Across many intermediate pickleball courts, a quiet stigma persists: the idea that the lob is a beginner’s shot. Players roll their eyes when it appears, dismissing it as accidental or unsophisticated.

That belief is not just wrong. It actively limits player development.

When used with intent, the lob is one of the most strategic and disruptive shots in the sport. It can reset rallies, punish positioning errors, and shift momentum instantly. Understanding where the lob fits within modern pickleball strategy is essential for any player hoping to progress beyond predictable patterns.


Where the “Beginner Shot” Myth Comes From

Beginners do hit many lobs, but rarely by design. Mishit dinks float long. Defensive swings send the ball high without purpose. These shallow, attackable lobs are easy to smash, reinforcing the idea that lobs belong only to inexperienced players.

The mistake is confusing accidental height with intentional placement. Skilled lobs are not desperation shots. They are calculated tactical choices.


What a Smart Lob Really Looks Like

An effective lob is controlled, disguised, and precise.

  • It begins with balanced footwork and soft hands.
  • It mirrors the motion of a dink to hide intention.
  • It travels high and deep, landing near the baseline.

This forces opponents into uncomfortable decisions: retreat under pressure, switch coverage, or defend an overhead from poor positioning. Each outcome disrupts rhythm and often creates the next attacking opportunity.

Disruption—not power—is the real value of the lob.


Control Beats Pace in Tactical Pickleball

At recreational levels, rallies often revolve around speed. Drives feel dominant. Fast hands feel decisive. Yet long-term improvement depends more on balance, positioning, and variation than raw pace.

The lob introduces vertical space into a mostly horizontal game. During extended dink exchanges or flat drive battles, a sudden high ball can instantly reset tempo and shift control—much like the momentum swings explored in pressure moments late in games.

This is veteran strategy, not beginner luck.


When the Lob Is the Right Tactical Choice

Selective use makes the lob powerful. Key situations include:

  • Against aggressive net players leaning forward or poaching.
  • From defensive positions to buy recovery time.
  • To break predictable rally patterns in dink or drive exchanges.
  • Against limited mobility or weak backpedalling footwork.

Even when it does not win the point outright, a well-timed lob often creates the next advantage.


Why Many Players Never Develop a Reliable Lob

The main barrier is not technique. It is perception.

Players remember poor lobs getting smashed and assume the risk is unavoidable. In reality, shallow lobs fail because of execution, not concept. Deep, spinning, well-timed lobs—especially to a backhand shoulder—are far harder to attack.

Avoiding the lob is often about pride, not performance. And that avoidance removes a valuable tactical option from a player’s game.


How to Practice the Lob Effectively

  • Start from dink exchanges to develop disguise and touch.
  • Prioritise depth over height, targeting within two feet of the baseline.
  • Use identical preparation for dinks and lobs to hide intent.
  • Integrate into warm-ups to build natural feel without pressure.

With repetition, control of arc, spin, and placement transforms the lob from risky to reliable.


A Tactical Tool — Not a Default Shot

The lob should never be automatic. Overuse makes it predictable and punishable. Precision timing is what gives it value.

Players who understand this balance often control matches without overpowering opponents. They vary pace, change height, and use the full geometry of the court.

So when someone calls the lob a beginner’s shot, recognise the misunderstanding. Then choose the right moment, disguise the motion, and send the ball just beyond reach.

Smart pickleball is not about hitting harder.
It is about choosing better.

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Chris Beaumont

Founder and Editor-in-Chief
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Chris Beaumont is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of World Pickleball Magazine. Chris follows the global game closely, reporting on the latest news, developments, stories and tournaments from all five continents. He also hosts the World Pickleball Podcast, interviewing people at…

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