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Tennis Drills For Advanced Players (With Videos)

by Scott Baxter
May 19, 2025
in Improve My Game, Tennis News, Tennis Tips
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If you’re a 4.0 to 5.0 rated tennis player who feels stuck despite training regularly, this article is for you. You’ve already mastered the basics, now you need drills that actually reflect the high-pressure, match-like scenarios you’re facing.

Feel like you’ve hit a ceiling with your game, even though you train hard?

Advanced players don’t need more reps. They need smarter, more intentional ones. 

That means training with drills designed to mimic pressure situations, target real weaknesses, and simulate the kind of point play that actually happens in matches. 

Forget the ball-feeding fluff, this is about building patterns that win points.

So if you’re tired of hitting a wall, you’re in the right place. 

What Makes a Tennis Drill “Advanced”?

The Difference Between Practicing and Improving

If you’ve ever walked off the court thinking, “That was a good workout,” but didn’t play any better the next match, you’ve experienced the gap between practicing and improving. 

It’s one of the most common traps I see advanced players fall into.

Hitting 100 forehands in a row might feel productive, but if those forehands don’t mimic the patterns and pressure you face in matches, you’re just reinforcing comfort zones. 

Advanced drills aren’t about perfect technique in a vacuum, they’re about making the right decision in the right moment, with your heart rate elevated, your brain engaged, and your opponent doing everything they can to throw you off.

Improvement comes from struggle, not autopilot. 

That’s why real progress demands drills that force adaptation: footwork under pressure, tactical commitment, and mental resilience. In short, advanced drills look and feel like real tennis, because they are.

How to Know If You’re Ready for Advanced Drills

Before you jump into the deep end, here’s your three-point readiness checklist:

  • Consistency: Can you rally 10+ balls with depth and control under light pressure?
  • Technique Foundation: Are your basic strokes reliable enough that they won’t collapse when you increase intensity?
  • Tactical Awareness: Do you understand concepts like shot selection, court positioning, and when to build vs. finish?

If you’ve checked those boxes, you’re ready to level up.

But be warned, jumping into advanced work too early can backfire. I’ve seen talented players copy high-level drills from YouTube, only to reinforce poor movement habits or ruin their timing. 

That’s why every PlayYourCourt drill is matched to your skill level, your goals, and your real-world match scenarios. Because the right drill at the wrong time? That’s just noise.

Serve-Focused Drills to Add Power, Spin, and Precision

Power Serve Progression Series

Let’s start with a reality check: power doesn’t come from your arm. If you’re trying to muscle the ball with your shoulder and bicep, you’re leaking energy and killing your consistency.

We train power with a Serve + Third Ball Targeting Drill, a progression that connects the kinetic chain from your legs through your core, shoulder, and into a loose, whippy racket head. It’s about sequencing, not strength.

Here’s how it works: start with a powerful serve, then immediately follow up with a deep third shot to a pre-marked target. 

You’re simulating the serve + first strike combo that dominates real points. 

Want to add even more efficiency? Layer in passive wrist drills to develop whip and lag. You’ll be shocked how fast your serve velocity climbs once you stop muscling and start flowing.

Target Zone Serve Accuracy Challenge

It’s one thing to hit a hard serve. It’s another to put it exactly where you want it, especially under pressure.

That’s why we run the Target Zone Serve Accuracy Challenge. 

Mark off four quadrants in the service boxes (wide, body, T, kicker) and rotate through them, hitting 5 serves to each zone. If you miss the zone, it’s a point off. 

Turn it into a scoring game with a friend or coach, first to 16, but you can only advance by hitting your targets.

You’ll build placement, pattern recognition, and match-ready confidence.

Groundstroke Drills for Power, Precision, and Pressure Play

Spin-Varied Rally

If you want to compete at a higher level, you’ve got to be comfortable in chaos, because not every opponent hits the same ball. 

That’s where the Spin-Varied Rally Drill shines. One player hits heavy topspin, while the other alternates with knife-like slices. Then switch roles.

The goal here isn’t just consistency, it’s adaptability. You’ll learn to adjust your footwork, timing, and strike zone mid-rally. 

It’s especially effective for players who struggle against junkballers or pushers with spin variety. You’ll start recognizing patterns faster, adjusting your shape on the ball, and responding under pressure with confidence.

Deep-to-Short Crosscourt Challenge

The Deep-to-Short Crosscourt Drill helps you develop one of the most devastating rally tactics in tennis: opening up the court, then carving an angle to finish the point.

Here’s how it works: Player A hits a deep crosscourt, Player B replies with a short angle. On the next shot, Player A must decide whether to redirect or reset, but only if their feet are balanced and court positioning allows. If not, they play safe.

This drill forces you to make decisions, not just hit balls. 

It mirrors real point construction and builds discipline around shot selection, because going for a winner off-balance? That’s a free point for your opponent.

The Slot and Lag Drill (PlayYourCourt Exclusive)

If you’ve ever watched pros and wondered how they generate so much spin without losing control, this is their secret sauce.

The Slot and Lag Drill trains you to drop your racket head into the “slot” (behind your body, below the ball), then accelerate through contact with that perfect delayed release, a.k.a. lag. 

It’s the difference between swinging hard and swinging smart.

If your forehand feels powerful but unpredictable, this drill will fix it. 

“Power without spin is just an error waiting to happen.” 

You don’t need to swing slower, you need to spin faster. That’s how you keep the ball on the court when you go for broke.

Net Game & Transition Drills for Advanced Doubles and Singles Play

Serve-and-Volley Pattern Drill

If you want to finish points at the net, you can’t just charge in blind.

The Serve-and-Volley Pattern Drill is all about purposeful movement, starting with the serve, flowing through your split step, and ending in the perfect first-volley position.

Here’s the sequence: Hit a wide or T serve, immediately sprint toward the service line, execute a controlled split step as your opponent contacts the ball, then play your first volley with intent. 

We emphasize keeping the body low, moving through the ball, and landing with your feet set, not swinging while you’re still running.

This drill trains the transition as one fluid motion. It’s perfect for both doubles and aggressive singles players looking to put pressure on returners. 

When done right, it turns your serve into a weapon that doesn’t just start the point, it finishes it.

Lob and Smash Recovery Series

Ever hit a clean overhead… and then lose the point anyway? That’s a footwork problem, not a shot problem.

In the Lob and Smash Recovery Series, one player throws up consistent lobs, while the other works overhead smashes, but with one key twist: you must recover back into position after every smash. 

That means split stepping, tracking the next lob, and adjusting your spacing all over again.

Why this matters: Most points at the net don’t end after one shot. 

This drill teaches court coverage instincts, explosive recovery, and positioning discipline. You’re not just practicing overheads, you’re practicing winning the point.

Cross-Volley Reflex War

Want to improve your reaction time? Step up to the net and go to war.

The Cross-Volley Reflex War is a live drill where two players volley diagonally at close range, aiming to outreact and out-soft-touch each other. 

There’s no time to think, just read, react, and reset. Advanced variations include one-touch rules, limited backswing, or using mini-courts to tighten the space.

This drill builds the hand speed, anticipation, and calm under pressure you need to win at the net, especially in doubles.

Match Simulation and Tactical Intelligence Drills

Tiebreak Mode Under Fatigue

There’s no better pressure cooker than a tiebreak, and yet, most players only practice them when they’re already in one. That’s backwards.

With the Tiebreak Mode Under Fatigue Drill, we start with a 3–5 minute high-intensity conditioning circuit (think agility ladders, sprint intervals, or shadow swings), then immediately launch into a full 7-point tiebreak.

The point? To force decision-making under duress. 

Your legs are toast, your heart’s pounding, and now you’ve got to choose the right shot, under pressure, on every ball. 

That’s exactly what match play feels like. And this drill builds the mental and tactical toughness to own those moments instead of fearing them.

Pre-Commitment Strategy Drills

Ask any high-level coach, and they’ll tell you: indecision is the silent killer of performance.

In the Pre-Commitment Strategy Drill, players must declare their tactic before each point begins. That could mean:

  • “I’m serve-and-volleying this point.”
  • “I’m attacking the backhand no matter what.”
  • “I’m finishing at the net within 4 balls.”

Why it works: when you commit to a plan, your footwork sharpens, your choices simplify, and your confidence skyrockets. 

You stop reacting and start dictating. And yes, it’s uncomfortable at first. That’s the point.

“Beat the Pusher” Pattern Play

Every advanced player has one nemesis: the pusher who gets everything back.

The “Beat the Pusher” Drill fixes that. Start with neutral ball feeds. Your goal? Hit through the retriever in under 5 balls. 

But here’s the twist, you can’t go for broke. You have to build the point smartly: move them off the court, attack the short ball, and finish at net if needed.

This drill trains patience under pressure, smart aggression, and shot pattern discipline. You’ll learn to stay in control instead of over-hitting out of frustration.

Footwork, Agility & Reaction Drills

Ladder + Ball Toss Agility Combos

Advanced tennis isn’t just physical, it’s neurological. Your body and brain have to work together under stress. That’s why we love the Ladder + Ball Toss Agility Drill.

Set up an agility ladder and add a layer of cognitive load: as the player navigates the ladder, a coach or partner tosses a ball in random directions, or calls out colors or numbers the player must react to. It’s not just about speed. 

It’s about processing, adjusting, and executing on the fly.

These dual-task drills improve reaction time, court awareness, and mental sharpness, the stuff that separates good footwork from elite movement.

Four Corners Movement + Shot Challenge

Here’s one that will test your lungs and your precision.

Set up cones in all four corners of the court. The coach feeds balls randomly to any one cone, and your job is to explode to the shot, hit it clean, then recover instantly to center, ready for the next.

The Four Corners Challenge builds:

  • Explosive first steps
  • Foot positioning under stress
  • Endurance for high-intensity points

Advanced players love this drill because it turns footwork into a weapon, not just a necessity. And it shows quickly if you’re moving to hit or just chasing the ball.

Rapid Fire Baseline Movement

This one is exactly what it sounds like, 30–60 seconds of side-to-side hitting without rest. The coach feeds alternating forehands and backhands, keeping the tempo high.

It’s brutal. It’s humbling. And it’s effective.

You’ll build end-range coordination, learn to reset your stance fast, and push your footwork to the point of fatigue, where most errors happen. That’s where the gains are made.

Player Insight: “You don’t get tired from running, you get tired from recovering late.”

These drills fix that. They condition your recovery habits, not just your legs. Because in real tennis, it’s not about how fast you move, it’s how fast you get ready for the next ball.

How to Structure Advanced Tennis Drills Into Your Training Plan

Sets, Reps, and Progressions

If you’re serious about improving, you need more than just great drills, you need a plan. I always tell players: training without structure is just sweating in circles. 

Here’s how we help our PlayYourCourt members train like competitors, not just casual hitters.

Stick to 2–3 focused drills per session. That’s enough to push progress without overwhelming your focus or energy. Rotate your themes each day:

  • Day 1: Serve & return
  • Day 2: Baseline consistency & pressure
  • Day 3: Net transitions & finishing
  • Day 4: Point play and match simulation

This rotation keeps your body fresh and your game well-rounded. 

Video Yourself Weekly

If you’ve never seen yourself hit on camera, you’re training in the dark.

Pull out your phone and tripod once a week, record 15–20 minutes of reps, and watch it back. 

Better yet, send it to PlayYourCourt coaches and get video analysis. They’ll point out things you’re missing, tiny inefficiencies, lazy habits, missed opportunities for power or spin.

Quick Wins and Confidence Builders

Here’s a tip most players overlook: end every session with a drill you’re great at.

It could be your favorite pattern, your cleanest forehand, or even a trick serve. Why? Because finishing with success builds a positive feedback loop in your nervous system. 

It helps reinforce muscle memory and sends your brain a message: “This is who I am on court.”

Over time, those little wins stack up and confidence stops being a feeling and becomes your default setting.

That’s how you build sessions that don’t just push you, but propel you.

Don’t Just Train Hard, Train Right

It’s tempting to copy what the pros do or grab a few drills off YouTube. But without the right structure, feedback, or context, those reps can do more harm than good. 

You’re not just spinning your wheels, you might be reinforcing the wrong habits. That’s the fear many players have. And it’s valid.

PlayYourCourt reimagined tennis improvement. We’re giving you an entire system for game development. 

From pro-level video analysis, to drill plans matched to your goals, to finding partners who challenge you, our membership is built for players who are tired of guessing and ready to actually improve.

👉 Explore our membership and get matched with a coach, custom drill plan, and training partner, instantly. 

We don’t just want you to play, we want you to win with joy.

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Scott Baxter

Scott Baxter is the CEO & Founder of PlayYourCourt.com, a nationwide mobile tennis business with the mission of making tennis more accessible. Through PlayYourCourt, Scott has revolutionized the way tennis instruction is distributed by introducing club level lessons and programming to underutilized courts and facilities throughout the country.

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No Result
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  • #7704 (no title)
  • #10391 (no title)
  • A Better Way to Get Fit
  • A Parents Guide To A Fun Introductory Lesson
  • add 10 mph to your forehand 2
  • add-10-mph-to-your-forehand-1
  • Best Tennis Skirt Outfits to Elevate Your Game
  • Change Your Tennis Game With This Trial Lesson
  • Contact Us
  • Creative Gifts: Give The Gift Of Tennis!!
  • Currently Experiencing Heavy Server Load
  • Find the Perfect Tennis Bag: A Complete Guide
  • Get The Parents Guide To A Fun Introductory Lesson
  • Get The Tennis Game Changer Checklist
  • Got It! Get Your Kid Started With This Trial Tennis Lesson
  • Got It! Improve With This Trial Tennis Lesson
  • Home
  • How To Add 15 MPH To Your Backhand
  • How To Find a Tennis Partner Near You
  • How to Find the Right Tennis Partner
  • How To Improve Your Tennis Game
  • How To Squeeze Tennis Into Your Busy Lifestyle
  • I Want To Add 15 MPH To Your Backhand
  • Improve With This Trial Tennis Lesson
  • Inspiration
  • Introduce Your Child to Tennis – Free Guide
  • Kids Guide Confirmation
  • Kids Guide Request Confirmation
  • Learn Why Your Tennis Lessons Aren’t Making You Better
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  • Personal Tennis Coach
  • Pickleball vs. Tennis: Product Recommendations and Comparisons
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  • PYC In The News
  • Sales Training
  • Special-Offer
  • Subscription Refunds
  • Tennis Dress Buying Guide: How to Select the Best Dress for Your Game
  • Tennis for Kids
  • Tennis Lessons in Annapolis, MD
  • Tennis Lessons in Asheville, NC
  • Tennis Lessons in Atlanta, GA
  • Tennis Lessons in Augusta, ME
  • Tennis Lessons in Austin, TX
  • Tennis Lessons in Baltimore, MD
  • Tennis Lessons in Bethesda, MD
  • Tennis Lessons in Boston, MA
  • Tennis Lessons in Canton, OH
  • Tennis Lessons in Cape Cod, MA
  • Tennis Lessons in Carlsbad, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Carrollton, TX
  • Tennis Lessons in Charlotte, NC
  • Tennis Lessons in Chicago, IL
  • Tennis Lessons in Columbia, SC
  • Tennis Lessons in Dallas, TX
  • Tennis Lessons in Dayton, OH
  • Tennis Lessons in Fayetteville, AR
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  • Tennis Lessons in Huntington Beach, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Indianapolis, IN
  • Tennis Lessons in Jackson, MS
  • Tennis Lessons in Katy, TX
  • Tennis Lessons in Las Vegas, NV
  • Tennis Lessons in Little Rock, AR
  • Tennis Lessons in Long Beach, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Los Angeles, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Minneapolis, MN
  • Tennis Lessons in New Bedford, MA
  • Tennis Lessons in New York, NY
  • Tennis Lessons in Newport Beach, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Ocean City, MD
  • Tennis Lessons in Omaha, NE
  • Tennis Lessons in Orange County, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Palm Desert, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Philadelphia, PA
  • Tennis Lessons in Phoenix, AZ
  • Tennis Lessons in Portland, OR
  • Tennis Lessons in Providence, RI
  • Tennis Lessons in Raleigh, NC
  • Tennis Lessons in Richmond, VA
  • Tennis Lessons in San Diego, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in San Francisco, CA
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  • Tennis Lessons in Santa Clarita, CA
  • Tennis Lessons in Santa Fe, NM
  • Tennis Lessons in St. Louis, MO
  • Tennis Lessons in the Virgin Islands
  • Tennis Lessons in Tucson, AZ
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  • Tennis Lessons McLean, VA
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  • Tennis Skirt or Shorts? Choosing the Right Gear for Your Match
  • Tennis Social
  • The Best White Tennis Shoes for Peak Performance
  • The Best White Tennis Skirts: Top Picks for Tennis Players
  • The Tennis Game Changer Checklist – Free Bonus
  • The Ultimate Guide to Buying Black Tennis Shoes for Players
  • Trial Lesson $39
  • VIP US Open Experience
  • What Makes Our Lessons The Best Money Can Buy
  • Why Your Tennis Lessons Aren’t Making You Better
  • Win a free lesson!
  • Win a free tennis lesson with a top instructor!

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