Blocking is considered the first defensive competence employed to try to keep your adversary to nail successfully in your court. While hearth of teaching of the fundamental principles I of volley ball on explaining what is the responsibility and the positioning for each part of body. Feet Place your width of shoulder of feet at parallel share and with two feet perpendicular to the net. Lower The Body Your hips and whole body should be adjusted to the top and of the coatings the net. The knees are in a light posture squatted in position lends in which allows you side stage along the net towards the right or left quickly. You if are approximately half the length of your ARM far from the net. Higher body Shoulders are adjusted to the top and of the coatings the net. Your starting position for your hands folded with hands – palms are the elbows facing the net right above the level of shoulder. Your hands remain just above your shoulders and not below your size or the Net. . . so that when you jump it your the hands and the arms are in ready position to block the ball and you not invaluable time of reject bringing them of a low position. By blocking its always important to observe the bruiser who you are to go to block. In this way which you can see and envisage where the bruiser will strike. If you see that your approach of transient of bruiser comes towards you – to an angle. . . more than probably they will strike the court transversely so much then you align in front of them to block their court transversely. You must align in front of the bruiser and lay out to block prolongation of your arm of bruiser. If the approach of your spiker is aligned in right they will probably strike in bottom of the line and you must make sure that your body is adjusted upwards in front of them ready to block the prolongation of their arm. Jump Of Block The observation of your bruiser is very important because it is how you know when you must time your jump to block. Once that the you’ve determined where your bruiser will block and the you’ve adjusted your position of body by the progression on left or right side in order to align in front of your bruiser – concentrating on the prolongation of their arm – wait to Just as the bruiser comes into contact with the ball to the transient – then you jump of block. Hands and arm As you jump, prolong your hands, arm and shoulders above the net or Have as possible in order to seize the ball high. You test literally to catch the ball as it passes above the net. Your hands are widespread and the fingers are distant broad in order to catch or block swell. Once that you come into contact with or block the ball your. . . fingers widespread (with the full rigid wrists) should just guide the ball again in your court of adversaries (some indicate that you present a wall with your hands and arms which will again guide the ball in your court of adversaries.
Posts Tagged ‘Hips’
Blocking in Volleyball
December 19th, 2009A Fundamental Progression to Improve Volleyball Passing at Any Level
December 9th, 2009At our camps we use the following progression to teach passing, no matter the experience level or talent of the players. Of course, how much time we spend on the following is dictated by the passing prowess of the players. However, I have never conducted a camp where the passing fundamentals of even the most experienced players could not be improved with a little more focus on technique. Typically, the better the players pass when we begin, the faster we run the drills, as mostplayers passing accuracy decreases as their speed to the ball increases. This passing progression has improved the passing accuracy of every team I have ever worked with, so here we go:THE STANCE: -Feet wider than shoulders with rt. foot slightly in front of left (big toe on lt. foot lines up to instep of rt. foot)-Ankles flexed or bent forward so that weight is on front of feet and heels feel like they are barely touching the floor. (This will cause their knees to bend naturally-but telling them to “bend their knees” will not guarantee their weight is on the front part of their feet. )-Hands waist high with elbows bent in front of hips, palms facing each other. -Hips up, shoulders forward, so that the back is flat and parallel to the floor. Tip: You do not not want them to bring their heals off the floor in their stance. USA Volleyball did a study awhile back and concluded that if the heals are off the floor in the ready position, the first thing that happens when the player begins to move is that the heals go down to the floor anyway, thus slightly slowing down the start of the movement to the ball. Tip: Each time they get into the ready position, have them lean forward and “swipe” the floor with their right hand with a sideways motion, touching it with their finger tips-this tells them they are low enough and helps to ensure their weight is forward on the front of their feet. Do not let them “squat and poke” the floor, make sure they lean forward and swipe instead. THE RHYTHM STEP/PASSING PLATFORM: -As the all comes in to them, they take a small “left-right” step to the ball. It’s almost a shuffle, as the left foot should never come totally in front of the right foot. -As they are doing this, the arms/hands are extended straight out from the body. -Hand position: lay the right hand across the inside of the left hand so that the first knuckles of the right hand are just outside of the pinkie of the left hand, then bring the base of the thumbs together and rotate the wrists so that the thumbnails are pointing toward the floor. Tip: This hand position guarantees that the fleshy part of the forearm will be exposed to the ball. This leads to more control of the ball upon contact than if the ball were to contact the bony part of the forearms-which is what is most exposed to the ball if the old “make a fist and wrap your other hand around it” technique is used. THE PASS: -Keep the ball between their hips-Point their passing platform at their target-Watch the “bottom-half” of the ball into the fleshy part of the forearms. -If the ball were to somehow pass right through their arms it would hit them right in the mid-to-upper thighs. -Hold the platform to the target until the ball reaches the target (or gets far enough away from them that it misses the target)
Tip: After they pass, have them stay low and again lean forward and swipe the floor with their right hand. This keeps them from bringing their shoulders up, and thus producing too much arm motion on their follow through, which produces too much force on the ball. PRACTICE: -Start them with the “Stanford Passing Drill”-Pair them up with a ball for each pair. -One girl from each pair is 15 ft. off the net, the other is at the net as the tosser/target. -Give them a goal of so many good passes in a time period, and make sure to define for them what counts as a good pass. Tip: As their passing level progresses, move the passers to the ten foot line. (The closer they are to the target, the harder the drill becomes. ) Next go to “Short/Long Passing Drill”: -Same alignment as “Stanford” to start-First ball is tossed so that the passer has to shuffle three steps minimum to make the pass-Passer then holds that position until the tosser tosses the next ball at least three steps minimum to make the pass-Passer holds that position until next toss is made in front of them like the first toss of the drill-Go for 30 secs with a “total good pass goal” and make sure everyone goes twice. Next use the “Passing Footwork Progression Drill”:-A coach stands at center net on the same side as a single fileline of players on the endline at middle back. Two players are to the left ofthe coach at the net. One serves to hand the next ball to the coach and oneis at the target. The drill starts with the coach rolling a ball to either corner. The first player in linemust shuffle to the ball in their passing stance and let the ball roll through thecenter of their legs (mid-line of the body) while keeping their hips and shoulders square to the net. The player then turns and runs to retrieve the ball and moves to the target position to the left of the coach. The player serving as ball hander gives the coach the next ball and runs to the end of the line at middle back. the target player moves to the ball hander position, and the drill continues in rapid fire fashion. Progression:-After a few times through the line, the coach moves to bouncing the ballon a low and quick path. -After a few more times through the line, the coach moves to tossing the ball andthe player passes the ball to the target. -After a few more times through the line, the coach moves to the opposite side ofthe net about twenty feet back and throws the ball overhand to the corners, andthe player passes the ball to the target. Tip: Stress “beating the ball to the spot”. This gets the players to focus on movingquickly enough to be in correct passing position when the ball arrives. This is a great drill for teaching shuffling to the ball while staying in the passing stance and square to the net. The progression allows the players to apply the footwork and body position to actually passing a ball immediately. Next use the “Triangle Passing Drill”: -Groups of 3 girls/two balls-aligned in a triangle formation with the two tossers about 10 ft. apart and the passer about ten ft. away and in the middle of them. -One tosser tosses ball directly out in front of herself and passer must shuffle over and make pass back to her. -As soon as the pass is made, the passer starts shuffling to get in front of ball tosses by the other tosser, who tosses it as soon as the first pass is made. -Go for 30 secs. and the score is the total of the good passes to both tossers added together. More Tips: -During this entire progression, periodically have them take off one knee pad and place it between their shoulder blades. This keeps them from bringing their shoulders up, because if they do, the knee pad falls off. -With each of these drills, be sure to make sure they remember their scores and then set a goal to beat that score the next time the drill is run. -Any time the ball is more than three shuffle steps away, they need to break down and run to get behind the ball and then quickly get back into their stance to pass the ball. Make sure they focus on “beating the ball” to the spot, not “meeting the ball at the spot”. -As you move into drills that are more of a combination of skills, make sure to demand they continue to focus on their passing fundamentals. Usually the more involved the drill is, the more they let their basic passing fundamentals drop off. Good Luck!
Girls Volleyball Tips: How the Pros Stay Square to the Net While Blocking
September 15th, 2009To get the most out of your block its important to “stay squared” to the volleyball net. This means to keep your shoulders, your underarms as you jump, boobies, abs and hips parallel to the net keeping as little space as possible between you and the volleyball net while you block jump.
No matter how tall you are the following five steps will help you put up your best block!
1. Watch your hitter with your shoulders parallel to the net.
Watch the hitter to get indications of how she intends to hit the ball…Is she approaching you with her shoulders at an angle indicating that she is going to hit cross court or are her shoulders coming at you straight on with the intention of hitting down the line. Does she hit the ball low across the net? Does she hit on her way down? Ultimately you should even be able to see if your hitter is turning her shoulders to face outside the court indicating that she intends to wipe off your block.
Watching means Keeping Your eyes open . Don’t laugh. I can show you hundreds of action shots of players blocking with their eyes closed. Watch your blocker then Go get the ball. I say it this way to emphasize Reaching OVER the net to grab or block the ball.
2. Jump straight up and down…don’t fly.
Some blockers jump “up” in one spot and come “down” in another one. Learn to control your body while you watch your hitter so that where you go “up” to jump is where you come “down”. Why is this important? Because you have three defenders behind you who are figuring out where they have to be in defense based on where you set your block. If your block is uncontrolled or all over the place YOUR teammates on defense aren’t going to know where to set themselves up on the volleyball court in team defense. Help your sisters out…come down in the same place that you JUMPED up from.
Secondly, for the outside blockers your middle blocker is relying on you to set up a solidly “closed” wall. Walls don’t move around they stay right where they were built. It’s your job to position yourself in front of your hitter’s body. Get there and don’t jump out again or move side to side so your middle blocker knows exactly where to come to close up the block. If you fly or jump to the outside your blocker will never be able to close up that space between the two of you and the other team’s hitter will look like a celebrity spiker hitting between that hole you created between you and your middle blocker.
3. Keep Palms Up at Shoulder Height in Ready Position.
A lot of volleyball players and high school coaches have difficulty deciding where the hands need to be while moving along the net to block. I’ve seen coaches teach players to keep their arms fully extended above their heads while moving along the net which actually slows you down and doesn’t allow you to squat to maximize your full jump. More commonly I’ve seen players of all ages drop their hands and arms way below the net BEFORE block jumping in an effort to gain a couple more inches to their jump. This technique a) usually slows your block jump timing because of the time it takes to go down before coming back up b) increases your risk of touching the net when your arms are swinging up in front of you and c) actually puts more distance between you and the volleyball net because of the extra space needed to swing your arms up in front of you so you are actually blocking farther AWAY from the net wasting alot of your vertical jump.
The solution? “Tiger Hands”, “Bear Hands” whatever you want to call it but you keep your lovely bear paws at shoulder height ..six to ten inches in front of you, Palms facing the net, Fingers wide…Solid wrists….when you go down (squat) and then fully extending your arms reaching OVER the net when you come out of your squat to jump. Speaking of squats…this is pretty much the same position you maintain when you do squats during your weight lifting workout in a gym with a bar on your shoulders, just keep your hands inside your body RIGHT in front of your shoulders. Your body is already used to doing this movement over and over again. Squatting with your hands at the height of your shoulders maintains body balance, allows you to stay close to the net gaining inches you can use to reach OVER the net to choke off that ball and allows you to maximize your powerful block jump.. If you can do it in the weight room …you can do it against a net on the volleyball court. Trust your body memory.
4. Use Maximum Arm Length Your goal is to be able to fully extend your arms at the maximum point of your block jump…everytime you jump.
There will be times for middle blockers especially that they will have to block a quick set which is so fast that they only have time to just get there hands over the net to stop the ball. But outside hitters who block 4’s and 5’s, balls that are set high to the outside or shot out at a quicker pace to the outside have time to use the full extension of their arms to block the ball. If you were born with arms that are 45” inches long then you should be reaching some 45+ inches as far OVER the net as you can get.
You want to keep your arms fully extended for as long as necessary so don’t put your arms up there and then pull them away before you’ve completed your block jump. Hold your arms extended throughout the duration of your block jump when you land, land back down into a starting “Tiger Hands “ position in case you have to block again.
5. Commit to Taking One Area Away.
If you have watched your hitter then you know she is going to hit or tip either down the line or cross court, or wipe off the block…very simple. Your job is take ONE of these directions away. You can only take cross court or you can only take line.
What you decide to take away will depend on what your coach has told your team in pre game strategy -what team blocking strategy is going to be used for a particular hitter, or against a particular team. If you don’t have an established game plan then what you take away is determined by the indications you “see” the hitter giving you as to where she is going to hit.
Once you’ve decided to take an area away Don’t go chasing the ball in mid air with your arms trying to cover everything. You just can’t. Besides when you set up early and take ONE area (either cross court or line) then your defense will cover your butt by taking away the other areas on the court.
If you are at the net trying to take everything away …then your back row teammates don’t know where they need to be in defense.
Remember the ball is in Your Hands.
By: april chapple