A question came up in a coaching group related to work on serve receive passing.
At what point, if at all, do you decide itβs not worth the time spent to become a good passing team and instead focus your time on out of system and transition?
Lots of womenβs teams, even with a perfect pass, wonβt necessarily get a first ball kill.
Because βgood passing teamβ is pretty vague, the poster followed up with the following:
When is good, good enough? Do you keep pushing your team until they can get a 3.0 passing rating? Do you stop at 2.5? 2? 1.8? Marginal returns tells us that the higher you are, the more time and effort is needed to get slightly higher returns. So when do you stop and put your time and effort on something else?
This is a good question on how to allocate practice time. The What percent of practice should I spend on serve and serve receive? post discusses the subject in a general sense. And as Iβve noted before, many teams donβt train out-of-system play enough. The same can be said of transition. Let me dig into the specific focus here of what is good enough with regards to passing, though.
Season timing
A big question here is when in the season weβre talking about this. If itβs in the latter part, chances are your gains from additional serve receive training will be minimal no matter your starting point. Unless thereβs some really glaring problem β like trouble with seams β you are likely better off working on other things.
That doesnβt mean dropping serve receive work all together! You want to continue giving your passer reps. Itβs just perhaps that you spend less time in dedicated reception training and look more at getting them reps in games and other activities.
Of course earlier in the year you want a different mentality. At that stage youβre thinking in terms of training progressions, steadily building, and all that.
What is βgoodβ?
That brings us to the subject of how well the team needs to pass β and where youβre at presently. The question you have to answer is how well the best team(s) at your level of play receive serve. Thatβs the obvious target.
Iβm not saying you have to hit that mark exactly. You may not even need to be super close. It depends on other parts of your game. If you have a team that is stronger than others in the serve/defense/transition phase, you can afford to not be quite as strong in reception. On the flip side, if you…
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