your jump serves are looking really nice rn btw 勁鐘意你件 MSBY merch haha
@carnos31772 жыл бұрын
i’m tryna learn the jump serve during breaks on my school net without proper coaching, and it’s pretty hard with the deflated ball that we have 😂. my success rate for an 80% power is about 1 in 5. i am slowly getting better, and i am trying to make a team for guys because there aren’t any where i live. thanks for the inspiration, i will keep at it
@cozyhill92432 жыл бұрын
Wow, that's awesome! Let us know how you're doing if you want
@williammishra76122 жыл бұрын
Consistent toss and timing are more important than power at the beginning. Once you have that down then work on power
@carnos31772 жыл бұрын
@@williammishra7612 that’s true, i’m kinda like a balls to the wall type of guys and i just hit it as hard as i can but that is good advice 😁
@that0n3child222 жыл бұрын
Before i actually officially learned to play vb, my first practice was jump serving 😭 less than a year in im still fixing my overhand serve-
@LoneCommentWanderer3 жыл бұрын
In my serve jump, I use the full approach run for the spike. So I need to be at the very beginning of the court so I don't step on the inside line before the jump. I think this makes my serve more powerful.
@FDE-fw1hd2 жыл бұрын
I'm sure that's what noat people do. I toss the ball, do a three step approach and hit it
Very nice to see your dedicated and continuous effort trying to reach such a hard challenge. Here are some tips to improve your jump serve and process (3 main steps) to achieve it. First and most important thing to know, is that a fully reliable and consistent hitting point while smashing the ball is necessary. I've seen number of volleyball players trying to improve their jump serve for years and years and years... and achieve nothing but inconsistent and poorly dangerous jump serve because of a bad hitting point skill. A good exercice (can be integrated in the warming routine) is to spike the ball against a wall, both feet on the floor. Aim at a target (a spot on the wall) and try to reach consistently, with a good contact point on the ball : full palm, fingers touching the ball (like you want to grab it) without giving power to it, only the palm does. Keep working on this until you reach the spot consistently, without hitting with the arm, or only the fingers. Then Increase distance, throw the ball higher, try to put some effect on the ball (floating and top spin are ok. Not lateral spin). Remember to keep the shoulders at the same level and chest straight, strong and "open". A common beginner mistake is to rise the hitting shoulder while moving down the other one. Very bad habit. This exercice is not only good for jump serve, but also spiking as well. Key exercice. Second step is to achieve consistent throwing. I would advise to learn one-hand throw (with of course your strong hand). More difficult at the beginning, but the only one allowing to achieve strong top spin during the throw, which could be decisive for step 3. First, start to throw the ball high and being able to serve consistently without jumping or moving. Trying to put top spin at this stage is a good idea. Then start to throw the ball in front of you, make one step before hitting the ball, then two, and three, without jumping, feet on the floor. Contact point is still key, correct balance of the shoulders too. You must hit the ball in front of you. Not over your head, definitively not behind. Practice to move late but quick, the latest and quickest, the best. Third step can be tried only after the 2 first one are correctly done. It's time to add the jump ! Repeat step two, and add the jump. Find your own running steps before juming. There is several ways, but i would advise (for right handed players) the most used spiking jump : throw the ball with right hand, right foot in front. Step 1 : left foot, try to be "high" and "light" on the feet. step 2 with right foot, starting to crouch, strong on the feet and reaching maximum speed on one step. The ball must be far in front of you so you can see it even while crouching. Step 3 : left foot, slow down the movement so you transform your horizontal speed into vertical (but not fully, like in a spike close to the net, keep some horizontal speed like a 3 meter spike). Start small jumps, low speed run, but always with perfect and consistent hitting point and shoulder balance. Increase slowly the speed and height of the jump by starting to run more and more late. Always hit the ball in front of you. During practice, serving in the net is not bad. Keep trying and increase your speed (feet and spiking arm). But if you start serving far over the net and the court, stop it. Throw the ball further ahead, move later, hit the ball further in front of you. At the end, your jump (and spike) should look like a 3meter spike. Putting some heavy top spin in the throw could also helps reaching that "sweet spot" when you have to run at full speed, jump at maximum height, taking the ball far ahead with full power, and serving very close to the net with strong top spin effect to make the ball fall down quickly. Last thing to know is... Jump serve is clearly an elite move, and you can achieve to be an incredible player without having it in your arsenal. A lot of top international players don't use it, and it's WAY EASIER to perform a killer and consistent floating serve, up to a very high level. I played as a libero several years (after 15 years as left side hitter, with jump serve as my main serve during the last years) and found that even at the doors of semi-pro levels, 99% of the jump serve i had to receive were so easy, they look like warm up to me... While strong floating services or/and jump floating services were a headache to return, and so much easier, almost every players was able to do it. Basically, seeing the opponent going for a jump serve was kind of a relief... :) So... Keep practising and having fun (with jump serve or anything working for you), it's the key. But don't make it an essential step to be a good volleyball player. It's not.
@artinghanbari10952 жыл бұрын
I been practicing my jump serve for a little over 3 months and Im getting better at it but the main problem is that it's not consistent. Sometimes it's really good sometimes its into the net and that's why coach won't let me use it in a match😓 yet. But I will keep practicing so that he accepts one day 😀 thanks for the inspiration
the force/power of your jump force starts on your feet through your core then through your hand.... "a powerful spike comes from a perfect running approach and form"... seems that you still haven't unlock the full potential of your strength to your jump serve ... I suggest you to still keep working on your approach and form and timing... goodluck my man, dont give up, you're almost there!
I remember being able to do it once during practice. I can confidently say it was a good serve. Tried it during intramural, attempted and failed 5 times.
@FDE-fw1hd2 жыл бұрын
I did better in the court for some reason. I think it was because I practice on grass and it's bumpy af
I'm 166cm and I learned to jump so efficiently and powerful that I can jump really high When I tried the jump serve it took me a few months of practice and now I can hit the ball really hard
Hahaha this is funny. Im laughing because I can relate. Also been practicing about my service and still at the level of inconsistencies but this video is really inspiring reminds you to just keep on going, practicing and surely improvement will be there for you. Thank you! Id like to add! I love your haikyuu jerseys waah 😍❤️been planning to get one as well