The Art of Poaching

The Art of Poaching

In a recent column, Coach Tim posed a key question: “Are you playing Badge Smart—or just playing Badge?”  One standout tactic from his advice: poach more at the net.  If your partner hasn’t been crossing, ask them to. Give your opponents a new problem to solve.

This post is a follow-up:  Here’s how to make that strategy work.

Watching Your Opponent’s Racket Head to Time Poaches

In competitive doubles, net play is where matches are won or lost. One of the most subtle yet impactful skills you can develop is learning to read the opposing baseline player’s racket head—and time your poach with surgical precision.

Rather than reacting after the ball is struck, this technique helps you anticipate the shot before it happens.


What It Means

This tactic centers on watching the racket head—not the ball.

Most players lock onto the ball and move too late. But if you’re tuned into the racket’s motion, you’ll pick up crucial cues that reveal:

  • What type of shot is coming

  • When to move

  • Where to intercept

You’re not guessing. You’re decoding intent hidden in swing mechanics.


Why It Works

The racket head tells a story. Learn to read it:

  • Long, fast backswing with high drop? Topspin drive incoming.

  • Short, choppy motion? Expect a slice.

  • Open face, minimal prep? Disguised lob or drop shot.

These cues give you a split-second edge—and at the net, that edge is everything.


How to Train and Execute

Step 1: Set Your Ready Position

  • Stay balanced, low, and still

  • Eyes level and forward

Step 2: Train Visual Awareness

  • Watch the hitter’s racket head, not the ball

  • Track:

    • Backswing length

    • Swing speed

    • Shoulder and hip rotation

Step 3: Time Your Poach

  • As soon as you sense a crosscourt drive or loopy ball, go

  • Cut across with conviction and volley into the Doubles Diamond

This is more than a physical skill—it’s a mental habit built on focus and confidence.


Wrap: Don’t Chase the Ball—Read the Swing

  • Watch the racket head

  • Poach on cues, not hope

  • Own the net with anticipation, not hesitation

Train your eyes to see intention, and you’ll start poaching with purpose—and winning more points with ease.