Very detailed video i offline your videos and watch them often again and again to more memorize them in the match. Thank you i love your videos as they are very helpful
Md.Mushfiqur Rahman Chowdhury thanks for your request. What you are seeing in this video is not just basic doubles. It’s doubles for all levels. The better you are, the better you exercise the principles. Better players know each other and can adapt better when things get out of hand and can cover one another better simply by applying these principles and knowing each other’s habits, strengths and weaknesses. It’s in the creativity that makes a player more advanced.
9:06 does high-body smashes mean the placing or the height of the shuttle? if I'm cornered would you rather play a high-power shot that is quite a bit over the net or a low-power shot that may come down earlier to the front court? I often have difficulties with that since being cornered really puts you under pressure and usually doesn't allow for a high quality shot.
Impulsage high body smashes means hitting the opponent in the area of the chest and racket shoulder. Somewhere in the mid torso area. When cornered you should try to keep the shuttle straight. Power is not necessary. Just playing a shot that will get your out of the corner. Taking pace off the shuttle is a good idea.
Many thanks for the great video! Will there be a related video on singles? A question for you: what advice would you give regarding returning an excellent high service in singles, where the shuttle is dropping vertically? It's difficult to judge where I should be positioned in order to time the reply correctly. Excellent logo, by the way!
Max Renn best thing to do is get behind it as quickly as possible and wait for it to come down. Then pound a clear or flat or angled smash (which ever feels most comfortable). But make sure you wait for it to drop and hit it when it’s a bit lower rather than reaching up too high. That’s when things go wrong. It’s the exact reason why the high serve is used.
@@PritPachu Thanks Prit! That's exactly where I've been going wrong - rushing the shot and not waiting for it to drop sufficiently, resulting in clears of inconsistent length. It really highlights what a useful shot it can be in singles.
When the attacking team do a straight smash or a dropshot, which player should cover straight short defense? If the attacker's partner is covering the front and the back of the opposite side, does it mean that the attacker have to cover the net after his smash?
Arthur Bossuet it depends on where the smasher is. It’s usually after a smash that a back court player will follow in. A drop shot from the back wouldn’t warrant coming in nor should a player at mid court hit a drop shot (they should smash). So the question pertains to when a back court player smashes. The answer is, the smasher will come to the net after smashing if the smasher is within 3/4 court. So if they’re smashing from in front of the long service line. The front court player will yield the area directly in front of his partner so he/she has a clear view of the net and move forward after smashing. This would be another example of transition. But this transition is dictated by the offence and is a “planned” transition if you will. As opposed to transition when defence drives the shuttle cross court FORCING the front attacker to move back. So if your partner in the back is smashing from closer to the net, step sideways out of their way and prepare to move back and take their place in the back and allow them to come forward to follow up there smash and get any return that happens to go to the net. You should discuss this tactic with your partner before hand and try practicing it before it becomes organic.
@@PritPachu I see what you are talking about. I have actually did a simulation of this kind of transition during a training session. It's quite clear : when you find yourself too close to the front of the court, you switch with your partner. My question was about another situation. You called that "cornering" in your video at 6:40 The red player is far in the back of the court and smashes along the line. His blue partner is in the middle of the court, covering the backhand side. It means there is an opening at the front of the court on the forehand side (in the middle between red and yellow players). If the yellow player defends to the front/middle of the court. Should the red or the blue player defend? The answer that I know is "It's up to the blue player to decide". But this situation is still unclear to me.
coach tell me what to do when im at the front (attacking position) and my partner does cross drop shot 90% of the time from the back(both forehand and backhand). where do i stand and what should i do ? TIA
Please cover more responsibilities of front and back partners after serving (serving side). When returned to side of front partner, who should get that shot? If front partner serves are poorly executed ( less experienced player), what can back partner do more of to minimise damage?
Where does the partner stand in the front court when his partner is smashing in attacking position ? I see some pros move to one side of the court and even back a bit to where his partner is ? Or is it best just to stick in the middle at the T ?
Ken Jiss maybe I can elaborate. The front player stands at the T roughly. If the back parte et is further back then front player also moves further back off the net. If back player is closer to net the. Front player can move forward more and then eventually yield the front court for back court player to move forward after smashing and both players switch roles (transition). Does this help?
Awesome video which covers all the basics ! I've met so many players who've been playing for 3 or 4 years and don't even master this. I have a question though. When your partner is serving, if you stay at the back T, isn't it a bit dangerous if the opponent goes for sidelines between you and your partner ? There's a risk of being late, no ? Thank you
2012alex2311 the back “T” is a guideline. It depends on where you’re comfortable. If you’re quick and anticipate the return you’re talking about then no problem. If you’re not good at anticipating and are slower, then you might want to be closer to your partner. If you’re closer to your partner then the opponent could push it deeper into the back corners. The best approach is actually working on your strength and conditioning so you’re both quick. When you’re quick you can anticipate more quickly and cover either scenarios. Hope that helps.
Thanks a lot for the video. Can you make more such videos like while returning the serve the opponent hits an extreme cross court drop. How to tackle that? Looking forward for your videos
Hey man, where have you gone ? :) I miss your new videos... If you're still on youtube I wanted to ask you what to do when you have a weak smash ? My smash is weak and I'm small, I don't have good angles. What should I do to win ? I remember a Chinese guy who used to be very good at doubles but he never smashed even once. I'd like to do the same because my smash sucks even after training hard for months..
2012alex2311 yes just lost momentum for making videos. I am trying to focus on my online coaching business. I can help you. See my Community post for details. Email me and we can go from there. I can coach you to be better. titan.athletics1@gmail.com
@@PritPachu Hey there. I was wondering if you'd be okay to make a video like this one about singles? We could discuss a price if you're interested. I've read on a forum that in doubles we only have 2 corners to cover and we should do the same tactically with singles. I think I'm doing okay in doubles but not that good in singles and sometimes I struggle with new players... sometimes everything is going fine but I make a shot and put myself in danger and don't understand why. Anyway, if you're interested, let me know, I can't reach you as your website seems to be down. And if you're not interested have a nice day anyway :)
The rotation seems to be a nice technique but would you have tips for knowing when your partner is in a corner ? When I'm front, I just know my partner is somewhere behind... Should I take a look behind when the opponent has lifted ? Thanks.
2012alex2311 thanks for your question. 1) you can trace the trajectory from opponents side and extrapolate to your end, which should give you an idea and 2) as you said, take a quick look behind with your peripheral vision. These two techniques, with lots of practice should give you an exact location of your partner. You can also say to your partner that when he’s is stuck in the corner, he can say something like, “cover” which means to look for the cross lift and move back and towards the cross corner.
azu mkyo yes. It was the holidays! Hope you had a nice break! The videos are complex and detailed so they take me a lot of time to make. Especially balancing on court coaching and family and everything else in between! I aim to publish every two weeks. I need to make sure the quality of the videos is 100% hope you’re enjoying them!
nildex34 the principles are exactly the same since there are two players on the court. The only difference might be weather the girl at the net covers the cross push when partner is cornered. Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. It depends on situation and speed and power of both player and their style and tactics. Mixed is starting to look a little more like doubles but still maintains its traditional guy in the back and girl at front. Some teams elect to play more like doubles since S&C for wines has improved significantly and they’re more effective from the back now comptes with 10 years ago. But yes, court coverage remains the same. Especially in defence triangulation.
@@PritPachu Basically, I am a doubles player. It has helped me a lot. In any case, I think, we need to watch good doubles match to understand the sync between the two for a good game.
Thanks Prit, i've been playing for decades but never find the detail as this. Thank you
You’re welcome. Glad you found it useful.
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I am mainly playing double, and watching this video really helps me. Been playing for 4 months now
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Very informative. It's a shame there isn't more content on this channel :(
Phenomenal tactics made easy to understand. Can’t wait to go out there and put it into practice with my double’s partner. Thank you!
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This guy is amazing. Straight to the point. Amazing video very informational. Thank you Prit Pachu.
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So technical. Love every bit.
Very detailed video i offline your videos and watch them often again and again to more memorize them in the match. Thank you i love your videos as they are very helpful
ramu 729 thank you glad they help you:)
@@PritPachu thank you
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Aloha Coach Prit, great video to start the new year. Awesome graphics. You did a fantastic job. Very impressive thanks. Like the shield and bow theme.
Bryan Chun thanks man. Appreciate it:)
Great production Prit. Lots to learn and practice. Thank you.
David Renwick thanks for your feedback! Much appreciated
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Thanks, great video. Strategy videos ALWAYS needed!👍👍
Poul Martin Ploug Pedersen thank you. Another tactics video coming next! Thank you for your positive comment.
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A lot of info. Clear and precise, thank you for teaching.
Jimmy Siu thank you
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Great clip Prit! Best I've seen.
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Please do provide some tips for advanced doubles players
Md.Mushfiqur Rahman Chowdhury thanks for your request. What you are seeing in this video is not just basic doubles. It’s doubles for all levels. The better you are, the better you exercise the principles. Better players know each other and can adapt better when things get out of hand and can cover one another better simply by applying these principles and knowing each other’s habits, strengths and weaknesses. It’s in the creativity that makes a player more advanced.
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Thankyou for this incredibly informative video. Just wondering if you have one for mixed doubles.
Hi no sorry I don’t. It’s in the plan though not sure when I’ll make it. Maybe soon! Thank you
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Nice video...it's very much use full..keep on doing such videos.
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High quality content, it helps a lot. Thanks coach !
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Hi coach, many thanks for an excellent, clear and informative video.
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9:06 does high-body smashes mean the placing or the height of the shuttle? if I'm cornered would you rather play a high-power shot that is quite a bit over the net or a low-power shot that may come down earlier to the front court? I often have difficulties with that since being cornered really puts you under pressure and usually doesn't allow for a high quality shot.
Impulsage high body smashes means hitting the opponent in the area of the chest and racket shoulder. Somewhere in the mid torso area. When cornered you should try to keep the shuttle straight. Power is not necessary. Just playing a shot that will get your out of the corner. Taking pace off the shuttle is a good idea.
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Many thanks for the great video! Will there be a related video on singles? A question for you: what advice would you give regarding returning an excellent high service in singles, where the shuttle is dropping vertically? It's difficult to judge where I should be positioned in order to time the reply correctly. Excellent logo, by the way!
Max Renn best thing to do is get behind it as quickly as possible and wait for it to come down. Then pound a clear or flat or angled smash (which ever feels most comfortable). But make sure you wait for it to drop and hit it when it’s a bit lower rather than reaching up too high. That’s when things go wrong. It’s the exact reason why the high serve is used.
@@PritPachu Thanks Prit! That's exactly where I've been going wrong - rushing the shot and not waiting for it to drop sufficiently, resulting in clears of inconsistent length. It really highlights what a useful shot it can be in singles.
@ Prit your technique is very useful and your contrast also very precise and selected. can you upload one smash technique video?
Chhotelal Prajapati
th-cam.com/video/uzRqAviLUbU/w-d-xo.html
Chhotelal Prajapati
th-cam.com/video/B33V7MceklI/w-d-xo.html
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Thank you so much for this ! so helpful ! Would you consider doing the same for singles, please ? Thank you !
Pif Paf Pouf yes definitely. Will do this. Possibly next. After my next video surprise.
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When the attacking team do a straight smash or a dropshot, which player should cover straight short defense? If the attacker's partner is covering the front and the back of the opposite side, does it mean that the attacker have to cover the net after his smash?
Arthur Bossuet it depends on where the smasher is. It’s usually after a smash that a back court player will follow in. A drop shot from the back wouldn’t warrant coming in nor should a player at mid court hit a drop shot (they should smash). So the question pertains to when a back court player smashes. The answer is, the smasher will come to the net after smashing if the smasher is within 3/4 court. So if they’re smashing from in front of the long service line. The front court player will yield the area directly in front of his partner so he/she has a clear view of the net and move forward after smashing. This would be another example of transition. But this transition is dictated by the offence and is a “planned” transition if you will. As opposed to transition when defence drives the shuttle cross court FORCING the front attacker to move back. So if your partner in the back is smashing from closer to the net, step sideways out of their way and prepare to move back and take their place in the back and allow them to come forward to follow up there smash and get any return that happens to go to the net. You should discuss this tactic with your partner before hand and try practicing it before it becomes organic.
@@PritPachu I see what you are talking about. I have actually did a simulation of this kind of transition during a training session. It's quite clear : when you find yourself too close to the front of the court, you switch with your partner. My question was about another situation. You called that "cornering" in your video at 6:40 The red player is far in the back of the court and smashes along the line. His blue partner is in the middle of the court, covering the backhand side. It means there is an opening at the front of the court on the forehand side (in the middle between red and yellow players). If the yellow player defends to the front/middle of the court. Should the red or the blue player defend? The answer that I know is "It's up to the blue player to decide". But this situation is still unclear to me.
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Prit I am going for a badminton tournament today at 6:30 pm I don’t know to play doubles can I play doubles or singles
Sir it is nassary for the 2nd player to stand on the back T ? In both server and exceptor court ?
Sir repley plz
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@@PritPachu sir it can't open ?
coach tell me what to do when im at the front (attacking position) and my partner does cross drop shot 90% of the time from the back(both forehand and backhand). where do i stand and what should i do ? TIA
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Really nice. Thanks
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Please cover more responsibilities of front and back partners after serving (serving side). When returned to side of front partner, who should get that shot? If front partner serves are poorly executed ( less experienced player), what can back partner do more of to minimise damage?
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Where does the partner stand in the front court when his partner is smashing in attacking position ? I see some pros move to one side of the court and even back a bit to where his partner is ? Or is it best just to stick in the middle at the T ?
Ken Jiss I believe the video covers this in great detail.
Ken Jiss maybe I can elaborate. The front player stands at the T roughly. If the back parte et is further back then front player also moves further back off the net. If back player is closer to net the. Front player can move forward more and then eventually yield the front court for back court player to move forward after smashing and both players switch roles (transition). Does this help?
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Clear and concise!
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Awesome video which covers all the basics ! I've met so many players who've been playing for 3 or 4 years and don't even master this.
I have a question though. When your partner is serving, if you stay at the back T, isn't it a bit dangerous if the opponent goes for sidelines between you and your partner ? There's a risk of being late, no ?
Thank you
2012alex2311 the back “T” is a guideline. It depends on where you’re comfortable. If you’re quick and anticipate the return you’re talking about then no problem. If you’re not good at anticipating and are slower, then you might want to be closer to your partner. If you’re closer to your partner then the opponent could push it deeper into the back corners. The best approach is actually working on your strength and conditioning so you’re both quick. When you’re quick you can anticipate more quickly and cover either scenarios. Hope that helps.
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Thanks a lot for the video. Can you make more such videos like while returning the serve the opponent hits an extreme cross court drop. How to tackle that? Looking forward for your videos
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Excelent......congratulation
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At our social games the strategy is simple: always lift or easy lob straight into waiting opponent’s forehand so they can kill.
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Sir plz make more videos🙏🏻from 🇮🇳.
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Hey man, where have you gone ? :) I miss your new videos... If you're still on youtube I wanted to ask you what to do when you have a weak smash ? My smash is weak and I'm small, I don't have good angles. What should I do to win ? I remember a Chinese guy who used to be very good at doubles but he never smashed even once. I'd like to do the same because my smash sucks even after training hard for months..
2012alex2311 yes just lost momentum for making videos. I am trying to focus on my online coaching business. I can help you. See my Community post for details. Email me and we can go from there. I can coach you to be better. titan.athletics1@gmail.com
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Please check out my new website
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@@PritPachu Hey there. I was wondering if you'd be okay to make a video like this one about singles? We could discuss a price if you're interested. I've read on a forum that in doubles we only have 2 corners to cover and we should do the same tactically with singles. I think I'm doing okay in doubles but not that good in singles and sometimes I struggle with new players... sometimes everything is going fine but I make a shot and put myself in danger and don't understand why. Anyway, if you're interested, let me know, I can't reach you as your website seems to be down. And if you're not interested have a nice day anyway :)
The rotation seems to be a nice technique but would you have tips for knowing when your partner is in a corner ? When I'm front, I just know my partner is somewhere behind... Should I take a look behind when the opponent has lifted ? Thanks.
2012alex2311 thanks for your question. 1) you can trace the trajectory from opponents side and extrapolate to your end, which should give you an idea and 2) as you said, take a quick look behind with your peripheral vision. These two techniques, with lots of practice should give you an exact location of your partner. You can also say to your partner that when he’s is stuck in the corner, he can say something like, “cover” which means to look for the cross lift and move back and towards the cross corner.
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Very nice video
Very nice good great 👍👍👍👍
Absolutely 👍👍👍
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Damned ! Your video are so good ! :O Thank you !
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Its been a while since last uplaod coach .
azu mkyo yes. It was the holidays! Hope you had a nice break! The videos are complex and detailed so they take me a lot of time to make. Especially balancing on court coaching and family and everything else in between! I aim to publish every two weeks. I need to make sure the quality of the videos is 100% hope you’re enjoying them!
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This is great, Thank you! How does the principles change for mixed doubles ?
nildex34 the principles are exactly the same since there are two players on the court. The only difference might be weather the girl at the net covers the cross push when partner is cornered. Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. It depends on situation and speed and power of both player and their style and tactics. Mixed is starting to look a little more like doubles but still maintains its traditional guy in the back and girl at front. Some teams elect to play more like doubles since S&C for wines has improved significantly and they’re more effective from the back now comptes with 10 years ago. But yes, court coverage remains the same. Especially in defence triangulation.
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Please post a tutorial on stick smash
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Teamwork? Most games I see are two singles games happening on the two sides and occasionally shuttle crossing over LOL
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some clippings of actual play would have been better for understanding.
Begur Kailash Yes...I’m sure.
@@PritPachu Basically, I am a doubles player. It has helped me a lot. In any case, I think, we need to watch good doubles match to understand the sync between the two for a good game.
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WOW .
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thats why i suck at doubles
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It's poona