How to serve badminton?

How to serve badminton?

Badminton serving seems to be a very basic and simple technique, but if the first step-serving is not done well, it means being passive from the beginning.

How to serve badminton?

1. Incorrect preparation posture for receiving service.

When preparing to serve, both feet and heels land at the same time, splayed feet stand upright, and the body center of gravity is between the legs, which is not conducive to the speed of sudden start and movement.

Because the foot touches the ground, the center of gravity of the body naturally leans backwards. When starting forward or backward, the center of gravity of the body must be moved to the front foot or the back foot before starting on the ground, which will affect the starting and moving speed.

The rapid characteristics of badminton require that when preparing to receive the service, the knee joint should be slightly flexed, the left foot should land (including the heel), the right heel should be raised and the right toe should be pointed.

This preparation posture is convenient for the body to start and move forward or backward quickly.

Clap your hands when receiving service.

When preparing to receive the serve, hold it with both hands and put it vertically on both sides of your body, which will affect the swing speed of high ball or flat shot; Or clap your hands too far to the right or too far to the left, which will also affect the speed of serving.

For example, clapping your hands too far to the left will affect the speed of forehand service, although backhand position is beneficial to catch the ball.

When receiving the service, you should relax your grip when clapping, bend your elbow naturally, and lift it to the front, so that the racket is placed in the middle of your body and the racket head is slightly left. This receiving posture is convenient for receiving and serving the ball in all directions.

3. Pay attention when receiving the service

When preparing for service, if you relax your whole body muscles and don't concentrate, it will also affect the quality of service.

When receiving the service, put your hands in the middle of the front of your body, keep your eyes straight, and concentrate on judging the direction of your opponent's service.

4. Slow swing arm for receiving service

In doubles, the swing speed of the arm is slow and the best hitting opportunity is lost, especially when the service is received and hit flat near the center line of the right service area.

When sending and receiving a flat racket, the contact position between the racket and the handle can be moved up a little to speed up the swing.

In addition, when preparing to receive the serve, you usually stand with your left foot in front and your right foot behind, so that you can move the serve back and forth. If the right foot is in front, it is often not conducive to progress.

Badminton made a big mistake when sending and receiving small balls.

When receiving the service, because of the hasty receiving, the arm swings greatly, and often there are ball control mistakes.

When you encounter this kind of ball, you must first be mentally prepared and don't panic. After judging the direction of the incoming ball, put your hands directly to the ball, and the racket should be small, so as to receive the service cleanly.

6. Wrong preparation for the third beat of doubles.

In doubles, when one serves, if the opponent's feet are upright in the backcourt and his arms are hanging to his sides, it is not conducive to receiving the ball from the opponent's third racket.

At this point, you should raise your heels, bend your knees slightly, and actively prepare to catch the ball.

7. The receiving station is wrong

Where to choose a receiving station depends on your own style of play and technical characteristics.

Taking a single song as an example, the receiving station should prevent:

(1) The tee is too forward, which is not conducive to receiving the service in the backcourt area;

(2) After receiving the tee, it is not conducive to receiving the service in the frontcourt area;

(3) Standing to the right when receiving the service from the right service court is not conducive to receiving the service and hitting the ball flat in the middle line;

(4) When receiving the service from the left tee, the position is left or right, which is not conducive to receiving and sending the ball from the opposite area.

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How does badminton serve so hard for others to catch?

The service is not interfered by the opponent, as long as it is allowed by the rules, the server can serve it to any point in the opponent's receiving area in any way. Using a variety of service strategies can often play a proactive role. Therefore, serving plays an important role in the game.

(1) serve the high ball in the backcourt.

This is a common service in singles, which requires sending the ball to the opponent's end line, forcing the opponent to retreat and counterattack, making it difficult for the opponent to attack. Although the serve is high and long, the arc is high and the flight time is long, but because of the long distance from the net, the ball falls vertically, so it is difficult for opponents with poor offensive skills in the backcourt to press it down. Send the ball to the outside corner of the bottom line of the left and right service areas of the opponent, which can mobilize the opponent to the bottom line corner, so as to open the opponent's position before the next slanting net. Especially the corner outside the bottom line of left field is the opponent's backhand area and the main target of the attack. However, when serving the corner kick outside the baseline in the right court, be careful that the opponent attacks his backhand area in the backcourt with a straight flat ball. If you send the ball to the inner corners of the left and right sides of the opponent's bottom line, you can prevent the opponent from attacking your sides quickly and straight.

(2) Serve a flat golf ball

The service is high and the ball is flat, and the flight curve of the ball is low, but the opponent still has to retreat to the backcourt to fight back. Because the ball flies fast, opponents don't have enough time to think about countermeasures, and the quality of returning the ball will also be affected to some extent. For the control of the team's flight curve, it depends on the front and back of the opponent's station and the height and resilience of the person. Don't give the opponent a chance to intercept halfway. The choice of landing point is basically the same as serving a long ball.

(3) Serve a flat fastball

Serve the fastball (or serve the fastball) with the ball in front of the net, and strive to create the active attack opportunity of the third beat, which is called serve and attack tactics. The flat fastball belongs to the offensive serve, and the ball speed is very fast, which is called the attack tactics of serving. Flat fastball is an offensive service with very fast speed. If used properly as a means of surprise attack, it can often take the initiative. However, when the receiver is ready, it can also be intercepted halfway to make it fast, and the server will be passive. When serving a flat fastball, the ball usually falls on the opponent's backhand area, or directly aims at the body receiving the serve, so that the opponent is caught off guard.

(4) Serve in front of the net

Before the serve touches the net, the ball can reduce the chance for the opponent to push the ball down, and immediately after the serve, it enters the oranges that attack each other. Send the ball to the inside corner of the front serve. The flight path of the ball is short, which easily blocks the angle of the opponent attacking his backcourt. Serving to the outside corner of the front serve line can play a transfer role away from the center of the opponent. Especially in the right court, the corner kick position outside the service line can create a big gap in the opponent's backhand area. But opponents can also attack the server's backhand with a straight line in the backcourt. If you are alert in advance, you can fight back with a header. Before the serve touches the net, the ball can also serve the opponent's chasing ball, causing the opponent to be passive. It's better to use the baseline ball to serve and touch the net, which is better.

Tip: When using serve tactics, you should not only look at your own ball and racket, but also observe the opponent's situation with the corner of your eye to find out the weak links. Pay attention to consistency in the preparation posture and movements of serving various balls, which brings difficulties to the opponent's judgment and is in a passive waiting state. Immediately after serving, you should lift the racket to your chest, adjust your posture according to the situation, spread your feet and center your body, but don't stand dead. Keep an eye on the other side, observe what changes have taken place in the other side, and actively prepare to fight back.

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