The Biggest Upgrade Most Pickleball Players Ignore: Rethinking the Return of Serve

Masterclass series — Return of Serve, VU6jPbmelwE


Grip Like a Pickleball Player, Not a Tennis Refugee

The first revelation in this breakdown is simple but transformative: stop gripping the paddle like a tennis player. Because the pickleball court is smaller and you can cover most of your side with a forehand, the Continental grip that dominates tennis is a liability here. Instead, shift toward an Eastern or semi-Eastern grip to prioritize your forehand. A stronger forehand return is worth the trade-off — you can cover roughly 70% of returns by running around balls even on your backhand side.

But there is a catch. That stronger forehand grip leaves your backhand mechanically weaker. If you try to slice your backhand returns, the open paddle face from the Eastern grip will cause you to pop the ball up and lose control. The fix is mandatory: a two-handed backhand return. Not optional. Not a specialty shot you can delay learning. With two hands on the paddle, you close the face, hit more linearly, and regain stability on the 30% of serves that force you to go backhand.

Timing the Split Step Right

The split step — that mini-hop before the serve — is not a flourish. It is preparation. The instructor emphasizes a simple timing rule: land your split step the instant the server makes contact. Not before. Not after. This rule scales across all levels because it ensures you are on the balls of your feet exactly when you need to react.

Land on your heels and you are stuck. Push from the balls of your feet and you explode into position. Pros like Quang Dang even set their ready position inverted on the balls of their feet to maximize that first push. The split step is what keeps your return compact, rhythmic, and forward-moving.

Contact Point and Forward Momentum

A return hit with your arms extended far from your body is a return you cannot control. The instructor calls out the "pockets" — the zones near your hips where leverage, power, and feel are maximized. On the backhand side, closing your stance hyper-tight lets your hips rotate closer to the contact point. On the forehand side, even if the serve jams your body, run around it and still make contact near your hips.

Then there is the weight transfer. Too many players split step correctly, then immediately lose forward momentum. The right mechanics are one fluid motion: lower-body drive forward, core engaged, arms guiding the ball through. Not swing-and-stop-and-sw-reset. Keep your speed constant through contact for dwell time, accuracy, and depth.

Eliminate the Big Backswing — Row, Don't Rotate

The dreaded big circular backswing is one of the biggest sources of timing failure in returns. The alternative the instructor proposes: a rowing motion, pulling your elbow back like a cable row at the gym. This engages your back muscles, shortens the swing path, and speeds up your preparation dramatically.

The practical rule here is sharp: your forward swing should start as the ball hits the ground. If the serve is deep and fast and you are still winding up your backswing after the bounce, the ball will creep up on you. You will get jammed, push the shot, or dump it in the net.

Wrist Hinge and the Two-Handed Backhand as Default

Another detail the pros use that amateurs miss: a slight backward wrist hinge at contact — like a handshake grip. This firms up the wrist, expands the sweet spot, and reduces shanks. But the instructor draws a hard line between a strong wrist position and using too much wrist to generate power.

Power comes from legs, core, shoulder, and arm. Wrist should guide, not generate. Letting wrist override the rest of the kinetic chain introduces variability and costs you placement.

And again: the two-handed backhand is non-negotiable in modern pickleball. A slice return off your backhand is not neutral — it is an invitation. Players with roll volleys and heavy topspin drives will convert your slice into an attacking opportunity. You do not need a glamorous backhand. You need one that is "good enough to push the ball deep" — flat, floaty, anything but slice.

Anticipating Serve Placement from Baseline Positioning

Here is a framework most players never internalize: where your opponent stands on the baseline predicts where they will serve.

Baseline PositionServe Tendency
Middle of the boxMost balanced. Mix of depth, T-serve, and moderate angles. Default for consistency.
Near the T (center line)Straight-line rockets down the T — usually to the opponent's backhand. High execution required.
Near the sideline (wide)Extreme angles to pull the returner off the court. Spin serves shine here. No consistent T-serve option.

If your serve is deep and consistent, stand middle and vary placement. If you own the T-rocket, shift to the T. If you are a finesse spin player, line up wide and shape serves off the court.

Key Lessons

What Transfers to Your Own Practice

Anand, most of your return-of-serve inconsistencies probably come from one of two things: landing late on the split step or swinging with too much arm and wrist rather than driving from the legs. Fix the timing first — practice the split-step-to-land rule until it is automatic. Then shorten your backswing. Your next session, try the rowing-pull backswing and see how much faster you are on hard, deep serves. If you are still slicing backhands on returns, make the two-handed backhand your default for the next thirty days — even if it feels awkward at first. The moment you stop handing opponents attackable balls by slicing, your third-shot opportunities will improve dramatically.