

If you want to elevate your pickleball game, the secret isn’t just in logging more hours—it’s in targeting the right skills with precision. The 80/20 Rule, also known as the Pareto Principle, asserts that 80% of your improvement comes from just 20% of your focused practice. But it’s not just about where you put the effort—it’s also about the type of drills and repetition you do to create lasting improvement.
Let’s get specific and tactical with drills that maximize your practice time while improving your game exponentially.
1. Dinking – Win the Soft Game (20%)
Most players want to end points quickly, but the truth is, those who master the dink game dictate play. Precision, patience, and movement are the name of the game.
Drills to Try:
- 50 consecutive dinks drill – Set a goal to hit 50 unforced-error-free dinks with a partner. Alternate forehand and backhand every 10 shots.
- Moving target drill – Place three cones at different spots in the kitchen and aim for each cone in a sequence while dinking.
- Speed variation drill – Mix in slow and fast dinks to improve control and reaction time.
- One-legged balance dinks – Practice dinking while balancing on one leg to improve stability and footwork.
2. Third-Shot Drop & Drive – Control the Transition (20%)
The third shot is where rallies are won or lost. You need a dependable drop and a calculated drive.
Drills to Try:
- 75-rep third-shot drop challenge – From the baseline, hit 75 drop shots in a row into the kitchen without hitting the net.
- Drop & charge drill – Drop the ball and immediately move forward; your partner feeds a volley to simulate a game scenario.
- Third-shot mix-up – Alternate between drop shots and drives every five attempts to practice disguising your strategy.
3. Volleys & Hand Speed – Dominate at the Net (20%)
Quick hands win battles. If you’re not winning your fast exchanges at the net, you’re giving away points.
Drills to Try:
- Rapid-fire volley drill – With a partner, volley back and forth as fast as possible for 60 seconds without dropping the ball.
- Reaction time challenge – Stand close to a wall and volley continuously for 2 minutes, aiming for a specific mark.
- Soft block reset drill – Have a partner feed you hard volleys, and practice absorbing the speed to reset the ball into the kitchen.
4. Serve & Return – Setting the Tone (15%)
You can take control of a point before it even begins by optimizing your serve and return.
Drills to Try:
- Deep serve challenge – Serve 50 balls, aiming for the last 2 feet of the court. Track how many land successfully.
- Return placement drill – Aim all returns to the opponent’s backhand corner. Hit 30 successful backhand returns in a row.
- Spin variation drill – Practice slicing and topspin serves to see which disrupts opponents more effectively.
5. Defense & Resetting – Keep the Rally Alive (15%)
Defense is about survival—if you can reset the ball under pressure, you’ll extend rallies and wear down opponents.
Drills to Try:
- Low-to-high reset drill – From the transition zone, practice lifting low balls softly into the kitchen. 50 reps per session.
- Two-touch reset drill – Allow yourself a soft bounce before hitting resets to emphasize control and feel.
- Paddle angle experiment – Vary your paddle angle to see how slight adjustments affect shot height and depth.
Where to Spend the Remaining 10%?
This last segment is for fine-tuning specialty shots—ATP attempts, lob retrieval, deceptive flicks, and mental strategies. These details matter, but only once the 80% is mastered.
Mental Strategies to Implement:
- Visualization techniques – Spend 5-10 minutes before playing imagining yourself executing perfect shots under pressure.
- Breath control – Use deep breathing exercises to stay calm and focused during high-stakes points.
- Pre-point routines – Develop a short, repeatable routine before serving or returning to reinforce confidence and reduce anxiety. For example:
- Bounce the ball three times before serving to establish rhythm.
- Take a deep breath and focus on a single strategic target (deep corner, opponent’s backhand, etc.).
- Mentally reaffirm a positive phrase like “smooth and controlled” before executing the shot.
- Pattern recognition – Train yourself to quickly analyze opponent tendencies and adjust your strategy mid-game.
- Emotional resilience training – Learn to recover from errors quickly by focusing on the next point rather than dwelling on mistakes.
Most players waste hours practicing low-yield shots while neglecting the skills that win games. If you follow this 80/20 practice plan, focusing on repetition-based, measurable drills, your efficiency will skyrocket. Work smarter, not longer—and watch your game transform.