Bill Previdi

Active Coach

Video Library (38 videos)

Name FPS Duration
Beating the Lobbers (10 of 12) Unknown player's OH Vol from the net area, filmed from an animation-style strategy angle. The animation emphasizes the small adjustment steps taken under the lob and the quick recovery shuffle back toward a ready position after the overhead volley.
5.3s
Beating the Lobbers (12 of 12) Bill Previdi's high defensive lob from a central baseline position, filmed from a rear court-level angle. After contact, his follow-through extends upward with his non-hitting hand staying back for balance before he recovers toward a neutral ready position.
3.3s
Returning in the System (1 of 7) Bill Previdi's return from a central baseline position, filmed from a side angle. His follow-through finishes high with the racquet in front as he quickly regains a neutral ready position, feet resetting under his hips for the next ball.
10s
The Hunter and the Helper (1 of 7) Hunter's positioning pattern animation from a central baseline view, filmed from a tactical overhead angle. The graphics make clear how the "hunter" moves into an aggressive contact zone with the racket prepared early in front of the body before striking.
6.5s
Beating the Lobbers (1 of 12) Bill Previdi’s instructional lob from a central court position, filmed from a court-level angle. The follow-through is emphasized with the hitting arm extending upward while the player quickly recovers by turning and moving forward into a ready position for the next ball.
4.6s
Serving in the System (1 of 6) Bill Previdi plays out a full point from a central baseline position, filmed from a rear court-level angle. After each shot he quickly recovers to a balanced ready position with his weight centered and racket prepared in front of his body.
5.7s
Introduction to the System (1 of 6) Bill Previdi’s animation on teamwork strategy from a central tactical perspective, filmed from a diagrammatic overhead angle. The contact points and racket paths are represented with simplified animated strokes, clearly showing racket face orientation and swing direction for each player within the team pattern.
9.3s
The Hunter and the Helper (2 of 7) Bill Previdi's animation helper strategy concept, filmed from a neutral, presentation-style angle. The video makes clear how the "Helper" player’s hips and legs position relative to the baseline and court geometry to support the "Hunter," emphasizing coordinated lateral movement and stance orientation.
4.9s
Beating the Lobbers (2 of 12) Bill Previdi’s instructional animation of a lob strategy sequence, filmed from a diagram-style overhead angle. The animation emphasizes how a neutral continental grip and a stable, minimally flexed wrist support consistent lob depth over an opponent who lobs frequently.
5.4s
Introduction to the System (2 of 6) Bill Previdi's animated strategy sequence from a central court position, filmed from a low court-level angle. The follow-through leads directly into a compact recovery stance, with the player’s weight settling evenly and the non-hitting hand resetting quickly in front of the body to prepare for the next shot.
7.1s
Returning in the System (2 of 7) Matt’s return contact position from the baseline, filmed from an animated side view. His hips stay relatively closed with a strong knee bend, showing how the legs load and drive up through contact to stabilize the return.
8.1s
Serving in the System (2 of 6) Bill Previdi's serve placement animation on the deuce and ad courts, filmed from a tactical overhead/court diagram angle. The racket contact point is represented schematically, with clear distinctions in toss location and contact zone to map different serve targets within each service box.
8s
Beating the Lobbers (3 of 12) Bill Previdi’s animation on “Hunter and Helper” positioning for beating lobbers, filmed from a diagram-style overhead angle. The animation emphasizes how the net player (“hunter”) keeps the racquet and wrist prepared in a neutral, continental-ready position while the back player (“helper”) sets up with a slightly laid-back wrist to handle potential overheads.
4.4s
Introduction to the System (3 of 6) Bill Previdi’s strategy animation is presented from a full-court, tactical diagram angle. The wrist action is illustrated conceptually here, emphasizing how grip orientation and subtle wrist adjustments change between neutral, attacking, and defensive patterns within the system.
8.8s
Returning in the System (3 of 7) Matt’s return while moving forward inside the baseline, filmed from a mixed side and rear court-level angle. His shoulders and trunk clearly rotate as a unit on the unit turn, then uncoil through contact with the chest finishing toward the target as his forward momentum carries him into the court.
6.8s
The Hunter and the Helper (3 of 7) Bill Previdi’s neutral-court animation setup sequence, filmed from a side instructional angle. The shoulder and trunk rotation are clearly segmented, with the torso coiling first and then uncoiling in sync with the forward step to model proper kinetic chain timing.
4.3s
Serving in the System (3 of 6) Bill Previdi’s serve animation on spin serve mechanics from a center-court position, filmed from a side and slightly elevated angle. You can clearly see the deep knee bend and upward leg drive that help tilt the hips and create the upward brushing motion needed for a heavy spin serve.
7.4s
Beating the Lobbers (4 of 12) Player's lob from a neutral court position, filmed from a side angle. The hips stay relatively square to the net while the knees flex and extend to drive the lifting motion of the legs through the shot.
4s
Returning in the System (4 of 7) Player's chip return followed by a defensive chip lob from a central position, filmed from a side animation angle. The contact point on both shots is taken slightly in front of the lead hip with a relatively open racket face, creating underspin while keeping the swing path compact and controlled.
6.9s
The Hunter and the Helper (4 of 7) Bill Previdi’s strategic animation is presented from a low, court-level angle focused on player positioning. From this view, you can clearly see how the hitter’s neutral grip and relatively firm wrist position are maintained as they transition between “hunter” and “helper” roles during the point.
4s
Serving in the System (4 of 6) Bill Previdi’s return from a central return position, filmed from an animation-based tactical angle. His split-step is timed just before contact and he uses small adjustment steps into a neutral stance to set up an efficient directional change for the next shot.
7.7s
Introduction to the System (4 of 6) Bill Previdi’s serve-and-volley animation from a central baseline view, filmed from a CourtLevel angle. The hips stay relatively closed through contact as the legs drive forward into the court, emphasizing an aggressive first step toward the net after the serve.
11.6s
The Hunter and the Helper (5 of 7) Bill Previdi's one-up-one-back strategy animation from a central tactical perspective, filmed from a 2D overhead court diagram angle. The footwork pattern emphasizes the net player’s small adjustment steps to track the ball while the back player uses balanced recovery steps to reestablish court positioning after each shot.
7.1s
Returning in the System (5 of 7) Bill Previdi's forehand return Inside-In from a central baseline position, filmed from an animated tactical angle. His semi-western grip is clearly paired with a laid-back wrist that maintains lag until just before contact, where the wrist snaps forward to direct the ball aggressively up the line.
3.6s
Introduction to the System (5 of 6) Bill Previdi's return from a central position, filmed from a court-level angle. His compact split-step precedes a short pivot into a neutral stance, followed by quick recovery steps that bring him back to a ready position for the next ball.
10.4s
Serving in the System (5 of 6) Bill Previdi’s serve from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side court-level angle. The shoulder line clearly turns past 90 degrees relative to the net before uncoiling, with the trunk leading the kinetic chain as the hips and shoulders unwind ahead of the arm swing.
2.7s
Serving in the System (6 of 6) Bill Previdi’s serve from a central baseline position, filmed from an animated instructional angle. The animation emphasizes a loose continental grip with a relaxed wrist that pronates aggressively through contact.
4.6s
The Hunter and the Helper (6 of 7) Bill Previdi’s animation of two players at the net, filmed from a tactical illustration perspective. The animation emphasizes how both players keep a neutral, continental grip with relatively firm but relaxed wrists, ready to adjust quickly for volleys on either side.
6.2s
Returning in the System (6 of 7) Left-handed and right-handed return positions from the center of the baseline, filmed from a court-level tactical angle. The shoulder and trunk orientation differ clearly between lefty and righty, with each player’s trunk coil setting up a distinct alignment of the hitting-side shoulder relative to the incoming serve line.
4.5s
Introduction to the System (6 of 6) Bill Previdi's strategic lob from a neutral court position, filmed from a court-level angle. The shoulder and trunk rotation are clearly sequenced, with an early upper-body coil followed by a smooth uncoiling that lifts the hitting shoulder and extends the kinetic chain upward to create height on the lob.
13.7s
Returning in the System (7 of 7) Bill Previdi's backhand return from a central position, filmed from an animation-style tactical angle. His split-step is synced to the server’s contact, followed by a short pivot into a neutral stance that sets up a compact, efficient unit turn on the backhand side.
4.4s
Beating the Lobbers (7 of 12) Bill Previdi’s instructional animation of a net player’s volley positioning, filmed from an elevated tactical angle. The animation emphasizes quick split-steps followed by short adjustment steps toward the ball and a diagonal recovery step back toward the ideal net position after contact.
3.5s
The Hunter and the Helper (7 of 7) Bill Previdi’s instructional drop volley animation from a central court position, filmed from a side angle. The follow-through finishes short with the racquet head slightly open while the non-hitting hand stays back, helping the player keep weight forward and recover quickly toward a compact ready position.
2.5s
Beating the Lobbers (8 of 12) Bill Previdi’s running lob from a neutral court position, filmed from a rear angle. The rear view makes the pronounced shoulder turn and delayed trunk uncoil easy to see as he accelerates upward through contact while moving back.
6.6s
Beating the Lobbers (11 of 12) Bill Previdi's overhead from a central net position, filmed from an animation-style angle. You can clearly see how his hips stay squared to the net while his legs load with a deep knee bend before driving upward into contact.
5.3s
Beating the Lobbers (5 of 12) Hunter's overhead from the center of the court, filmed from an animated instructional angle. The racket face is slightly closed at contact above head height, with a steep upward swing path that accelerates the racket head directly through the ball.
3.4s
Beating the Lobbers (6 of 12) Bill Previdi’s overhead from the center of the court, filmed from a side animation angle. The racket face stays slightly closed at contact above head height, with the racket head accelerating steeply upward along a serve-like swing path.
6.8s
Beating the Lobbers (9 of 12) Bill Previdi’s overhead from the center of the court, filmed from a short court-level angle. His shoulders and trunk rotate as a single unit on the preparation, then uncoil together through contact with minimal independent shoulder turn, emphasizing a compact kinetic chain.
3.4s