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DYNAMITE DOUBLES. Play Winning Tennis Today! By Helle Sparre Viragh. Introduction. This presentation will introduce the main contents of the book by Helle Sparre Viragh . Charts & Visuals will be direct from the book with page references - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DYNAMITE DOUBLES

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Page 2: DYNAMITE DOUBLES

DYNAMITE DOUBLES

Play Winning Tennis Today!

By Helle Sparre Viragh

Page 3: DYNAMITE DOUBLES

Introduction• This presentation will introduce the main

contents of the book by Helle Sparre Viragh.

• Charts & Visuals will be direct from the book with page references

• It is recommended to buy the book, read the book & use it as a reference book as you learn the system

Page 4: DYNAMITE DOUBLES

Learn the Zones

There are 4 Zones:

Defense, Transition, Offense, Attack

Zones extend beyond the court lines

The lines are for the ball, the zones are for the players

Page 26

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Know Your Homes

• Each Player has 2 “Homes”

• Depending on where the ball is in your opponent’s court, you and your partner need to be in one of your homes

Page 27

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The Offense Zone

• This is where you and your partner want to be

• This is where you’ll build up the points

• You can get any ball your opponents hit from here

• You’ll be able to volley most shots from here

• You’re in charge from the Offense Zone

• This is a “major” zone

Page 33

Page 7: DYNAMITE DOUBLES

The Defense Zone

• This is the other “major” zone

• Notice how little of the actual court is in this zone

• Players play from zones, not from sections of the court

Page 33

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The Transition Zone

• This is where you transition from one major zone to another

• This is where most opponent shots land

• Stand here and you won’t be able to hit a volley or a ground shot

• You should hit only one shot from here – then move to a major zone, either Offense or Defense

Page 34

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The Attack Zone

• This too is a one shot zone

• Hit a winner and then move out

• Get prepared in another zone in case your “winner” is returned

Page 35

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Playing From the Defense Zone

• Playing only from here and you will:

-Work Hard

-Play Tired

-Only win a point when your opponent makes a mistake

Page 36

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Playing From the Defense Zone

• Sometimes you have to play from here

• You have more time in the Defense Zone

• You can slow play down to regain control

• If you get in trouble in this zone, your partner needs to be there, too

Page 37

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Playing From the Defense Zone

• If you stay in the Defense Zone while your partner is in the Offense Zone, the gap is huge

• The gap between partners is the main thing to protect and defend against

Page 38

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Closing the Gap

• With both partners in the Offense Zone, the gap is smaller and harder for the opponents to bisect the plane between them

• Getting both partners into the same major zone (Offense or Defense) narrows the gap

• This may take time

• BE PATIENT!

Page 39

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Playing Through the Transition Zone

• It’s a one-shot zone

• Either continue through it to the Offense Zone or retreat to the Defense Zone

• Both partners must be in a major zone before your opponent hits the ball

Page 41

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What to Hit in the Transition Zone

• Don’t depend on winning shots from here

• Build up the point, have patience

• Use your one shot to help you and your partner to both get to a major zone

Page 41

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Playing From The Offense Zone• The main goal is for you & your partner to

be together in the Offense Zone• You Can:

– Move forward for a put-away volley– Stay for a reflex/defensive volley, or– Back up for a deep lob in the Transition Zone

• Always try to volley from the Offense Zone

• Don’t plan on hitting a winner from here

Page 44

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Playing From the Attack Zone• Playing in the Attack Zone

can be hazardous

• This is a one shot zone

• Don’t stand in this zone waiting for the ball

• Move towards the ball and hit down on the ball

• Hit the shot:– Between your opponents, or

– Angled short & wide, or

– At your closest opponent’s feet

• Hit and move quickly back to the Offense Zone

Page 48

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Court Coverage

• The biggest mistake in Doubles: Partners trying to cover the same shot

• As partners, you have to cover as close to 100% of the court at all times

• The Offense Zone is the best area to be in as a team

• In Dynamite Doubles, you and your partner are never side-by-side, parallel to the net

Page 54

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Partnership Roles

• The crosscourt player is farther back than the partner

• The crosscourt player has more court to cover

• The crosscourt player has to deal with more shots

• The crosscourt player is called the Workhorse

Page 56

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Partnership Roles

• The head-on player is closer to the net, has less court to cover and fewer possible shots

• The head-on player can take more chances

• The head-on player is called the Terminator

Page 56

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Up and Back the Diagonal Way

• The Workhorse is always diagonal from the ball on the opposite side of the net

Player A is the Workhorse

Player B is the Terminator

Page 56

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Up and Back the Diagonal Way

• Each time your team changes the direction of the ball, each of you must also change positionPlayer B is now the Workhorse

Player A is now the Terminator

Page 57

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Up and Back the Diagonal Way

• The Workhorse is responsible for:– Crosscourt returns

– Down the middle shots

– All lobs

• The Terminator is responsible for drives down the line

Page 58

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Playing Dynamite Doubles on Paper

• Dynamite Doubles winning tennis is knowing where to position yourselves:

–After partner A serves, A moves into the Transition Zone

–Partner B moves forward toward the Attack Zone, ready to poach

–If receiver C returns crosscourt toward server A, partner B moves back into the Offense Zone Page 68

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Playing Dynamite Doubles on Paper

• Server A volleys from the Transition Zone back crosscourt and moves into the Offense Zone

• Partner B moves forward again

Page 68

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Playing Dynamite Doubles on Paper

• Partners A and B have worked their way into the Offense Zone, facing the ball

• Partner A is the Workhorse and partner B is the Terminator because the ball is crosscourt from A

• Partners are never side-by-side

Page 70

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Moving Together

• The crosscourt player is always a little behind her partner and facing the ball in a “V” angle

• The Terminator creates her own “V”

• Both partners move right after either hits the ball in order to maintain control

• Move with your partner and always face the ball

Page 74

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Moving Together

• Here is how you can get in trouble

• Note how big the gap is for the opponent hitting the ball

• Notice also that B is too far back to volley the ball if C decides to drive the shot down the line

Page 75

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A Review of the Dynamite Doubles System

• Dynamite Doubles demands diagonal decisions• The Workhorse must be ready to take:

– Anything crosscourt

– Deep lobs

– Down-the-middle shots

• The Terminator should not take:– A shot out of reach down the middle

– A crosscourt shot that can’t be turned into something offensive or positive

Page 78

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A Review of the Dynamite Doubles System

• Always try to be in the same major zone when the ball bounces in your opponents’ court

• Always stay positioned diagonally (staggered) to each other

• Both face the ball and the opponent who is going to hit it

• Be ready and balanced at the right place before the opponent’s next shot

Page 78

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A Review of the Dynamite Doubles System

• The Dynamite Doubles system helps answer those four basic questions that plague doubles tennis players:

1. What should I have done?Knowing what shot to make from where

2. Where should I have been?Knowing where to position yourself with partner

3. How could I have gotten that?Covering 100% of the court before opponent hits

4. Whose was that?Partner roles determines each partner’s responsibilities

Page 84

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Playing from the Defense Zone, Advanced

• Your main goal is to vary your shots, mix up the pace, spins and the height of the ball to take control

• Always let the ball bounce

• Work at making opponents move forward & back, rather than side-to-side

• Surprise works

• Make them movePage 86

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Playing from the Defense Zone, Advanced

• Try to force a mistake from your opponent, rather than trying a grandstand winning shot

• Watch the opponent’s feet, body & racquet– Will it be an overhead smash?– Will it be a backhand shot?– Will the ball bounce before being hit?– Will it be a return lob?

• Cover the Defense Zone with your partner and be ready to move together through the Transition Zone

Page 91

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“Turning the Court”

• Always face where the ball is coming from

• Your court coverage, your “V” changes each time you face a different spot

• You “turn the court” as you move

• You and your partner will always know which part of the court each is responsible for

Page 95

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Where Do I Serve, Coach?

• If you serve up the middle, you decrease the angle at which your opponent can return the ball

• Also, serving to the backhand is very effective and results in a more predictable return

• The graph shows the author’s preferences from the deuce and ad courts

Page 96

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Where Should I Stand to Serve?

• The best place to serve from in doubles is about halfway between the doubles line and the center mark

• Run forward in a slight diagonal line following your ball after you serve

Page 97

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Where Should I Stand to Receive Serve?

• Draw an imaginary line from the server to one corner of the service box

• Draw another line to the other corner of the box

• Position yourself in the middle of those two lines for the best possible coverage

Page 99

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Where Should I Stand to Receive Serve?

• Adjust to the server’s pattern, left or right-server, where they serve from, etc.

Page 99

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Where Should I Stand to Receive Serve?

• Adjust to the server’s pattern, left or right-server, where they serve from, etc.

Page 99

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Basic Rules of Doubles Tennis

1. Get the ball over the net

2. Stay away from the net person

Page 101

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Targets for the Returner

1. Crosscourt, back toward the server

2. Lob in a straight line over the net person

3. Short angle crosscourt

Page 100

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The Author’s Basic Rules to Play Winning Doubles - TODAY

1. Always face where the ball is coming from and let the ball come into your “V”

2. Know your “home” positions on the court – 2 in Offense Zone , 2 in Defense Zone, depending on whether you are the Workhorse or the Terminator

3. Know your responsibilities as a Terminator and as a Workhorse

4. Recover to a major zone AFTER your hit and BEFORE your opponent’s hit

5. READY, READ and REACT!6. A point is never over until the ball bounces the second

time. Never give up. There are no put-aways! HANG IN THERE. The ball is always coming back!

7. Doubles is a game of angles and percentages. And Patience.

Page 106

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Triangles and Diamonds• Visualize four triangles on the other side of the court: 1,

2, 3 & 4• The hypotenuse of each triangle forms one side of a large

diamond• Depending on where you are, to avoid the opponent’s net

person, hit your shot from:• Your Triangle to your opponent’s Triangle• Your Offensive Diamond to opponent’s Diamond• Your Defensive Diamond to opponent’s Triangle

• NEVER your Defensive Triangle to opponent’s Diamond

Page 107

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Subtract One Triangle

• Only three of the four Triangles should be your target:

• Crosscourt Deep

• Crosscourt Short

• Deep down the Line

• Play the high percentage shots and let your opponents make the mistakes

Page 110

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Shot Selection & Targets

• The easiest Triangle to aim for is your opponent’s #1 Triangle

• Depth is important – if you hit short, the ball will land in the Diamond and your opponents will take control

• The second choice is the short crosscourt to Triangle #4

• Last choice from your Triangle #1 is Triangle #2, usually a lob Page 120

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Shot Selection & Targets

• From your #2 Triangle, the shot selection is the same – the target Triangles are just numbered differently

Page 120

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Dynamite Doubles Partners’ Contract

I will stay in the moment and play One Point At A Time

I will play in the same major zone as my partner

I will get my first serve in

I will get my return over the net

I will stay in the point until it is over

I will make my lobs high, knowing height is more important than depth

I will always make my Split-Step just before my opponent hits the ball

I will BISECT THE PLANE of our opponents when I am the Terminator

I will hit a minimum of 3 shots with patience when I am the Workhorse

I will be positive and focused and in-the-game at all times

I will let go of the last point played. I will not worry about the end result

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The End

• That was just the highlights of the Dynamite Doubles System of playing winning doubles tennis

• We suggest you do the following:–Buy the book–Read the book many times–Practice the system when you play

–Encourage others to play the system