Imaginary Game Challenge

This drill helps beginners build serve consistency by simulating a real game against an imaginary opponent. Players focus on landing serves in the box, keeping score as if they were playing a match. It’s an effective solo activity that allows players to practice without a partner and is especially useful when they can’t engage in full-court play, such as during injury recovery.

Setup

  • One player with a basket of balls
  • Standard singles or doubles court
  • Divide service boxes for optional advanced variations

Rules & Objectives

  • Player begins a “service game” by serving from one side of the court
  • A point is won if the serve lands in the service box
  • The imaginary opponent scores a point only on a double fault
  • Player keeps score as in a regular game (15–0, 30–0, etc.)
  • Continue serving until one side “wins the game
  • ”Switch sides and repeat

Repetition

  • Play multiple service games for practice, aiming to hold “serve” consistently
  • Add directional control: require serves to specific halves of the box (wide or body)
  • Use targets (cones) for accuracy
  • Track percentage of serves made in for self-assessment

Coaching Points

  • Builds serve consistency and rhythm
  • Reinforces mental focus under match-like conditions
  • Encourages self-accountability with scoring
  • Teaches players to practice alone effectively
  • Develops accuracy as players progress to directional serving

Drill Tutorial

Difficulty: Beginner

Emphasis: Serve Drills

Age Group:

Format:

Additional Tennis Drills