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Topspin, Slice, and Smart Shot Variety

🎾If you want to be more than just a hitter and become a true player, mastering spin and shot variety is essential. In today’s game, players who can change the pace, height, and bounce of the ball—not just hit hard—are the ones who win big and break opponents down.

Let’s break down three key elements of smart shot-making: Topspin, Slice, and Shot Variety. Whether you’re a junior developing your toolkit or an adult player looking to step up your strategy, understanding these tools can transform your game.


🔄 Topspin: Your Consistency Weapon

Topspin causes the ball to dip down into the court faster, allowing you to swing more aggressively while still keeping the ball in play.

Benefits of Topspin:

  • Keeps the ball in the court on high-power swings
  • Helps you hit higher over the net with safety
  • Makes the ball bounce higher, pushing opponents back
  • Crucial for groundstrokes and topspin lobs

How to Add Topspin:

  • Use an Eastern, Semi-western or Western grip (on the forehand)
  • Brush up the back of the ball with a low-to-high swing path 🎾⬆️
  • Finish high over your shoulder or around your head

Drill to Try: Hit cross-court rally balls with the challenge of clearing a rope or barrier 3 feet above the net. Focus on net clearance with spin, not flat pace.


🔪 Slice: Your Control and Disruption Tool

The slice keeps the ball low and skids through the court, making it difficult for opponents to attack. It’s not just for defense—it’s a weapon.

Benefits of Slice:

  • Breaks up the rhythm of baseline rallies
  • Keeps the ball low, especially effective on fast or low-bounce courts
  • Great for approach shots and drop shots

How to Hit a Slice:

  • Use a continental grip 🏸
  • Swing high to low with a slightly open racquet face
  • Keep the ball in front and drive through it with smooth contact

Drill to Try: Play a mini-game using only slice shots. Focus on depth and keeping the ball under net height.


🧠 Smart Shot Variety: Thinking Like a Chess Player

It’s not about just hitting the ball—it’s about crafting points. Changing pace, spin, and placement forces your opponent to adjust. That’s where the errors come from.

Keys to Smart Variety:

  • Mix topspin, slice, and flat shots based on the situation
  • Use crosscourt shots to open up the court and down-the-line to surprise
  • Add drop shots or lobs when your opponent is out of position
  • Develop a go-to combo: for example, deep topspin + short slice

Situational Awareness Tip: 🎾 When your opponent is far behind the baseline? Hit a short slice. If they’re standing inside the court? Use deep, heavy topspin to push them back.

Drill to Try: Play points where every shot in the rally must be different—topspin, slice, lob, flat. Reward creativity over winning.


📈 Final Thought: Add Tools to Your Tennis Toolbox

The best players at every level know how to change it up. Don’t just practice your favorite shot—practice using the right shot at the right time. Variety doesn’t just make you harder to beat—it makes you a smarter, more complete player.

Keep training with intention and remember: faith and focus go hand in hand with footwork and feel. That’s FOFTA.

Written by
Everett Teague

Everett is an Elite‑Rated Tennis & Pickleball Instructor/Coach with the Racquet Sports Professionals Association (RSPA), based in Tallahassee, FL. With over 35 years of experience coaching players of all ages and skill levels, he combines sport‑science precision with a values‑driven approach that defines the Faith Over Fear Tennis Academy (FOFTA). Everett specializes in sound, science‑based stroke fundamentals, efficient contact movement and footwork, targeted fitness training, strategic awareness, and mental toughness strategies. Central to his coaching process is the integration of FOFTA’s time‑honored principles — faith, discipline, resilience, and respect — to cultivate intrinsic motivation, reduce the pressure of external validation, and help athletes grow into confident, self‑driven champions both on and off the court.

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