How to Handle Moonballers Titelbild

How to Handle Moonballers

How to Handle Moonballers

Jetzt kostenlos hören, ohne Abo

Details anzeigen

Über diesen Titel

We apologize for the microphone/sound issues!

In this episode of The Prodigy Maker Show Replay from the archive, Chris breaks down the hot-topic debate around moonballers and moonballing in junior tennis — including the recent controversy at the Little Mo Regionals and Nationals. Chris shares what he thinks is fair, what’s not ideal for development, and how parents/coaches can respond without losing their minds.

You’ll learn:

  • Is moonballing dirty tennis or honorable?
  • Should tournaments discourage/stop moonballing?
  • The good and bad about moonballing as a junior strategy
  • The difference between true moonballing vs. attacking with a heavy, high topspin ball
  • Do the pros ever moonball?
  • The connection between moonballing, pushing, and drop shots
  • The best way to beat a determined moonballer (and what Chris teaches his players)
  • The best technique to use if you want to “moonball” the right way

Chris also shares real match observations from Little Mo, why high balls are so disruptive for young kids, and the #1 solution he teaches: the swinging topspin volley.

Vamos! 🇪🇸🎾

00:00 Episode intro + location (Manchester, Vermont)

00:25 Why this show: moonballing frustration + Little Mo controversy

01:38 Is moonballing a legit strategy in 9s/10s/12s?

03:11 Does moonballing work long-term? Do pros do it?

03:42 “Moonball” vs heavy topspin high ball (what Chris teaches)

04:49 The extreme “cloud ball” example from Little Mo Nationals

06:13 Why super-high balls are so disruptive (tracking + timing)

07:22 Is it “dirty”? Comparing moonballing to drop shots/underhand serves

08:03 Why moonballing works in young juniors (size, strength, overheads)

09:48 The real solution: teach the swinging topspin volley

10:39 Take it on the rise vs take it out of the air (what’s more reliable)

11:21 What if a kid moonballs every single point? (reality check)

12:03 Respect the tactics, but don’t build bad long-term habits

13:19 Use high balls selectively + with racket speed and topspin

14:10 Fixing technique: accelerate, use spin, footwork, positioning

15:02 “There’s no height limit” — why it’s legal tennis

16:05 High/slow/short/low: all are valid ways to attack

17:29 “A slow ball can be an attack” (big tactical lesson)

18:33 “Disturb your opponent” (Luis Bruguera concept)

19:42 Develop technique so kids don’t rely on ugly moonballs

21:22 Moonballing in Little Mo: thoughts + invite comments

22:24 Put yourself in the kid’s shoes (why they do it)

23:42 Moonballing vs pushing (and why it wins)

25:12 Moonballing, pushing, drop shots = psychological warfare

27:22 Tactical maturity vs overusing the strategy

29:18 Coaching it right: tools + timing + technique standards

31:17 Praise creativity, then guide long-term development

33:23 “Who wants to watch that?” (boring but legal)

34:19 Final take: don’t villainize — teach better habits

35:29 Little Mo circuit overview + why Chris recommends it

36:46 Whooshing vs pushing (racket speed mindset)

38:06 Training announcements: Florida (Oct 12 week) + Vermont training day

40:25 Train with Chris in Manchester, VT + closing

🎾 The Prodigy Maker Tennis Show (PMTS) explores the intersection of junior tennis development, cutting-edge sport science, fitness, health, and human performance. Hosted by world-renowned coach Chris Lewit — author of The Secrets of Spanish Tennis and Winning Pretty, and developer of numerous No. 1 juniors in the U.S. — PMTS brings together coaching wisdom, research, and technology to shape the future of tennis and human performance.

👉 Subscribe and listen on

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/id1456148452

https://open.spotify.com/show/3Wu0PXf9IXneu0ogrzujZN

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLR2QscfBfEs9dtttR6XNhduNlWYmZIfy-

🌐 https://shows.acast.com/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/about

📖 Books: The Secrets of Spanish Tennis | Winning Pretty

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Noch keine Rezensionen vorhanden