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How Your Return of Serve Shapes the Entire Rally

In pickleball, many players focus their energy on the third shot โ€” learning to drop, drive, or roll it into position. But hereโ€™s something most overlook: the third shot only happens after the return. And how you return the serve plays a massive role in how the point unfolds.

Your return isnโ€™t just a formality. Itโ€™s your first real chance to shape the rally โ€” to influence pace, direction, positioning, and even psychology. Do it right, and you can turn defense into instant control.

Letโ€™s break down how to use your return of serve as a strategic weapon โ€” and how to train for it.


Why the Return Deserves More Respect

A well-placed return does three things:

  • Buys time to get to the kitchen line.
  • Forces patterns in how your opponent hits their third shot.
  • Sets up your next move โ€” whether thatโ€™s a poach, a fifth shot roll, or simply holding your ground.

Too often, returns are hit without intention. Theyโ€™re deep (sometimes), theyโ€™re safe (hopefully), but theyโ€™re not deliberate. And thatโ€™s the difference between playing on your heels and steering the point.


Return Styles That Create Advantage

Here are four return styles that do more than just โ€œget it back.โ€

1. Deep to the Backhand Corner

This is the high-percentage workhorse of strategic returns. Most players have a weaker third shot on their backhand side. By sending your return deep and crosscourt to that corner, you:

  • Force a longer diagonal drop.
  • Create more opportunities for pop-ups.
  • Make them hit from farther behind the baseline.

Bonus: If they donโ€™t stack, youโ€™re almost always hitting into their backhand.

2. High and Heavy to the Middle

This isnโ€™t a floater โ€” itโ€™s a controlled, looping shot that gives you time and disrupts them. It works best against players who struggle with communication.

  • They hesitate: โ€œYours or mine?โ€
  • Their footwork gets jammed.
  • The drop often floats short or sails long.

This return is especially effective in doubles against two righties โ€” the middle is where the indecision lives.

3. Sharp Crosscourt Angle

Used sparingly, this return can be devastating. By hitting an angled return that lands deep near the sideline, you:

  • Pull the server wide.
  • Force them to hit a running third shot.
  • Create space in the middle for your next play.

The risk: it can float too high or go wide. So itโ€™s best deployed against slower-footed opponents โ€” or as a momentum breaker.

4. Body-Targeted Return

Sometimes the most uncomfortable return isnโ€™t angled or deep โ€” itโ€™s aimed right at the body. This jams the opponent and gives them little room for a clean third shot swing.

  • They have to back up or adjust.
  • You force a weaker stroke under pressure.
  • It sets you up to hold center court.

What Happens After the Return

Your return determines what kind of third shot your opponent will attempt โ€” and from where. That, in turn, tells you what to expect next. Here are a few common patterns:

  • Deep to backhand โ†’ crosscourt drop โ†’ expect a middle dink or reset opportunity.
  • Wide crosscourt โ†’ opponent off balance โ†’ watch for a short third shot or a pop-up.
  • High middle return โ†’ hesitation or miscommunication โ†’ look to poach or pressure the next ball.
  • Jamming body return โ†’ rushed reply โ†’ prepare to finish off a soft third shot.

You donโ€™t have to attack right away. Just knowing whatโ€™s coming allows you or your partner to step in with the next high-percentage play.


Reset or Poach? It Starts With the Return

If your return creates:

  • A short drop โ†’ your partner may roll or speed up.
  • A floater โ†’ you step in and attack.
  • A crosscourt drop โ†’ you play soft and steady to reset.
    This is where doubles play gets fun โ€” and why communication starts as early as the return. When your return shapes the shot they hit, you decide how the rally plays out.

Training to Return With Purpose

If you want to get better at using your return to build the point, try these drills:

Target + Predict

Place cones or towels in target zones: deep backhand, middle, and sharp angle.
As you return each serve, call out what third shot you expect in response.
This improves your tactical awareness and helps you build return-to-rally instincts.

Shadow Return Sequences

Practice return footwork and transition to the net without a ball.
Add in a mental script: โ€œReturn deep to backhand โ†’ expect crosscourt drop โ†’ step left, paddle up.โ€
This gets your brain and body moving together with purpose.

Return and Freeze

In live doubles play, hit your return and then pause while your partner plays out the next ball.
Your focus: did your return create what you wanted โ€” or did it float, jam, or miss the zone?
This teaches you to assess the impact of your shot, not just your technique.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

Even experienced players sometimes give up free points because their returns lack clarity. Watch for these:

  • Too much pace without control. A fast return that sails long or hits the net helps no one.
  • Floating the return. Easy returns invite attacks.
  • Overusing one style. If you always go crosscourt, opponents will start sitting on it.
  • Failing to reset after the return. The serve is over โ€” get to the line and stay alert.

Final Thoughts: Own the First Exchange

The return of serve is more than just a defensive shot โ€” itโ€™s the first offensive move you get. Treat it like a serve in disguise: placed with intention, designed to earn control, and meant to create advantage.

Next time you step on the court, challenge yourself to shape the rally before it even starts. Because when your return has a purpose, everything that follows gets easier.

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