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In badminton tactics, there is a single and double tactic, that is, the chase ball tactic, which not only plays the chase ball to make the opponent uncomfortable to catch the ball, but also has a kind of "hit people" pleasure.

Chasing the ball, as the name suggests, is to hit the body, but there is attention to the landing point, not a random hit on the body. Why the principle of chasing the body: Due to the length of the racket and the limitation of the body arm hitting the ball, the position of the chase becomes a vacuum belt for defense.
The general chase ball is played in a straight line from the shoulder to the knee on the side of the clapper:.
1. Hold the clapping hand on the side shoulder
Holding the clapper side shoulder here is a small dead end, because not sideways there is no shot block, you can try it yourself, the shoulder position of the ball is difficult to block, not to mention counterattack or force, the side can be picked up, but a slow step is no rut.
2. Hold the side of the clapper at the ribs
The position of the ribs on the side of the clapper is also the position where the opponent is uncomfortable to return the ball, because this position can not carry out active force at all, and the passive return ball can only give you the opportunity to attack next.
3. Chest
Here is also one of the positions that are not easy to block, the ball chasing the chest is often not solved by the side, most people will subconsciously shoot to block, some of the more powerful are only sideways, but this ball is very easy to cause the return mistake, giving you the opportunity to attack continuously.
4. Hold the clapper on the side of the waist
The waist is the position where the center of gravity is located, and it is chased to the waist, and the movement is slower to give way, and the defense is limited.
5. Hold the clapping hand on the side of the knee
In the knee position to kill, whether it is a flap side or a backhand, there is no swing space; if the foot on the flap side is withdrawn, it is difficult to have time to react in the face of a faster kill, and it is more difficult to defend.
So when is the right time to play the chase ball?
In doubles, kill the ball in the backcourt and kill the opponent's torso position; when the front court blocks the net, kill the opponent's torso position; and pounce on the body when firing.
The premise is that every shot of the attack is threatening (referring to the speed of the ball, the speed of the ball is everything), which can make the opponent passive and the quality of the return ball is low, otherwise you will kill the past and want to follow up, and the opponent's wrist will flash the ball back to your backcourt, which is passive.