Pickleball Tips - 4.0 To Pro, A Pocket-Sized Pickleball Podcast

Michael O'Neal & Mircea Morariu

Welcome to 4.0 to pro, the pickleball podcast that focuses on a single shot, tip, or strategy to improve your pickleball game with every single pocket-sized episode. Our goal is to make you better every single time you hear our voices! We are covering in-depth pickleball tips and strategies like serving, returning, drives, 3rd-shot options, dinking, faster hands, and much more! Subscribe to become a better pickleball player! . For more tips, find us on Instagram at @4.0_to_Pro. If you have a Pickleball question, submit it at http://picklehelp.com. Now get out there and DOMINATE…. but don’t forget to have fun!

  1. 16h ago

    68: Stop Thinking About the Third Shot. START Thinking About the Fifth.

    Most players are asking the wrong question. "Should I drop or drive?" treats the third shot as a single moment — but it's actually the opening move in a sequence. In this episode, Michael and Mircea break down how advancing players shift from shot-by-shot thinking to combo thinking, and why that mental shift is what separates Pros from 4.0 players. What we cover: The four stages of pickleball thinking — from beginner ("get it in") to pro ("create a sequence") — and how to identify where your game actually is right now. When to drive vs. drop on the third, including how wind, nerves, your skill set on a given day, and your opponent's tendencies should all influence that choice. Why your partner's position matters as much as the shot itself, and how a single heads-up communication before the point can prevent your partner from becoming the target. The most common third-fifth combinations: drive-to-easy-drop, great-drop-to-pounce, and the methodical drop-drop for players who want to slowly work their way up. Why driving middle off the third removes angles and creates confusion, and how to find that imaginary window between your opponents' outstretched paddles. The red-yellow-green framework for third shot quality, and why targeting yellow (not perfect) is the right call on big points. A practical homework assignment: record one match and count only your third and fifth shot errors. The number will surprise you. Key quote from this episode: "The players who control the fifth ball usually control the rally." Drill to try: Rally scoring games. When a missed third costs your opponents a point, you'll find ways to get it in fast. Sponsor mention: CRBN Pickleball — use code 4O2P at crbnpickleball.com for 10% off! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    37 min
  2. May 25

    66: Stacking Revisited - Why You Should Stack More in Pickleball, at ALL levels.

    What We Cover This Episode Stacking comes up constantly in rec play, and most players either resist it, misunderstand it, or simply never try it. Michael and Mircea break down why you should at minimum stack on serve, how to think about court positioning based on skill sets, and why ego is quietly costing recreational players games every single day. Key Takeaways Why players resist stacking (and why those reasons don't hold up) "My backhand is just as good as my forehand" is almost never true Common objections: too complicated, not fast enough to switch, messes up the return The cost of staying wrong-sided is almost always higher than the discomfort of learning The lefty-righty problem A lefty on the left creates two backhands in the middle, one of the most exploitable situations in doubles Middle, middle, middle. Every single ball. It's a cash register at most rec levels The fix is simple: lefties on the right, forehands in the middle The one scenario where there is no excuse not to stack On serve, stacking requires zero movement complexity. You just stand on the correct side before the point starts. There is no reason not to do this How to think about which side each player should be on Ask your partner which side they prefer before you start Match the stronger or more dynamic player to the left side so they can dictate angles and control the middle Hide weak forehands by keeping that player on the right, where their partner can cover the middle Exception: if a player's backhand is a weapon, you may want that weapon sitting in the middle instead Conor Garnett and the pro game Conor typically plays the left side, in part because at the pro level, precise dinking can avoid his backhand entirely, making it more valuable to protect from the outside His pairing with Roscoe Bellamy works because Roscoe's reach clogs the middle and takes pressure off that dynamic Mircea's partnership with Jose DeRisi Mircea plays right, Jose plays left, based on complementary strengths Mircea's defense and forehand options suit the right side; Jose's skills are better expressed from the left They adjust situationally, including half stacking when an opponent has a big serve Using stacking to break momentum Lost four to six points in a row? Switch sides, even temporarily The change in look alone tends to break runs, regardless of the tactical reason Half stacking explained Stack only on serve, not on return A good entry point if full stacking feels overwhelming The returner controls whether to call off the switch, not the player at the kitchen How to start if you've never stacked Pick a preferred side. If you start there, stay. If you start on the other side, scoot over You do not need pro-level athleticism, fancy signals, or perfect execution You need: commitment, communication, and repetition Practice it in rec play before bringing it into a tournament Reference Episodes Episode 28: "Should You Stack More Than You Are in Pickleball?" covers the full mechanics, including regular stacking, half stacking, three-quarter stacking, where to return, and court movement patterns. Sponsor CRBN Pickleball. Use code 4O2P at crbnpickleball.com for a 10% discount. Thanks for letting us into your earballs. Go enjoy some pickleball. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    29 min
  3. Mar 19

    64: Watch Yourself Win: How Video Analysis Instantly Improves Your Pickleball Game

    If you’re serious about getting better at pickleball, one of the fastest ways to improve isn’t drilling more—it’s watching yourself play. In this episode, Michael O’Neal (http://instagram.com/solohour) and Mircea Morariu (http://instagram.com/brainsdoc) break down how video analysis can dramatically accelerate your progress. From simple positioning mistakes to advanced pattern recognition, seeing your game on film reveals what you think you’re doing versus what’s actually happening. They share how pros—and top coaches—use film study to sharpen strategy, improve teamwork, and eliminate costly habits. Whether you’re a 3.5 or pushing 5.0, this is one of the lowest-effort, highest-impact tools you can add to your game. Key Topics Covered: Why Video Doesn’t Lie:Most players think they’re in the right position, split stepping, and hitting balanced shots—until they watch themselves. What to Watch First:Start with serve/return positioning, then track your movement to the kitchen and whether you’re arriving in sync with your partner. Court Positioning > Footwork (But Both Matter):Being in the right place often matters more than perfect mechanics—and video makes positioning mistakes obvious. Stop Moving Through the Ball:Many unforced errors come from hitting while off-balance. Watch how often you’re still vs. moving at contact. Partner Awareness & Team Dynamics:Are you advancing together? Covering the middle? Speeding up balls your partner isn’t ready for? Film exposes breakdowns instantly. Winning vs. Losing Patterns:Identify repeatable outcomes—who you target, where you hit thirds, and what consistently wins or loses points. Shot Selection & Communication:Driving vs. dropping, attacking at the right time, and making sure your partner knows what’s coming. Advanced Insight: Pattern RecognitionAt higher levels, small tendencies (like predictable counters) become opportunities you can exploit over and over. How to Watch Film Effectively:Watch full matches first, then rewatch focusing on: Yourself Your partner Your opponents Pro Tip:Watch elite players (like Anna Leigh Waters) and focus only on their footwork—you’ll learn more than watching the ball. Bottom Line:You can’t fix what you can’t see. Film gives you instant feedback on positioning, balance, teamwork, and patterns—and it’s one of the quickest ways to level up your game. Want help analyzing your game?Email: fourohtopro@gmail.comInstagram: @4.0_to_Pro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    31 min
  4. Mar 10

    63: Tournament Prep PART 2!

    Michael and Mircea record live from the Pickle Brawl — a charity Pro-Am event at Dink & Dine Pickle Park in Mesa, raising awareness and funds for fentanyl addiction treatment. This is Part 2 of their tournament prep series. Event Highlights Played alongside NBA Hall of Famer Rick Barry (age 82!) — still incredibly competitive Met outstanding junior players aged 12–17 — the future of pickleball is very bright Honored veterans in attendance — thank you for your service Playing with a Ref Refs focus on two things: calling the score and calling foot faults. You'd be amazed how often rec players are in the kitchen. Pro tip: film yourself at the kitchen line and watch it back — you probably foot fault more than you think. Tournament Prep Checklist Know the ball (Franklin vs. Lifetime plays very differently — practice with it first) Know the scoring format: standard 2-to-11, rally scoring, or win-by-1 (NPL/CSP style) Know timeout rules: traditional = 2, NPL = 1 Verify paddle approval: USAP vs. UPA — this caught Mircea off guard at this very event! Side selection: pick the better end at the start so you have it for a potential Game 3 Mental Game Everyone gets nervous — embrace it. Michael's reset: tap the paddle on the fence between points to physically "wipe" the last point away. When things get tight, focus on your footwork. Moving your feet loosens you up mentally and physically. Anna Leigh Waters is the gold standard here. Common Mistakes Changing equipment last minute Arriving late and skipping warmup Going too aggressive too early Letting nerves take you out of your wheelhouse Poor hydration and nutrition (dehydration = injury risk) Abandoning what worked in Game 1 Strategy Reminders Start simple: returns down the middle, thirds toward the moving player. Consistency beats spectacular every time. If you're down big, just get 2–3 points on the board — momentum is real. 🎒 Sponsor: CRBN Pickleball Michael and Mircea have been loving the CRBN Barrage 4 — great sweet spot, pop, control, and spin. Use code 4O2P at checkout for 10% off → crbnpickleball.com 📬 Registered for your first tournament? Write in — we'd love to help you prep! picklehelp.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    48 min
  5. Feb 9

    61: Attacking in Pickleball: When to Speed Up (and When Not To) — 4.0 to Pro

    In this episode of 4.0 to Pro, Michael O’Neal and Mircea Morariu break down one of the most important strategic decisions in modern pickleball: when to attack. As paddles become more powerful and the game continues evolving into a more offensive style of play, knowing when to speed up — and when to stay patient — can be the difference between winning and losing at higher levels. Michael shares early impressions of a new “CRBN Barrage” paddle and how modern paddle technology is changing resets, counters, and energy output. From there, the conversation shifts into practical strategy for attacking intelligently in today’s faster game. The hosts outline key principles for successful speed-ups and instigation, including balance, control, partner positioning, and anticipating counters. They also discuss how the pro game has evolved since the late 2010s, why control still beats power at higher levels, and how to use early attacks as “data points” to understand opponents’ tendencies. The episode wraps with discussion of the instigator drill, partner coordination during attacks, and strategic adjustments when you’re losing the soft game battle. If you’re trying to move from 4.0 to 4.5 and beyond, this episode will help you attack more confidently — and more intelligently. Key Takeaways Modern pickleball is increasingly offense-driven Location > Spin > Power at higher levels Only attack from a stable, balanced base Attack when the ball is in your control Your partner must be ready for the counter Anticipate the next shot before you attack Use early attacks as information gathering Identify and target body positioning weaknesses The instigator drill is one of the best ways to train attack recognition If you’re losing dink rallies, shorten the point Upcoming EventMichael O’Neal and Mircea Morariu will be in Mesa, Arizona (March 7–8).Visit PickleHelp.com if you’re interested in a clinic or VIP session. 4.0 to Pro is your pocket-size pickleball podcast — one shot or strategy every episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    45 min
4.8
out of 5
366 Ratings

About

Welcome to 4.0 to pro, the pickleball podcast that focuses on a single shot, tip, or strategy to improve your pickleball game with every single pocket-sized episode. Our goal is to make you better every single time you hear our voices! We are covering in-depth pickleball tips and strategies like serving, returning, drives, 3rd-shot options, dinking, faster hands, and much more! Subscribe to become a better pickleball player! . For more tips, find us on Instagram at @4.0_to_Pro. If you have a Pickleball question, submit it at http://picklehelp.com. Now get out there and DOMINATE…. but don’t forget to have fun!

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