
Pickleball Strategy: Stacking to Target the Left-Handed Backhand
Stacking on Your Opponent’s Weak Side: Targeting Left-Handed Backhands
Introduction: The Power of Strategic Targeting
In pickleball, exploiting an opponent’s weaknesses can decisively shift the balance of a match. One of the most underused yet highly effective strategies is targeting the backhand side of a left-handed player, particularly in doubles play. When combined with stacking, this approach can severely limit your opponent’s shot-making options, disrupt their rhythm, and open up high-percentage attack lanes. But to use this tactic successfully, players must understand the technical, psychological, and positional dynamics that make the left-handed backhand especially vulnerable.
Why Left-Handed Backhands Are Often Weaker
Although not universally true, many left-handed players tend to have a weaker backhand for several reasons:
Rarity of left-handed opponents: Most players rarely train against left-handers, which means lefties don’t experience consistent backhand targeting and may undertrain the shot.
Biomechanics: The backhand swing, particularly under pressure or at awkward angles, is naturally less powerful and more compact than the forehand.
Shot variety: Left-handed players often rely heavily on their forehand cross-court dinks and drives. Their backhand dink or roll might be less consistent or lack spin, especially under targeting pressure.
This makes the left-handed backhand a prime zone for aggressive play — if you know how to get the ball there consistently.
Understanding Stacking in Doubles
Stacking is a positioning strategy in doubles where partners align themselves on the same side of the court after the serve or return to maintain preferred player-side orientation (e.g., righty on the left, lefty on the right). This allows strong forehands to cover the middle and creates consistent tactical setups.
There are two main forms:
Partial stacking – only in certain game situations (e.g., when serving).
Full stacking – done on every point, requiring fluid movement and coordination.
Why Stack?
Maximize strengths (forehands in the middle).
Hide weaknesses (backhands on the sideline).
Maintain strategic pressure (e.g., constant attack on an opponent’s weak wing).
Using Stacking to Exploit the Lefty Backhand
Targeting a left-handed opponent’s backhand becomes much more efficient when your team stacks to direct traffic toward that wing. Here’s how to do it:
1. Serve and First Shot Strategy
Righty server stacks with partner on the right, setting up a cross-court return to the lefty’s backhand (on the right side of their court).
Use topspin serves or deep slices aimed at the T or sideline to pin the backhand and make a forward transition harder.
2. Return Strategy
After a return, shift quickly into a forehand-middle formation so your drives and drops go toward the lefty’s right sideline — their backhand side.
If possible, lob over their backhand shoulder, forcing a defensive overhead or awkward backpedal.
3. Third and Fifth Shot Pressure
Once in the rally, this is where the damage happens:
Dink diagonally to the backhand corner, especially if they’re crowding the middle.
Use inside-out topspin rolls or sharp angles that require the lefty to extend wide on their backhand — a mechanically tougher shot.
Psychological Impact and Pattern Disruption
Smart stacking isn't just physical — it's mental. Constantly probing a left-handed player's backhand does the following:
Builds frustration as they sense being “picked on.”
Narrows their focus, causing rushed decisions on forehand opportunities.
Breaks rhythm, especially in dink exchanges, forcing them to speed up or pop up balls they can’t handle confidently.
This cumulative pressure often leads to unforced errors, rushed drives, or timid resets.
Defensive Adjustments by Left-Handers
Of course, left-handed players aren’t without tools. Skilled opponents might:
Slide into forehands to avoid backhands.
Use two-handed backhands for power and spin.
Stack themselves to protect that side.
Be ready for these counters by:
Changing spin on your dinks (e.g., mixing slice and topspin).
Altering pace and height, especially when approaching their NVZ line.
Targeting body shots when they try to slide into forehands, freezing them in position.
When Not to Use This Strategy
Despite its effectiveness, targeting the lefty backhand isn't always optimal. Avoid overcommitting to this tactic when:
The lefty has a well-developed two-handed backhand with consistent placement.
You’re in windy conditions, where cross-court dinks to the backhand side become risky.
Your team is out of sync on stacking, leading to communication breakdowns and court coverage gaps.
Adaptability is key. Use the strategy, but don’t become robotic.
Pro-Level Examples
Top players like Ben Johns and Anna Leigh Waters use variations of this strategy to control court dynamics. You’ll often see Ben stack to keep his forehand in the middle and apply pressure to the lefty’s wide backhand, especially on slower courts. The professional emphasis is always on precision, pressure, and predictability — forcing the lefty into uncomfortable, repeated motions.
Final Thoughts: Strategy + Execution = Edge
Targeting a left-handed opponent’s backhand through intelligent stacking is a subtle art that pays off with discipline, observation, and synchronized teamwork. It’s not just about hitting a weaker shot — it’s about reshaping the geometry of the court and forcing your opponents to play your game.
By practicing dinks, drives, and drops that naturally drift to that vulnerable quadrant — and by setting up your team to control the pace and flow — you convert a subtle tactical insight into a game-winning edge.