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Badminton
Strategies and Tactics for the Novice and Recreational Player |
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Now
that you have graduated from backyard badminton, you can no longer rely on
physical ability alone to win games. It is time to develop tactics and
strategies a game plan to out-think and beat your opponent. By identifying
and focusing on his or her weaknesses, you are beginning to use your
mental acumen to win. If you play without thinking you will lose without
realizing why you lost.
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Study
your opponents. Discover what shots they are prone to make errors on,
which shots are their favorite ones, and which shots they are limited to
in specific situations. You are looking for patterns and tendencies.
Perhaps by their body language and movement they telegraph what shot they
are going to execute. Correctly anticipating what the opponents will do
with the shuttle will help your own game enormously. Even feeding the
shuttle to an opponent's favorite put-away shot will work to your
advantage because you gain time: you will be ready for it and may return
it before he has recovered. |
| Singles : |
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Use
the length of the court and pin your opponent to the back line before
trying a drop shot to the net. It is much easier to retrieve his shots
when he is forced to hit from deep in his court. Move your opponent to all
four corners to tire him. It is much easier to hit winning shots against a
tired player, even a fresh player who is slightly tired from a long rally.
Dart in and out of your own corners so that you can cover your court for
his next shot. Singles is a mental and physical battle. A lapse in concentration can easily lead to losing a run of points, which in turn is discouraging and may lead to losing even more points. To win in singles one must be fit, focused, and hit good clears and drops without errors. Smashes should only be used for ending the rally within the next two shots. The classic singles rally would use drops and clears until the shuttle is too far away from the opponent to him to effectively clear a return, and then with a smash win the rally outright.
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| Mens and womens doubles : |
Avoid
lifting or clearing the shuttle, which is like punting in football. By
clearing, you are giving the opponents a chance to win. If you do clear,
your team should adopt a side-by-side defensive position. The whole point
of the rally, starting with the service, is to hit shots that force the
opponents to lift. This is why when you are serving your partner stands
behind you because you hope to make the receivers lift with your good
short serve. This is also why when you are receiving serve your partner
stands behind you because you hope with your aggressive return you will
make someone on the serving team lift to your partner. If your opponents clear to your side, the
person who will hit the shuttle must hit downwards (either smashing or
dropping) while the partner must be moving to the front as soon as he
realizes the shuttle is not his. This is the up and back offense position,
the better to control the net. From now on the smasher gets all the deep
ones, while the net man cuts off or puts away everything else. If you have the offense, it is safest if
you do not smash cross-court, since their down-the-line return will be
directed at your undefended open space. Find out how your opponent
directly across the net from you waits for your smash. If he waits on his
backhand, smash wide to his forehand or close to his forehand hip or
shoulder. If he waits on his forehand, smash to his body or his backhand.
If he stands deep, hit drops or cut smashes. If he stands close and waits
with his racket up, try a quick clear. |
| Mixed doubles : |
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If you do lift, the woman should not stay
at the T and duck, but run away cross-court from where the shuttle is on
the other side and take a position about 2-3 feet behind the short service
line, squatting down and keeping the racket head up. She is only
responsible for smashes and drops directed at her; the man gets everything
else, including the down-the-line drop. Since you are playing in an up-and-back formation, hitting cross-court is risky since you are vulnerable to a down-the-line return. Hit cross-court only if both opponents are on the same side of their court as the shuttle is on your side, or if you know you can hit a winner through the opposing woman. Source: Washington State Badminton Association Newsletter
Newsletter, Fall 1996 Author: Eugene Kumekawa |
| Badminton
Tutorial Service Tips
Summarised Tips Improve
your Game
Defence In Mixed Doubles How To Enjoy Singles Strategies The Smash |