Adventures of Andrew Lenz and a Yellow Ball

Month: August 2019 (Page 2 of 5)

Just Let Her Play

Thursday, August 22, 2019 (Court Day #298)

57th day out playing lefty. Tennis elbow.

A man named Gregg whom I don’t know, messaged me on Facebook asking if there was still play at Sgt. Derby on Sunday and that he recently played in Boulder Creek but was looking for somewhere closer to Santa Cruz. I told him “yes” and that there was also play tonight at Skypark in Scotts Valley. I pointed him in the direction of the Santa Cruz Pickleball Club website. We figured out that on our mobile devices—I have an iPhone—that when you tap on “Courts”, the courts page doesn’t load and it just gives you the dropdown menu of “Other places to play” . . . if you happen to tap “Courts” twice, then it loads. Otherwise, you only access non-club court sites. Something to fix! I passed along that bad behavior to Dave Allenbaugh and Karen Long who took over operating the website from Dave.

Skypark

I got to Skypark about 7 p.m. Parking was super hard to find. People were even parked in the weeds and I joined those cars. I quickly got into a game.

Eric—not Eric S.—had brought his partner Ann to pickleball. She and I were playing together against Jeanne and Carol. I gave Ann a couple of pieces of advice during the game, including coming up to the net when the opportunity is there. I paused and added . . . “if you don’t mind me coaching.” No response. I took the silent cue. Just let her play.

Often, in our desire to help others, we can overdo it. It’s recommended that we always remember to ask first before giving advice, even if it’s obvious someone on the court can use that advice. It’s a courtesy. I neglected to do that. It should always start with, “Do you mind if I give you some tips?” Most often, the answer is “Yes, I can use tips please!” But it’s annoying when you don’t ask and the answer would have been “no”.

It turns out that Ann is not addicted like the rest of us and only comes to humor Eric. Maybe she’ll eventually get hooked. She said she’s still waiting for it to be “fun”. For me, it was fun from the first game I played. But it’s not for everyone . . . and I respect that.

Switching Hands

During the evening, Allan K. tracked me down. “You know why you can’t switch hands at a tournament, right?” I was trying to figure out what he meant. I rarely switched hands during a game at the tournament we’d just played in. When he went on, I understood. “You and Binh practiced with you playing left-handed leading up to the tournament. Then you played right-handed and he didn’t know what to do.” Ah. Well, I think there was some of that. Binh is pretty adaptable, but I’m sure switching didn’t help the automatic nature/comfort of us playing together.

The Rest

There was a tall young guy with black hair and a ponytail whose name escapes me. It was fun playing against him, he’s upbeat and easygoing.

There was a very tall man with long light hair who I figured could be the guy who messaged me, but I opted to not go out on a limb and ask.

Things wrapped up and I was in my car shortly after 9 p.m.

Oh. My protective clear eyewear has some scratches. This is even with me storing them in their original “blister” packaging after each use. I’ll either need to buff them out or get new ones. It’s somewhat distracting.

The Pros

While winding down at home after playing in Scotts Valley, I was watching a video on Facebook of a match this week at TOC—Tournament of Champions—in Utah. Simone Jardim and Corrine Carr against Regina Franco and Sarah Ansboury. This annual tournament finishes this weekend.

I didn’t watch the whole video—boy, they women are good!—but I did notice something. While Simone and Corrine were receiving, the partner at the net would place a hand behind her back and signal to the receiver. Here are a couple example photos of Corrine:

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The open hand.

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The fist.

I was trying to make out what the signal was. Was she indicating one side or the other? Was she indicating who of the two opponents they’d be targeting for this point?

It didn’t take me long to figure it out. An open hand meant, “we’re switching positions after the serve.” A closed fist meant, “we’re staying put.”

My question was why? Were they testing to see if a particular combination of court positions were better than others?

It’s time to contact Mark Renneson of Third Shot Sports!


Friday, August 23, 2019 (No Play)

I wrote Mark Renneson an email tonight about the signaling. (I didn’t get to do that right away.) We’ll see how long it takes him to get back to me.


Saturday, August 24, 2019 (No Play)

Mark got back to me pretty fast, he wrote back today. Here’s his insight:
“Players are always looking for ways to make life harder for their opponents. Switching — especially when it is varied — gives the serving one more thing to worry about when they play their third shot. That can be the difference between hitting a good one or not. This is especially important when one player (CC) is being targeted on the third.”

“CC” being Corrine Carr. Simone is recognized as the top woman singles player—that may have changed recently, but regardless, she’s a force. What Mark is saying, is under normal circumstances where partners are consistently stacking to keep a particular player on the left, for instance, as an opponent you don’t even have to think before you hit—you know that the weaker player will always be on the same side of the court. By your opponent randomly switching, that level of comfort and consistency for your team is gone. Corrine might be on the left this time and maybe the right three points from now. For the switchers, the trick is not also making it hard on themselves in the process!

Number of days on a court: 298
Number of total hours: 824

To start at the beginning of this blog click on “1st Post” in the menu above.

Newbies

Wednesday, August 21, 2019 (Court Day #297)

56th day out playing lefty. Tennis elbow.

Today started out sunny. There was no fog to keep us cool at the courts. I arrived around 9:30—one of my staff was going to be a no-show and I had to confirm we’d have adequate staffing. (I checked with the one least likely to work as planned, but he was coming.) Also, my wife had left her lunch on the kitchen counter when she left to teach the first day of 1st grade. Oops. I ran that to school and dropped it off with her.

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From right to left: Joe, the newbie guy (white), Tim pointing at Eric, Tristan (blond hair) standing next to Patty, Art (white) with is back turned, Jeanne talking to Ted B., Ron (dark clothes) and blocked behind Jeanne is Gary, Terry’s husband.

The game of the day was Eric and me playing against Trevor and Rich. Eric and I lead most of the game, but my game fell apart a bit at the end and Trevor and Rich won by a couple of points. Trevor is a solid 3.5 and Rich, on good days, can pass as a 4.0. I don’t know Trevor other than I think I’ve seen him a few times in recent weeks. This was my first game with him. I played pretty darn well up until the last few points. Taking a step back, it’s pretty amazing that I held my own in this game playing left-handed. Right?

Today, I hit one ball back to someone absentmindedly using my right arm and that was a mistake. This morning, my arm had no longer felt like a constant charlie horse in my forearm. Well, that’s back. Stinks.

There were a couple of first-timers today. A young guy with an unusual name from a European country with a tennis background and a tall woman named Cheryl who said she played a little pickleball as a kid in Seattle. She mentioned something about her grandson, so likely she’s at least in her 50s. Both of them have good hand-eye coordination and can get the ball back over the net. It’s just learning the rules and strategy and developing pickleball-specific skills. As site coordinator, Eric S. provided the basics.

The last game of the day was Eric and Jeanne against me and Cheryl, the newbie. In this case, it was good that they were hitting to the weaker partner on my team—I don’t need the practice! It was a throw-away instructional game.

My serving was better today. Thank goodness. It’s been crummy lately.

Number of days on a court: 297
Number of total hours: 822

To start at the beginning of this blog click on “1st Post” in the menu above.

Cabrillo Game Analysis

Tuesday, August 20, 2019 (No Play)

As promised, here’s my complete analysis of the only game for which I have a recording at the Cabrillo Tournament Men’s Doubles on Sunday, August 11. (It’s very hard to believe 10 days have passed already, it seems less than half of that!) It’s Binh and my second game of the day, this one against Rick and David from San Juan Bautista—both nice guys.

Some quick notes. This was the first day that I’m playing completely right-handed since January 1. That’s 222 days or 8 months and 10 days or 60.8% of a year. A long time. Binh and I had never played a tournament together with me playing right handed. (Binh had his first ever tournament two months ago.) I did pay the price the next day and beyond—my right forearm felt like it had a nearly constant charlie horse and shaking hands with people was once again painfully uncomfortable. It’s still particularly sore after a week and half.

I will also say that Rick and David went on to play better than they did in our match, later winning the gold medal for our bracket. They are both fun guys to play against. Rick was generous in loaning me his extra forearm band for the tournament that you see me wearing in the video.

I’m color-coding the serving team for the points below. Blue—Binh’s shirt color—for Binh and me. Maroon—Rick’s shirt color—for Rick and David. (White and gray would be bad colors to use!) At the end of each point, I’m putting in parentheses the first letter of the name whom I feel is responsible for losing a particular point. Also, know that I’m the starting server for our team and David is the starting server for their team—so if it’s side out and our own team’s score is even, we each start as the #1 server.

Here’s the video again:

 


GAME BEGINS

0-0-2 (START, 0:08)
Andrew serves. Unforced error when Andrew hits his easy dink into the net. (A)
[An inauspicious start!]

Sideout, 0-0-1 (0:22)
David serves. Binh hits a drive from the kitchen into the net. (B)

1-0-1 (0:43)
David serves. David hits his drop shot into the net. (D)

1-0-2 (1:00)
Rick serves. Rick backhands Binh’s crosscourt dink back too high and Andrew attacks it for a winner. (R)

[Rich V. walks through.]

Sideout, 0-1-1 (1:28)
Andrew serves. Andrew’s drop shot is too high,  Rick attacks and Binh is unsuccessful handling it. (A)

[Allan K. trots through.]

0-1-2 (1:48)
Binh serves. At first, I was going to blame this on Binh. His drop shot was too high and was attacked by David and a rally ensued with us at a disadvantage. However, I believe I had solid opportunities to reset the point and couldn’t. (A)

Sideout, 1-0-1 (2:09)
Rick serves. Andrew returns the serve left-handed and it sails back past the baseline. (A)
[Being that Binh and I are not stacked at this moment, I don’t need to hit the ball high to give us extra time to shift into our “good” positions. I only had to hit the ball deep to keep them back. I would have been far better off keeping the ball low.] 

2-0-1 (2:19)
Rick serves. David attacks a shot at the kitchen and the ball flies out long. (D)

2-0-2 (2:42)
David serves. David’s drop shot falls short in the net. (D)

Sideout, 0-2-1 (2:55)
Andrew serves. Andrew hits an easy dink into the net. (A)

0-2-2 (3:11)
Binh serves. Rick got caught out of position and hits the ball into the net. (R)

1-2-2 (3:25)
Binh serves. Andrew wasn’t patient and drove a low ball at Rick which Rick handled and Andrew and Binh were at a disadvantage thereafter and lost the point. (A)

Sideout, 2-1-1 (3:55)
David serves. Serve is wide. (D)

2-1-2 (4:04)
Rick serves. David hits a drive at Binh who knocks it sideways off court. (B)

Sideout, 1-2-1 (4:24)
Binh serves. Andrew hits a shot too high, it’s attacked for a winner. (A)

1-2-2 (4:51)
Andrew serves. Rick hits an attackable ball into the net. (R)

2-2-2 (5:16)
Andrew serves. Andrew hits a shot too high, David hits it off the court for a winner (A)

Sideout, 2-2-1 (5:39)
David serves. After some nice dinking, Andrew wasn’t patient and drove a low ball at Rick which Rick handled and Andrew and Binh were at a disadvantage thereafter. (A) [Second time this has happened.]

3-2-1 (6:06)
David serves. Binh hits a dink into the net. (B)

4-2-1 (6:21)
David serves. Andrew returns an easy serve into the net. (A)
[I will call “rusty” here. Under normal circumstances—not the first day in over 8 months playing a whole game right-handed—I would have never missed this shot. I was slightly moving through my shot, never a good thing.]

5-2-1 (6:30)
David serves. Binh hit a level drive at Rick. Unlike my attempts, Rick can’t handle this one. I’ll lay this one at Ricks’ feet, but Binh did keep his drive attack from getting too high. (R)

5-2-2 (6:53)
Rick serves. Andrew hits a deep backhand too long out past the baseline. (A)
[I’ll call rusty on this shot too. I typically have a reliable backhand.]

6-2-2 (7:06)
Rick serves. This was all Binh and David. David’s drop shot was too high and set off a series of defensive hits by him. (D)

Sideout, 2-6-1 (7:16)
Andrew serves. Andrew misjudges a ball and slams it into the net. It wasn’t deep/high enough. (A)

2-6-2 (7:42)
Binh serves. Andrew hits a change-up and Rick isn’t ready and can’t get his paddle around for the forehand he needs. (R)

3-6-2 (8:12)
Binh serves. Andrew hits a shot too high and Rick attacks it for an easy winner. (A)

Sideout, 6-3-1 (8:29)
David serves. Andrew switches the paddle to his left hand and hits an easy dink into the net (A).

7-3-1 (8:56)
David serves. David drives at Andrew. Andrew lobs it deep just a hair past the baseline. (A)
[This was a super close call and these are always hard to make in real time.]
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The wonders of Photoshop composites! Darn close, eh? But I think they were right—the ball hasn’t quite landed in the composite.

8-3-1 (9:09)
David serves. David hits an attackable ball into the net. (D)

8-3-2 (9:09)
David serves. David hits a drop shot into the net. (D)

Sideout, 3-8-1 (9:39)
Binh serves. Rick misjudges a ball and drives it into the net. (R)

4-8-1 (9:53)
Binh serves. Rick returns a serve wide. (R)

5-8-1 (10:04)
Binh serves. Andrew drives a shot at Rick’s head—not on purpose!—and Rick reacts, partially blocking a ball that would have otherwise sailed out. (R)

6-8-1 (10:23)
Binh serves. Andrew makes a great scrape and drop from the right sideline—if I do say so myself—and Rick hits up on the ball too hard and it sails out past the right sideline. (R)

David and Rick call timeout. A wise time to do it with Andrew and Binh going on a quick four point run.

7-8-1 (11:04)
Binh serves. David dinks into the net. (D)

8-8-1 (11:17)
Binh serves. Binh hits a drop shot into the net. (B)

8-8-2 (11:35)
Andrew serves. Rick hits a shot into the net. (R)

9-8-2 (11:52)
Andrew serves. Binh drives at Rick. Rick handles it well hitting it at Andrew and Binh’s feet. (B)

Sideout, 8-9-1 (12:12)
David serves. Binh returns the serve very shallow and therefore can’t get into his stacking position in time, popping up a shot that Rick attacks for a winner. (B)

9-9-1 (12:31)
David serves. David hits a high shot too deep. (D)
[I got away with one here!]

9-9-2 (12:49)
Rick serves. Binh returns short, hits a resulting shot wide. (B)

10-9-2 (13:04)
Rick serves. I hit an aggressive shot that Rick attempts to hit but he probably midway through he realizes that the ball is going out, but he’s already made contact. (R)

Sideout, 9-10-1 (13:24)
Binh serves. Binh hit a drop shot that’s way too high and David attacks it. (B)

9-10-2 (13:42)
Binh serves. Andrew serves too long. (A)
[Yes, likely rust showing.]

Sideout, 10-9-1 (13:52)
David serves. David hits a shot into the net. (D)

10-9-2 (14:05)
Rick serves. After a rally, Andrew hits a low ball into the net—set up by a backhand shot that went too high. (A)

Here, a team has reached 11 points and it’s time to switch sides.

11-9-2 (14:53) – Rick calls 11-9-1, though it’s 11-9-2.
Rick serves. Rick serves wide. (Maybe trying to keep Binh from getting to his stacked position.) (R)

Here, a mistake happens. Rick and David get a third serve!

11-9-2/3 (15:18)
David serves (again). Andrew returns too deep. Point. (A)

12-9-2/3 (15:29)
David serves (again). Binh returns too deep. Point. (B)

13-9-2/3 (15:45)
David serves (again). Rick hits his drop shot into the net. (R)

Ouch. Two points off of a third service!

Sideout, 9-13-1 (15:57)
Binh serves. Andrew lobs too deep. Out. This one started with my drop shot that was too high. It was all defensive after that. (A)

9-13-2 (16:19)
Binh serves. Binh misses an overhead that would likely have been a winner. (B)

Sideout, 13-9-1 (16:49)
Rick serves. Andrew drives at Rick who hits it out. (R)

14-9-2 (17:24)
David serves. I’m going give this one to Binh. He hits a high shot that David hits down at my feet that I end up hitting up and too deep. (B)

15-9-2 (17:24) David calls “13-9-2”.
David serves. Andrew lobs too deep. Out. (A)

16-9-2 (17:44) David calls “14-9-2”.
David serves. This is a really nice, long point! David hits a shot wide, but it’s Rick who hit the prior shot high enough for Binh to attack. (R)

This is hysterical! Rick and David gave back the two points that they won off of their accidental third service! We were all completely oblivious to both of these errors!

Sideout, 9-14-1 (18:16)
Binh serves. Andrew hits a number of shots too high. (A)

9-14-2 (18:45)
Binh serves. Binh hits his third shot wide. (B)

Sideout, 14-9-1 (19:00)
David serves. Andrew hits a inexplicable shot. It’s not an attack, it’s a lame “please attack me with a high backhand” shot. Rookie move. (A)

15-9-1 (19:27)
David serves. Andrew hits a low volley into the net. (A)

16-9-1 (19:44)
David serves. Binh hits a shot right at David who can barely get a paddle on it and it sails wide on their side of the net. (D)

16-9-2 (20:02)
Rick serves. Andrew attacks Rick who pops it up and Andrew slams it for a winner. (R)

Sideout, 9-16-1 (20:29)
Binh serves. Binh attacks a shot into the net. “Patience!”, he tells himself afterward. (B)

9-16-2 (20:52)
Andrew serves. Rick starts an attack but becomes the victim. (R)

10-16-2 (21:17)
Andrew serves. Andrew attempts a backhand drive—which goes right into the net. (A)
[Rusty. Grrr. I should have known better than to try that. It wasn’t a wise shot anyway.]

Sideout, 16-10-1 (21:35)
David serves. Andrew hits a dink too high, a volley rally ensues, Andrew hits it out. (A)

17-10-1 (21:52)
David serves. Binh hits a volley out of the air and into the net. (B)

18-10-1 (22:10)
David serves. I don’t think I can blame anyone for an error. Rick just makes a fantastic offensive lob. Kudos. (*)

Binh and Andrew call timeout. (Running out of time/points!)

19-10-1 (23:02)
David serves. Andrew is impatient, misjudges the height of a ball and drives a dink into the net. (A)

20-10-1 (23:29)
David serves. This one is a little hard to determine. Do you blame David for popping up Binh’s timely short dink or Rick for returning Andrew’s backhand smash too high? Or just say Binh made a great shot? I think I’m going to give David the error, but it’s debatable. (D)

20-10-2 (23:56)
Rick serves. Rick gets impatient in a dink rally and drives into the net. (R)

Sideout, 10-20-1 (24:25)
Andrew serves. David hits a ball down and into the net. (D)

11-20-1 (24:40)
Andrew serves. Andrew’s third shot drop is too high and it quickly results in Andrew defensively lobbing too deep. (A)

11-20-1 (24:57)
Binh serves. Andrew blows an attack of a high ball and hits it into the net. (A)

Sideout, 20-11-1 (25:16)
David serves. Rick hits a dink too high, and three shots later, Andrew smashes a winner. (R)

20-11-2 (25:52)
Rick serves. Andrew hits a dink too high resulting a rally with an advantage to David and Rick who hits the winner to take the game. (A)

Game end.

 


Analysis

It’s quite clear that I was the weak link on the court, numbers don’t lie. I made over twice as many errors than my partner Binh who made the second least amount of errors. Fortunately for Rick and David, I more than made up for my partner’s good performance. I’m in a class of my own for the sheer number mistakes.

Error count:
Andrew: 29

Binh: 14
Rick: 18
David: 13

If you asked any of us, I bet none of us felt we played our best.

I played rusty right-handed versus weak left-handed. Would Binh and I done better had I stuck to my left hand for the tournament today? I doubt it. And if we’d practiced with me playing right-handed, that would have been my “one off” day and I couldn’t have played the tournament right-handed since my arm would have been “used up”. This is where tennis elbow is soooo frustrating. So frustrating. Did I say frustrating?

Still, I enjoyed playing the tournament. Would I have liked to win? Of course. Did I have fun anyway? Yes. Would I have changed anything? Ask me in a month about my elbow and I’ll let you know.

Number of days on a court: 296 (Same)
Number of total hours: 819 (Same)

To start at the beginning of this blog click on “1st Post” in the menu above.

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