Pickleball doubles court positioning: where to stand and when to move
Where to stand on the court, when to switch sides, and how to cover with your partner. The geometry of doubles.
Why this matters
This is part of the Pickleball3 strategy hub. Every strategy guide links back to the third shot — the foundational technique that shapes every rally. If you only have time to learn one shot in pickleball, this is the one to learn deeply.
The core idea
Court positioning for doubles is built on a small set of repeatable mechanics. Master the mechanics in practice, then deploy them in games. The pages in this hub break each technique into the smallest components — grip, contact, follow-through, recovery — so you can drill each one in isolation.
What good execution looks like
At the kitchen line, control matters more than power. The dink is the workhorse. The drop neutralizes pace. The reset turns a hard shot into a soft one. A team that can do all three at the kitchen line will beat a team that only drives — at any level, recreational or pro.
Common mistakes
- Trying to win the point from the baseline. Hard third shots are high-risk, low-reward against a team that's ready at the kitchen line.
- Skipping the drop in practice. The drop is a feel shot — it takes hundreds of repetitions to be reliable. Skipping practice means inconsistent in-game performance.
- Forgetting the recovery. After every shot, return to ready position. The third shot isn't done until you're ready for the fourth.
Practice plan
Drill the third shot drop from the baseline, 30 in a row, 5 days a week, for 2 weeks. Track the percentage of drops that land in the opponent's kitchen (target: 80%+). After 2 weeks you'll see the shot show up in games automatically.