The lob is one of those shots that separates beginners from players who actually know what they’re doing. It’s basically a high, arcing shot that sends the ball sailing over your opponent’s head, ideally landing deep in their court. Think of it as the great equalizer when you’re getting pounded at the net.
Here’s the thing—most recreational players either never use the lob or use it way too much. Understanding when and how to deploy this shot can completely change your game.
Definition
A lob in pickleball is a defensive or offensive shot hit with an upward trajectory, designed to travel high over the net and your opponent’s paddle. The ball should arc through the air and land near the baseline, forcing your opponent to retreat from their advantageous net position.
You’re essentially hitting a rainbow-shaped shot that buys you time, resets the point, or catches someone off guard.
Purpose
Defensive Reset
When you’re pinned back and your opponents are crushing balls at the kitchen line, the lob gives you breathing room. It forces them backward, neutralizes their advantage, and lets you recover your position.
Offensive Weapon
A well-placed offensive lob can win the point outright. If your opponent is crowding the net or has slow footwork, a lob over their backhand side might be unreturnable.
Change Pace
Constantly dinking and driving gets predictable. Throwing in an occasional lob disrupts rhythm and keeps opponents guessing. It’s like adding a changeup to your fastball.
Types
Defensive Lob
This is your bailout shot. You’re in trouble, scrambling, and need to hit something—anything—that gets you back in the point. The defensive lob is higher, softer, and prioritizes height over precision. You’re buying time, not trying to win the point.
Offensive Lob
The offensive lob is lower, faster, and placed with intention. You’re attacking a specific weakness or exploiting poor court positioning. This shot requires touch, timing, and confidence. Hit it right and the point’s over. Miss and you’ve gifted your opponent an overhead smash.
Execution
Grip Position
Use your standard dink or groundstroke grip. Continental works for most players, though some prefer eastern. The key is comfort and control—you need feel for this shot.
Paddle Angle
Open your paddle face more than you would for a drive. The angle determines trajectory. Too closed and you’ll drill it into the net. Too open and it floats out.
Contact Point
Hit the ball slightly in front of your body, lower than you would for a typical groundstroke. You’re scooping under the ball, creating that upward arc.
Follow Through
Your follow-through should finish high, almost like you’re reaching toward where you want the ball to land. Abbreviated follow-throughs produce weak, short lobs that get destroyed.
When
Opponent Positioning
If they’re crowding the kitchen line with paddles up high, that’s lob territory. Also works beautifully when someone’s leaning forward aggressively or has shown poor backward movement.
Court Awareness
Look at the entire court situation. Are you both pushed back? Probably not lob time. Is one opponent way up while their partner is back? Target the aggressive one.
Wind Conditions
Outdoor play changes everything. A tailwind can turn a perfect lob into an out ball. Headwinds can drop your lob short. Adjust your power and trajectory accordingly.
Score Situation
In crucial points, the lob becomes riskier. You might opt for safer shots. But sometimes a well-timed lob at 10-9 can catch opponents by surprise precisely because it’s unexpected.
Technique
Preparation Phase
Read the incoming shot early. Position yourself with bent knees and paddle ready low. Weight should be balanced, ready to transfer forward through the shot.
Swing Path
Your swing moves low to high in a smooth arc. No jerky motions. Think smooth acceleration rather than sudden power. The shot requires finesse, not force.
Weight Transfer
Shift your weight from back foot to front foot as you make contact. This generates power without sacrificing control. Your body is the engine; your arm guides.
Target Selection
Aim deep—within three feet of the baseline is ideal. Cross-court lobs are generally safer than straight-ahead because you’re using more court. The backhand corner is typically the weakest target on most players.
Common Mistakes
Telegraphing Intent
If you wind up like you’re launching a mortar, everyone knows what’s coming. Keep your preparation similar to your other shots. Disguise is crucial.
Insufficient Height
A low lob is just a slow, terrible drive. It needs to clear their outstretched paddle by at least several feet. Better too high than too low—height creates difficulty.
Poor Depth
Lobs that land mid-court are batting practice. You’re giving opponents an easy overhead from an optimal position. Depth is everything. Shallow lobs lose points.
Overuse
Hit too many lobs and opponents will anticipate, position deeper, and smash everything back. Use it strategically, not habitually. Maybe two or three per game unless conditions really favor it.
Strategy
When Used
Deploy lobs when opponents are positioned aggressively at the kitchen line, leaving the backcourt vulnerable. Use them after fast exchanges to change pace and rhythm. Lobs work particularly well against opponents with limited mobility, overhead weaknesses, or when sun position favors your side.
The shot also proves valuable when you’re pushed off the court or stretched wide, needing time to recover central positioning.
Court Positioning
After hitting a lob, immediately move toward the kitchen line if you’ve hit an offensive lob, anticipating a weak return. For defensive lobs, first ensure you’ve regained balanced court position before advancing.
Watch your opponent’s movement and paddle preparation. If they’re tracking the ball well and setting up for an overhead, prepare for a defensive return.
Practice
Start by practicing lob trajectory without opponents, focusing on clearing an imaginary player at the kitchen line while landing balls near the baseline. Use targets or cones to develop depth accuracy.
Progress to live drills where partners feed balls from various positions, requiring you to lob under different conditions. Practice both offensive and defensive lobs to develop versatility. Work on disguising your lobs by maintaining consistent body positioning across different shot types.
FAQs
Which is more effective: backhand or forehand lobs?
Backhand lobs are physiologically easier—your arm naturally crosses your body, giving better paddle control and visual contact. However, target opponent backhands regardless of which side you hit from, since most players turn slower and have weaker overhead mechanics on their non-dominant side.
Who takes the lob in doubles: me or my partner?
Short lobs belong to the front player who calls it immediately. Deep lobs default to the back player with forehand positioned in the middle. Communication eliminates the “I thought you had it” disaster—whoever has the better overhead angle calls “mine” aggressively.
What body cues telegraph an opponent’s upcoming lob?
Watch for paddle face opening more than usual, weight shifting backward before contact, and lower contact points. Players often pause or shorten their backswing before lobbing. If opponents repeatedly glance at the baseline before hitting, they’re measuring depth for their lob attempt.
How precisely should offensive lobs land near the baseline?
Target the 1-3 foot zone from the baseline for maximum effectiveness. This sweet spot forces opponents into awkward sprint-backs rather than controlled backpedals, significantly reducing their overhead quality. Landing deeper than 3 feet gives opponents time to set up devastating smashes; shorter risks easy put-aways.
Should both partners retreat together after every lob?
Yes, synchronized retreats maintain defensive formation integrity and prevent exploitable court gaps. Move “back together” as a unit even when only one partner hits the return. This teamwork approach builds trust, ensures balanced coverage, and keeps you both positioned optimally for opponents’ next attacking shot from the baseline.
What height advantage matters when lobbing tall players?
Conventional wisdom says avoid lobbing tall players, but data reveals the opposite—tall players (6’2″+) often struggle with deep lobs requiring backward sprints. Their height advantage at the kitchen line becomes a mobility liability on baseline retreats. Target the 1-3 foot baseline zone where their reach can’t compensate for reduced foot speed.
