I only change my grip when I have time and I’m receiving a slow shot from my opponent. Anytime I’m in the middle of a fast exchange, I want to keep the same grip.
0 bezel is not “extreme continental.” It’s eastern. Unless pickleball is redefining tennis definitions. I don’t have time to change my grip when at the NVZ because I’m too slow I guess so I use continental for all shots.
Hi Tyson, I do my backhand roll volley the same way I do it in Table tennis. I use continental grip and point the top of the paddle to the ground at 6 o'clock and then come up from 6 o'clock to 12 o'clock in front of me. When I point to the ground my wrist is part of the shot i.e I flick my wrist.
Mike When staying in continental you have to modify the technique and contort your wrist a bit more to get that up and low to high swing. If In extreme continental you won’t have to contort your wrist, it’s more natural from this position. I would assume in ping pong you don’t have time to change the grip.
@@TysonMcGuffinPickleball I love your videos. Thanks! As a former squash player and a table tennis player, I too like the continental grip for the backhand roll, but I agree about the slight contortion in the wrist. BTW, indeed table tennis players may not change grips, but they will flip the entire paddle around on the fly, a manoeuvre known as "twiddling". Rubbers are usually different on both sides. Players using pips out on one side are most prone to doing this.
Hi, I think it would be better to show the recordings from side swing clearly that ball brushing tecnic. Also, a few slow motion roll voleys would be a plus. Thank you