John Cincola FIXES My Ready Position

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  • čas přidán 10. 04. 2024
  • John Cincola helped me improve my hand speed by reconstructing my ready position. Looking to enhance pickleball experiences for all players, I'm opening my playbook with John to showcase a better approach to increasing speed by optimizing the ready position.
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    I've been deeply immersed in the world of pickleball, teaching and sharing my knowledge as a PPA Tour pro, while also providing advanced instruction. But even with my experience, there's always room for improvement. That's why I recently sought the guidance of John Cincola, a fellow PPA Tour Pro whose expertise I've admired from afar. Through our collaboration, I dug into Cincola's pickleball playbook and enhanced my approach to the ready position.
    John's understanding of playing better pickleball remains unparalleled, which I've also honed through years of playing alongside him. When I expressed concern about hand speed, Cincola immediately zeroed in on my ready position. John astutely pointed out that while the ready position may vary slightly from player to player, there are fundamental principles that underpin an effective stance, particularly when it comes to hand speed.
    At the core of John's insight is the concept of relaxation. A high ready position can actually impede hand speed by inducing tension in the arms and shoulders. Cincola's pickleball playbook advocates for a more relaxed stance, with the paddle positioned around hip or net-strap height. This promotes fluid movement and ensures you're primed to react swiftly to incoming shots, which can enhance pickleball performance for most.
    John highlights the positioning of PPA Tour Pros, whose ready stances consistently prioritize relaxation and efficiency. By keeping the paddle at a comfortable height, players can effortlessly intercept fast-paced shots without succumbing to tension or fatigue. Maintaining a lower ready position reduces the risk of getting jammed up by the ball, resulting in more accurately controlled returns.
    Embracing Cincola's teachings, I embarked on a series of drills to refine my ready position and enhance my hand speed. We focused on keeping the paddle neutrally relaxed, ready to respond to both forehand and backhand shots with equal agility. The results were immediately profound, as I began reacting faster, with greater precision, resulting in better pickleball performance.
    John's approach remains a testament to the nuances of pickleball strategy. By prioritizing relaxation over rigidity, players can unlock a level of responsiveness that elevates their game to new heights. As I continue to refine my skills under John's guidance, I'm reminded of the power of embracing innovation and challenging conventional wisdom on the court.
    John Cincola's insights into the pickleball ready position represent a paradigm shift in the way we approach the game. By prioritizing relaxed fluidity, players can cultivate faster hands and a more dynamic on-court presence. As I integrate these principles into my own game, I'm grateful for the opportunity to learn from a true master of the sport.
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Komentáře • 69

  • @melisamelisa8929
    @melisamelisa8929 Před 8 dny +30

    Very nice video!
    Quick question :Is anyone familiar with the Oliver-Sport paddle?

  • @mhamberg
    @mhamberg Před 3 měsíci +18

    You literally posted the higher ready position short on Twitter six hours ago! 😮

  • @buchananosteve
    @buchananosteve Před 3 měsíci +26

    One thing I noticed is the different heights between you two guys. This also affects the level or height of the paddle. A shorter person may want it higher, and a taller person may want it lower relative to their bodies.

    • @lesterma1608
      @lesterma1608 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Relative to the net!

    • @sd1660
      @sd1660 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Agree. Im 5’1 standing feet together and tall. So many pieces of advice do not apply lol. Feet apart with an athletic stance my paddle is at chin height 😂😂

    • @davidaronson9475
      @davidaronson9475 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm 6'4 and always wondered how I get away with my arms practically hanging down. I have very fast hands for being 65 years old. Now I get it.

    • @Scotticus07
      @Scotticus07 Před 3 měsíci +1

      JW Johnson isn't tall and he holds at his knees... But maybe he's an exception

    • @KCVen805
      @KCVen805 Před 3 měsíci

      Are you saying Zane is kinda short? lol

  • @stevenjanoff8496
    @stevenjanoff8496 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Zane excited to see your collaboration with John. I’m a relatively new, one and a half years Pickleball player and I have been following John for over a year. I have also watched your videos for sometime. I have some vision problems now and I do find that while I had very good volley/hand skills as a 40 years tennis player, my hands or vision are slower now with Pickleball . I appreciate the ready position. Content in this video. Looking forward to more videos from each of you. Good luck on tour in 2024.

  • @charlesmuller120
    @charlesmuller120 Před 3 měsíci

    This is exactly what I am working on! Thank you so much!

  • @kurt5347
    @kurt5347 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Love this collab! Two awesome players working together to get better. Great vid gents!

  • @gnarfish5555
    @gnarfish5555 Před 2 měsíci

    Love the tips!! thank you so much for sharing!!

  • @brett7011
    @brett7011 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks for posting this!!!!

  • @brucebillst
    @brucebillst Před 3 měsíci +2

    Thanks Zane. If we didn't evolve as players then there would only be a one-handed backhand in tennis. I greatly appreciate your open mindedness to say there may be a better way rather than being "that guy" that is so insecure they can't (or won't) pivot.

    • @frankfurter7260
      @frankfurter7260 Před 3 měsíci

      I wish tennis had not “evolved.” And I’ll take peak Wawrinka’s BH over peak Djokovic’s.

  • @wafarris
    @wafarris Před 3 měsíci

    Great content! I have been thinking about this for the past couple of weeks. For some reason, I have just recently noticed that it seems a little slow and slightly awkward to hold the paddle at mid-chest height as I was told to do. And this is after about a year of playing pickleball. This makes perfect sense. Going to be trying a lower position now.

  • @mikeoliver861
    @mikeoliver861 Před 3 měsíci

    Wow, this is amazing. I've been doing it wrong. Thanks so much!

  • @-theslatemasons7428
    @-theslatemasons7428 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thanks Zane … been practicing for the last four weeks the way that you previously taught, now I need to change it😳

  • @AustinRich-bf5vd
    @AustinRich-bf5vd Před 3 měsíci +2

    Zane flexing!

  • @BruceAChristie
    @BruceAChristie Před 3 měsíci

    I appreciate this change as an improvement from Zane’s earlier position. I used John’s suggested ready position and was able to return more shots, with better quality.

  • @georgebanker2669
    @georgebanker2669 Před 3 měsíci

    Great stuff, guys.

  • @lobocnc
    @lobocnc Před 3 měsíci +1

    From watching your fast hand exchanges in this video, it looks like every shot had a back swing, rather than just a static block from where your ready position keeps the paddle. So what's important is not so much keeping the paddle where you expect the ball to be, but keeping it where you can start your swing to hit the widest variety of shots. JW Johnson keeps his paddle down by his thigh, which allows him to bring his paddle up from ready position to contact position (forehand or backhand) without the retraction motion required for a higher, more forward ready position. The physics of paddle motion is pretty complicated, and not necessarily intuitive.

  • @jespb66
    @jespb66 Před 3 měsíci

    Wow! No wonder my hand is still not fast enough!!! Definitely will try this new theory!!! Thanks!! 👍👍👍

  • @filmstop7828
    @filmstop7828 Před 3 měsíci

    great video

  • @madrum
    @madrum Před 3 měsíci

    I’ve landed on that positioning too in the last few months. I also try to have my paddle a bit lower if my opponent is hitting down and higher if they’re hitting up.

  • @gymleaderjake1579
    @gymleaderjake1579 Před 3 měsíci +3

    You guys made the correct observations but came to the wrong conclusion.
    Ideal paddle positioning is not determined by its relationship with your body. E.g (at the hip vs at the chest.)
    It is determined by the relationship between the ball, and the net.
    If the ball is being sped up from a lower angle, then your paddle needs to be higher. If from a flat angle then the position in the video is correct. If from high angle, the paddle needs to be lower.

    • @kabob21
      @kabob21 Před 2 měsíci

      They literally talk about relaxed position falling naturally at net tape height and compare it to how Ben Johns keeps his paddle at top-of-net height as an example. 1:28 - 2:05

  • @josefbleaux6724
    @josefbleaux6724 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video Gentlemen! I Think of the paddle position, not so much relative to your waist- but relative to the net. Just depends on your height...

  • @Cacheola
    @Cacheola Před 3 měsíci +1

    Yes, but keep in mind those pros typically hit the ball just above the net. The majority don't, hence keep your ready position where most of the balls are coming

  • @mathaddicts100
    @mathaddicts100 Před 3 měsíci

    Could height relative to net height play a factor in the ready position height? Both John Cincola and Ben Johns are over 6 feet tall. They have to stay lower.
    I love that two of my favorite pickleball CZcamsrs are in the same video! I laughed when Zane flashed his bicep.
    Thank you for the video. I still find your original ready position a helpful reminder in my play.

  • @acarter2072
    @acarter2072 Před 3 měsíci

    I like it!

  • @Klmrc
    @Klmrc Před 21 dnem

    Wish to see zane and jack vs john and james play at the lab

  • @hruntingson
    @hruntingson Před 3 měsíci +1

    Cincola’s waist high is probably armpit height for me. Rather than body probably relate to it to the net rather than the body, maybe? Or if I take a wide low stance at the net it would be the same place relative to net, but higher relative to my body. 🤔
    Edit: typos.

  • @househq48
    @househq48 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video, it seems you both are tall, what about when you are sooo small. Should the racket be higher?

  •  Před 3 měsíci

    Would you change your ready position (maybe raising hands a bit) when anticipating a drive from the baseline as opposed to a hands battle at the kitchen line?

  • @josepinchero
    @josepinchero Před 3 měsíci

    a local pb coach suggested to keep the paddle in slight backhand favoring ready position. do you want the paddle facing straight forward? or in a slight backhand favoring position?

  • @shih_nanigans
    @shih_nanigans Před 2 měsíci

    different per player in relation to net height and where you're setting up to receive the ball imo

  • @kento1957
    @kento1957 Před 3 měsíci

    As far as being in a neutral position, I always thought that since you can cover more space with the backhand, that it's okay to slightly favor that angle, say 11 or 10 oclock.

  • @btreese7
    @btreese7 Před 3 měsíci

    What about when you're at the kitchen and your opponent might be hitting a speedup from below net level that is going to be up around chest high. Would you move your ready position up a little?

  • @PalamaPickleball
    @PalamaPickleball Před 2 měsíci

    If you are shorter then your waist may be below net level. If that is the case, do you recommend raising the ready position to where the net height hits your own height?

  • @joshuapickett1234
    @joshuapickett1234 Před 3 měsíci

    Zane, have you been playing your signature paddle stock lately? If so, I’m curious why?

  • @lesterma1608
    @lesterma1608 Před 2 měsíci

    The variable of player height is the standard of the net height that is fixed, so ready position for all players is net height!

  • @jagpickleball
    @jagpickleball Před 3 měsíci

    It's funny I had several lessons bring this up to me recently because they saw your video with that high ready position. So I even went and watched your video and then a couple match videos of you to see if you did that because it didn't seem right and I don't think you usually do that. Maybe if you're on the kitchen line and you hit a dink low and tight to the net so they'd have to drive it up, then you'd have the angle. In fact, even in this video you guys are saying stay in the neutral position, but I don't think you are most of the time. You're slightly tilted toward the backhand unless you're anticipating forehand because that's the natural position of your arm and wrist being straight in front of you. Otherwise you have to bend the wrist to be centered and the fastest hands you can have is just raising that elbow giving you a shield to counter or reset and you can handle like 70% of the balls coming near you without even moving to the forehand (even more if you're fine with just a chicken wing reset once in a while).
    I always say have the paddle where the ball would be if they drove it. Be ready for what comes fast first.
    And yes I know you guys have taught a ton and are better players than me : ) I'm just trying to help clarify what you're clarifying a little more so it helps more people. Good on you Zane to see and admit that you might have been off a little on that and decided to tell people what you learned.

  • @andrewroberts9716
    @andrewroberts9716 Před 3 měsíci

    Put his link in the description

  • @robertcuomo7084
    @robertcuomo7084 Před 3 měsíci

    Right shoulder shots are very very hard for me to return no matter my paddle height. Help!!😢

  • @wadethomas3908
    @wadethomas3908 Před 3 měsíci

    Come back to Wisconsin

  • @daciawolter5810
    @daciawolter5810 Před 3 měsíci

    Did you grow up in Brookfield? I went to Brookfield Central.

  • @AnnMitt
    @AnnMitt Před 3 měsíci

    Zane is cute and has a fun sense of humor.

  • @mtcdnp
    @mtcdnp Před 3 měsíci +1

    How do you explain JW Johnson ready position?

    • @btreese7
      @btreese7 Před 3 měsíci +1

      crazy hand speed

    • @mtcdnp
      @mtcdnp Před 3 měsíci

      @@btreese7he does what all teachers say not to do, keep paddle way low 😅

    • @btreese7
      @btreese7 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@mtcdnp yes, he gets away with it because of his hand speed.

    • @binkyandtony
      @binkyandtony Před 3 měsíci +1

      relaxed + great pickle-IQ and anticipation

    • @josefbleaux6724
      @josefbleaux6724 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Ready position at the knees. 2 feet below the top of the net. I don't think he's six feet tall ...
      Don't get me wrong- JW is freaking amazing! However based on my observations of J-Dub, he could definitely benefit from bringing up that paddle some. I watch a LOT of the pickleball TV (I'm hooked).

  • @frankfurter7260
    @frankfurter7260 Před 3 měsíci

    JW Johnson’s paddle ready position is even lower - below his balls. That guy has super fast hands.

  • @shipwreck8847
    @shipwreck8847 Před 3 měsíci +3

    01:36 - I don't see any muscles zane. What are you checking for?

  • @Herringbone1777
    @Herringbone1777 Před 3 měsíci

    So, Bruce Lee was right !

  • @clintroberts1
    @clintroberts1 Před 3 měsíci

    Yeah previously taught by Zane himself with his stupid ball technique . And he did just a recent video with the same thing. Get some consistency on your teaching Zane!

    • @charlesmuller120
      @charlesmuller120 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Really dude?! We are all trying to improve and that includes Zane!

    • @imnotjoken
      @imnotjoken Před 3 měsíci +3

      Don't be a knucklehead! The game is constantly changing, and instruction should be changing as well.
      Kudos to Zane for reaching out to another pro to help him with his game. Maybe we all should be as open minded!

    • @ZaneNavratilPickleball
      @ZaneNavratilPickleball  Před 3 měsíci +12

      Thanks Clint. Why don't you make some videos

    • @clintroberts1
      @clintroberts1 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@imnotjoken Look how recent his videos are teaching the touch ball technique and high paddle up around his chest to chin level. for ready position. I pointed out on those videos that he and other pros never had their paddles up anywhere near that high during their matches and now he is teaching something completely different. He's a pro. He should really assess his training and thoughts and analyze his and other pro player games before putting a video out. It was like less than two months ago....he's been playing for years. It didnt evolve that fast. He should either take down his video or replace it with a link to this one with a disclaimer. I like Zane's video but it felt like on this one video I mentioned he was putting content out just to have content and views. If that makes me a knucklehead then so be it.

    • @alexandercochran806
      @alexandercochran806 Před 3 měsíci

      Ok so if u watch the end he says beginners stay higher which isn’t that diff from his touch the paddle video in which paddle is higher. He says at the end once you get comfortable then jump it. I don’t see the inconsistency but just a next level in progression video. The tone is one where I think the criticism is off. Zane is just putting out stuff to make people better and grow the sport. I don’t take everything he says on the court. But I’m not angry about it and attack the dude. I’m just happy a top end pro is willing to take the time and teach. All in all I think Zane’s personality, making it simple and getting into technical aspects is very good. Teaching and playing isn’t the same and not many high level players can actually teach pickleball or tennis for that matter. My experience hitting a round ball for 50 years tells me Zane is actually pretty darn good at it especially when he only has a few mins to make the point as opposed to an hour lesson.