Stop Apologizing and Start Poaching More Balls

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Poaching applies pressure, shrinks the court for your opponents, and helps cover a weaker partner — all tactics that increase unforced errors for the team across the net

A Reddit discussion this week sparked a familiar pickleball debate: How much court should you take when your partner is clearly the weaker player?

The conversation began when a 3.25-rated player described competing in a DUPR league alongside a 2.3-rated partner. According to the post, opponents quickly identified the skill gap and began targeting the weaker player.

In response, the stronger partner started taking more balls down the middle and covering extra court.

The strategy worked. The partnership won.

But the partner wasn't thrilled.

After the match, the weaker player reportedly complained that too many balls had been taken away from her, leaving the stronger player wondering whether they had crossed the line from helping into poaching.

The pickleball community weighed in, and the overwhelming consensus was clear:

If you're playing a competitive, rated match, the goal is to win as a team.

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Poaching Is Sound Strategy Even with a Strong Partner

The concept of poaching in pickleball gets a bad rap. Too often, it implies someone over-playing their position, being too aggressive, or just generally acting like a ball-hog. And nobody likes a ball-hog.

But there’s far more behind this strategy than just looking for an easy point. In a nutshell, you should be poaching far more often than you are. Like, every game you play. Early and often.

Here’s why:

Poaching early applies pressure to your opponent. Shading middle and punching a ball back that’s not technically “yours” shows them you’re offensive-minded and won’t be giving up any easy points. This game is being played on your terms. That gives you an edge.

✅ When you’re willing to be aggressive in the middle, it effectively shrinks the court for your opponents. No floaty drops in the middle. No lazy cross-court dinks. One early poach puts them on notice. Just like that, they’re aiming for smaller targets and over-thinking routine shots. And that forces errors.

It protects a weaker partner. Poaching has the added bonus of covering for a partner who needs a little extra help, especially if they’re being targeted throughout the game. Now you’re covering 75% of the court instead of 50%. And that could tip the scales back in your favor.

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One more parting thought: don’t keep your poaching plans to yourself.

Tell your partner you’re going to do it, any why. “Hey, I’m going to jump on a middle ball early just to put them on their heels. Cool?”

This is what having a strategy actually looks like.

Read the full Reddit thread here.

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