
In high-level pickleball, every millisecond matters and one of the most underused timing tactics is also one of the most effective: holding your shot. It’s a subtle, split-second delay before you make contact with the ball. But in that moment, your opponent often shows their hand too early.
Pro players like Zane Navratil and Jack Munro use this deceptively simple move to force poor slides, bait premature shifts, and freeze defenders in no-man’s land.
When done well, holding your shot doesn’t just slow the game down; it completely scrambles your opponent’s rhythm.
The Purpose: Mess With Their Mental Clock
In pickleball, players constantly rely on anticipation—guessing where the ball will go based on patterns, body cues, and timing. When you hold your shot, you break that rhythm. Instead of giving early clues, you delay your decision until your opponent has already committed.
“The main point of holding your shot,” says Jack Munro, “is to get your opponent to slide early in anticipation for a specific ball… but you haven’t even connected with the ball yet.”
Once they commit too soon, they’re either:
- Off-balance and out of position,
- Forced into late resets,
- Or frozen and guessing wrong.
Real Match Scenario: Crosscourt Dink Battle
Imagine you’re in a soft crosscourt dink exchange. Your opponent expects you to continue the rally. But this time, you pause for just half a beat before striking the ball. That tiny delay makes them slide early, preparing for another wide cross dink.
Now they’ve opened up the middle.
Instead of going crosscourt, you redirect down the line or hit a soft middle push into the gap they left. They’re already committed, and you didn’t even show your paddle intention until after they moved.
Result: You didn’t hit harder—you just hit smarter.
Hear it all in the words of pro player Jack Munro:
Technical Breakdown: How to Execute the Hold
Holding your shot doesn’t mean freezing or hesitating. It means maintaining a neutral position as long as possible so you can:
- Read the opponent’s movement,
- Decide late,
- And strike with control and intention.
Key Mechanics:
- Stable Stance: Keep knees flexed and weight balanced so you can push in any direction.
- Neutral Paddle Prep: Avoid obvious pre-swing cues. Hold your paddle mid-line, so it’s not telegraphing cross or line.
- Soft Grip: A relaxed grip gives you better touch and the ability to change direction last-second.
- Quiet Eyes, Active Vision: Use peripheral vision to spot early slides, open court, and rushed footwork.
Drills to Practice the Hold
🟢 Dink-and-Hold Drill
- Dink crosscourt with a partner.
- Randomly pause a half-beat before contact—then either go back cross or surprise with a line.
- Partner works on reacting only after you hit.
🟢 Freeze-to-Fire Drill
- Practice short volleys at the kitchen line.
- Freeze your paddle just before contact, then quickly flick or push in an unexpected direction.
- Helps with disguise and late contact control.
When to Use the Hold (and When Not To)
| Use the Hold When… | Avoid the Hold When… |
|---|---|
| You’re in a dink battle | You’re being rushed or out of position |
| You’re setting up a third shot drop | You’re hitting speed-ups with tight timing |
| You want to disguise your direction | The ball is already too low to hesitate |
| Your opponent is leaning or guessing | The pace of play is too fast for deception |
Pro-Level Bonus: Combine the Hold with Deception
Once you master the basic hold, start pairing it with:
- Fake Shoulder Rotation: Open up your body like you’re going line… then go cross.
- Disguised Wrist Flicks: Hold, then snap late using forearm or wrist to change direction.
- Hold-and-Bait Patterns: Set up a pattern (e.g., 3 crosscourt dinks), then hold and attack the middle or down the line.
Control the Tempo, Control the Point
Holding your shot is not about slowing the game down—it’s about controlling it. It’s a mental and physical tactic that shifts pressure onto your opponent and gives you more options, more vision, and more confidence.
Next time you’re in a dink battle or eyeing a reset, remember:
The more your opponent moves early, the more control you gain by waiting.



