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Training Programme
The Power Player players are defined by their signature ability to deploy Overpower forehand, Deep smash, Aggressive backhand drive. Heavy hitters who turn every rally into a power-hitting contest. They rely on pace, depth, and aggressive stroke-making to overwhelm opponents and control points. The drills below are selected to sharpen your natural strengths and close the gaps around inconsistency under pressure, vulnerable to slice and variety, giving you a complete training routine purpose-built for your archetype.
Areas to develop
A focused drill session for The Power Player players should last 45–60 minutes. Start with 10 minutes of footwork warmup, then move into 2–3 targeted drills from the list below at 80% intensity. Finish each session with 15 minutes of points play so the patterns transfer to match conditions.
Prioritise drills marked with your signature shot labels first — these reinforce your natural strengths and raise your ceiling. Then rotate through the “areas to develop” drills once per week so your weaknesses stop being exploited in matches.
At the intermediate level, the biggest gains come from drilling specific patterns under moderate pressure — you already know the mechanics, now build automatic responses.
Execute flat serves with maximum speed and minimal spin for aggressive serve-and-volley strategies. Flat serves are the most powerful serve variation, ideal for setting up first volleys and service-game dominance.
Why this drill
Targets the flat serve power and placement technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Execute the poach, crossing over from your net position to intercept the opponent's attack at the net. Poaching creates aggressive net dominance and forces immediate finishing opportunities.
Why this drill
Targets the poach positioning and execution technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Execute block returns against powerful serves, using minimal backswing to absorb and redirect pace. Block returns are defensive tools that keep the ball in play and set up court positioning.
Why this drill
Targets the block return defensive technique technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Execute counter-attacks against opponent attacks, turning defensive situations into offensive opportunities with aggressive shot selection. Counter-attacks require court reading and tactical awareness.
Why this drill
Targets the counter-attack aggressive response technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Execute the contra-remate, an aggressive counter-overhead shot that attacks the opponent's smash or overhead attempt. Counter-remates demonstrate advanced tactical awareness and confidence.
Why this drill
Targets the contra-remate counter-overhead attack technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Develop skills to maintain aggressive net position throughout rallies, preventing opponent attacks and controlling points from the net. Net maintenance is crucial for serve-and-volley and aggressive play styles.
Why this drill
Targets the net maintenance positioning practice technique, which aligns with The Power Player's signature shot: Aggressive backhand drive.
Key steps
Signature shot reinforcement — Overpower forehand
Weakness drilling — inconsistency under pressure
Match-play integration — apply drilled patterns in live points
What are the best drills for a The Power Player padel player?
The Power Player players benefit most from drills targeting their signature shots and plugging key weaknesses. Core practice areas include: Overpower forehand, Deep smash and addressing gaps like inconsistency under pressure, vulnerable to slice and variety.
How often should a The Power Player player drill?
For steady improvement, aim for 3–4 focused drill sessions per week. Each session should include 10–20 minutes of targeted solo or pair work, followed by match-play so the patterns become instinctive under pressure. As a intermediate-level archetype, The Power Player players benefit from mixing technique repetition with tactical practice.
How does SmashIQ video analysis help The Power Player players improve?
SmashIQ analyses every shot in your match footage and flags specific technique patterns. For The Power Player players, it tracks metrics directly relevant to your style — Overpower forehand execution, positioning, and error patterns. You get objective data on where your game matches the The Power Player profile and where drilling will unlock the most improvement.
Track your progress with SmashIQ video analysis
Upload your match footage and SmashIQ identifies exactly which The Power Playerpatterns you're executing well and which drills will move the needle fastest. Objective data, not guesswork.
Join the waitlist →Not sure if The Power Player is the right label for your game? Read the full archetype profile for tactical breakdowns, famous examples, and how to counter it.
The Power Player archetype profile →