the net!

There are many other reasons why your forehand volley should be seamless and I am going to show a video to help you with the learning process.

So what is the best strategy to develop a great volley?

1. To have great volleys, first you need to find a teacher that knows how to volley.

2. The teacher has to be willing to teach you the volley first. Most teachers that know how to volley will be glad that you asked!

In this tennis video lesson these are the things you should learn:


- To keep your racket head up and centered.

- To bounce on your toes at all times for rhythm and reaction speed.

- To use the same grip (continental hammer or chopper grip) for both shots.

- To keep your racket out in front and elbows away from your "tummy".

- To stroke the volley always in front of you.

- To keep your back and forward swings short and compact.

- To step out with the right leg towards the ball (if you are righty - lefties left leg).

- To step forward (diagonally) into the ball instead of swinging.

- To use your hands and arms for balance and control.

- To keep your upper body upright at all times and to use your legs/knees to bend and get under the ball when necessary.

- To firm-up your wrist at contact.

- To punch through the ball.

- To recover with your racket head up and centered for balance and reaction speed.

As a matter of fact I prefer letting young players develop their own volley grips, I do not teach them, but I rather let them find out.

In this case I will show you the grips the girl in the video found for herself.

    forehand-volley-racket-high forehand-volley forehand-volley-back forehand-volley-high




There you have it, keep it simple, keep it short and you will have a nice solid forehand volley forever!


Support the TennisCruz website, use our search link partners and purchase from them. Anything you would like to find on this website or anywhere on the internet? Be sure to find it, enter your search terms here:

Custom Search

 

Related Tennis Forehand Volley Tennis Instruction

Here are other tennis video lessons:

How to Master Your Tennis Backhand Volley!

Rafael Nadal Tennis Forehand Volley

Maria Kirilenko - Low Forehand Volley

Tennis Instruction: Novak Djokovic - Forehand Drop Volley

Tennis Instruction: David Ferrer - Jammed Forehand Volley

Tennis Instruction: Roger Federer - Swing Forehand Volley

Tennis Instruction: The Basics of How to Hit a Volley


 

Back From How to master your tennis forehand volley! to Tennis Cruz Main Page

Copyright © Tenniscruz.com®. All rights reserved.