

There’s a reason pros win points with dinks that don’t even make a sound. It’s not magic—it’s precision. And if you’ve been dinking aimlessly “just to keep the rally going,” it’s time to level up with a little strategy called pressure zone placement.
Let’s break down what that means, how it works, and how to use it to control the kitchen (and your opponent’s sanity).
What Is the Pressure Zone?


According to Selkirk pro and coach Dominic Catalano, not all parts of the kitchen are created equal. He divides the NVZ into three sections:
- Front third (dead zone): Closest to the net—easy for your opponent to attack.
- Middle third (neutral): Neither here nor there—safe but not threatening.
- Back third (pressure zone): Right at the opponent’s feet. This is your goldmine.
Why is the back third so effective? Because it forces decisions.
A well-placed dink to the pressure zone makes your opponent choose:
- Short-hop a tricky bounce?
- Step back and lose kitchen control?
- Take it out of the air at an awkward height?
None of those are ideal. And that’s exactly what you want.
How to Play to the Pressure Zone
1. Visualize the Zone
Take one step into the kitchen and draw a line across—everything behind that is your target. You want your dink to land there, skimming just over the net with a soft bounce.
2. Mix Up Your Targets
Don’t hit the same spot over and over. Catalano warns that your opponent will adjust quickly if you dink to their inside foot three times in a row. Keep them guessing:
- Outside foot one rally
- Inside foot the next
- Middle body the one after
Same depth, different width.
3. Reset Your Mindset
You’re not dinking to survive. You’re dinking to apply pressure. That little change in mindset is what separates 3.5s from 4.5s. You’re not just “keeping it in”—you’re setting traps.
4. Aim Low, Not Flashy
You don’t need a highlight reel shot. You need a shot that makes your opponent uncomfortable. Pressure zone dinks aren’t sexy—but they force errors, and that’s how you win.
What NOT to Do
❌ Don’t Dink Short
Shallow dinks land in the dead zone, giving your opponent the chance to pounce. They’ll step in and smack it. You’ll wish you hadn’t fed them that sitter.
❌ Don’t Rush the Net After Every Dink
If your opponent drops a ball into your own pressure zone, you need to step back—just a little—to handle it. Planting your feet makes you vulnerable.
Take a calm step back, absorb the ball, return something soft and unattackable… then get back to the line.
Defending the Pressure Zone
Let’s flip it.
If your opponent is targeting your feet with dinks, your best defense is:
- Step back slightly. This buys you space and time.
- Don’t try to speed up. That’s just feeding them a put-away.
- Reset safely. Soft, neutral returns give you the chance to get back in position.
And always, always work your way back up to the kitchen.
Pressure Is a Tactic, Not a Power Shot
You don’t need to blast winners to win rallies. Just make your opponent uncomfortable enough that they make the mistake for you.
Dink to the back third.
Move them side to side.
Wait for the pop-up.
Then—boom—you’re in control.
Now go pressure some people (nicely, of course).
