pickleball swing check / learn / arm vs body
Are you swinging with your arm instead of your body?
If your forehand feels weak, flies long, or makes your elbow sore, you're probably swinging with your arm instead of your body. The fix: turn your shoulders and hips first, then let your arm follow. That one change adds power, makes your shots more consistent, and is easier on your arm.
How to tell
- You swing hard, but the ball still floats.
- Your shoulders stay facing the net the whole time.
- Your elbow or shoulder is sore after you play.
- You hit the ball beside you, not out in front.
Why it matters
Your arm is small and tires fast, so an arm-only swing is weaker and harder to repeat. Power comes from a chain: legs and hips start the turn, your torso carries it, and your arm is the last, fastest link. Turn first, and your arm just delivers what your big muscles already built.
The fix
- Turn back. As the ball comes, turn your shoulders and hips away from the net. The paddle goes back because your body took it there.
- Turn through. Lead with your hips and chest. Let the paddle trail for a beat.
- Finish. End with your chest facing your target.
One cue makes it click: belly button to the target. If it ends pointed at your target, your body did the work.
2-minute drill
Stand side-on, a step from a wall:
- Turn your shoulders away from the wall.
- Turn back to face it, paddle trailing.
- 10 slow reps, then 10 at game speed. Keep your feet still so you feel the turn.
Check yours in 10 seconds
Not sure if you're turning enough? Film a 10-second shadow swing and the free Pickleball Swing Check will tell you — it looks for arm-vs-body rotation and gives you one thing to work on.