Individual session: working on the vibora and the rulo

After a technical correction drill for the vibora, the player works on hitting the rulo toward the fence.

He then applies these two overhead shots in a classic drill alternating overhead and volley, and finishes the technical work with specific placement work on his víbora.

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1. Warm-up

The session begins with a classic diagonal warm-up between the player and the coach:

  • Rallies from the back of the court, initially without using the back glass, then gradually lengthening the shots so both players can practice shots after the back-glass rebound.
  • Next, one player warms up at the net while the other stays at the back (and vice versa).
  • To finish, a few overhead balls to warm up the aerial shots (bandejas, víboras, and a few smashes) and their defense.

2. Technical work

paquito navarro smash

Working the vibora with this intense exercise and tips from Fernando Poggi (M3 Padel Academy)

This exercise, taught at the emblematic M3 Padel Academy, enables you to work on your vibora with a high volume of practice, in sets of 6. Fernando Poggi also gives precious advice on how to master the correct technique.

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tapia bandeja padel

Agustín Tapia: training the « rulo » on the diagonal fence, a decisive move to perfect

When the situation enables it, playing a rulo (slow and lifted smash) cross-court towards the diagonal fence can often prove decisive during the point. This exercise, practiced by Agustín Tapia in training, improves the precision and regularity of this movement.

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Alternating rapidly a vibora and a free volley, an exercise with high intensity in the legs

Taught at the M3 Padel Academy, this exercise enables you to work on a whole range of techniques. The exercise consists of alternating a vibora and a free volley 3 times, i.e. 6 balls per series. As the rhythm of the ball changes between each shot, the player must…

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→ Then perform exactly the same drill as before, but replace the víbora with a rulo (a kick smash directed toward the diagonal side fence) or, if appropriate, a gancho (if the player is a right-side player and right-handed).

Then carry out the first training block of this drill:

vibora galan padel

Improve the placement of your cross-court víbora to make it extremely difficult to defend

Developed at Aurial Padel Academy, this advanced-level drill focuses on refining the placement of the víbora to make it extremely hard to defend. To achieve this, the coach uses a target placed close to the diagonal side fence, which the ball

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3. Match sequence

The player and the coach finish the session with a super tie-break played fully open in the diagonal. The coach analyzes and corrects the player in real time, both tactically and technically.

Reminder of the rules for a one-on-one diagonal match:
For a ball to be considered good, its first or second bounce must land in the correct half of the court.

Example: if the players are playing in the left diagonal, and the ball’s first bounce is on the right side, but its second bounce returns to the left side of the court, the ball is good.
Similarly, if the ball bounces first on the right side → hits the back glass → and its second bounce lands on the left side of the court, it is also good.