Squash Forms - Styles of Play
1. Basic Form: basic strokes, straight length,
straight drops, hitting target zones and practice drills, and the
basic principle of hitting the ball where your opponent is not.
Basic form allows mental focus and a slightly improved chance of
creating an opening and winning a point with a basic stroke.
Nonetheless, because of its few advantages and disadvantages,
basic form is an effective form to fall back on when no other
form will do to suit the current match situation.
2. Refined Form: is described as being very elegant, powerful, and requiring extreme precision, allowing the player to attack and defend with minimal effort, while opponents tire themselves out. This form emphasizes smooth movement and fluidity. The form relies on high lobs, and tight, precise drop shots, as opposed to quick volleys and hard hitting of other forms.
Players well trained in the refined form prevent attacking shots
from there opponents using anticipation and commonly confuse or
set-up their opponents for a trap to win easy points. Precise
footwork and movements are required for maintaining proper
distance to the ball to keep from getting out of position. The
racket skills required for this form are very refined and require
intense focus. Timing, accuracy, and skill, rather than strength
and speed are relied on to win matches.
A skilled practitioner of the refined form is extremely potent.
The footwork of the refined form is simple and allows the player
to keep in perfect balance while attacking and retrieving. The
refined form is a style based on balance, on back-and-forth
exchanges and variety from all areas of the court. Elegance,
gallantry, enchantment, finesse, artfulness, and economy are the
core of the refined form, although many practitioners of the form
have also trained themselves to avoid being predictable to keep
there opponents off balance. The elegant, precise, calm,
confident to the point of arrogance of many players who use this
form is a result of the relaxed mindset of these
players.
Refined form users are supremely confident in their chances for
victory, and often looked so relaxed when they are playing, they
appear to be dancing. Despite its effectiveness, refined form was
not without its weaknesses. Among the first of these is the fact
that it was somewhat harder to volley shots and training teaches
practitioners to defend against well played shots, although
skilled players could overcome this with minimal effort. Another
drawback is that refined form is most potent when used against
low to moderate pressure, therefore is reduced in effectiveness
against exceptionally skilled opponents. But the greatest flaw
with this system of squash is that it cannot withstand the
overwhelming speed and pressure of modern styles, which emphasize
power and brute force as opposed to the elegance and precision
refined form demands. In the end sheer, raw power of other forms
will wear down refined form defenses, physically exhausting them,
draining them mentally and forcing them to hit looser shots and
making more mistakes.
3. Resilience Form: requires maintaining a
constant vigilance to defend every shot with slow or tight
replies, leaving the player less exposed to a constant barrage of
shots. Resilience form is the most defensive of the squash forms.
The philosophy of resilience form is described as "being within
the eye of the storm." The practitioner maintains a centered
frame of concentration, undisrupted by the pressure, speed, power
or shot selection of the opponent. Maintaining a calm center
where the attacking storm of shots from the opponent is
prolonged. Resilience form commands powerful defensive techniques
that seemed to adapt to almost any circumstance, at the cost of
never reaching past the figurative eye of the storm. The
resilience technique uses little to none of the attack power
needed by those who concentrate on the storm itself.
Those who practice this style use the primarily defensive
technique of wearing down aggressive opponents by defending long
onslaughts with minimal counter-attacking. Players wait until
their opponents spend most of their energy, and then often employ
an alternate, more aggressive attack, or allow the opponent to
slowly deteriorate and they wait for the eventual lapse in the
opponent's defense. The key to truly mastering resilience form
may come from a mastery of the concept and philosophy of
resiliency. Although some players may prefer resilience form,
applying elements of other forms will confuse many opponents.
Resilience form allows you to slow down an opponent with minimal
effort, forcing opponents to expend precious energy with each
shot, slowly tiring them while players remain fresh and strong.
Resilience form attacks with defense, redirecting an opponent’s
energy and waiting for opponents to become weary or frustrated,
allowing them to make a mistake and creating openings to score
easy points. Observers generally described resilience form as a
passive form of squash. Players with extreme patience and a
reserved personality often employed the form although the form
stresses quick reflexes and fast positional transition, in order
to overcome the speed and pressure with which many opponents can
play squash. This technique minimizes the court exposure, making
it nearly impossible to hit a winner against a well-trained
practitioner. Resilience form requires preparation for prolonged
matches where players observe and learn as much as possible about
their opponent’s technique and tendencies.
Many practitioners have played many lengthy matches, owing to the
endurance gained from the form and its specialization in fending
off and neutralizing attacks. Resilience form’s greatest power is
the endurance and control a practitioner eventually develops. The
defense and control it allows a practitioner makes for favorable
outcomes when faced with hurried opponents who leave themselves
vulnerable to counterattack. However, its defense requires a very
large amount of focus from the player and even a momentary fault
in concentration could spell defeat. Players with less focused
minds will usually abandon this style of squash to capitalize on
the benefits of other styles that require less dedication to
prolonged matches. Resilience form users will play attacking
shots to increase the speed and frequency at which the opponent
will have to play the ball but will keep defending until they see
an opening in the opponent. Truly focused players are very
formidable due to their strong defense technique; however, the
style depends on mistakes from the opponent and guarantees
survival more than victory. Resiliency form practitioners are
more than capable but need a large amount of experience to learn
how to trap an opponent in their own offense. Maintaining focus
to prolong the fight, and causing the opponent to become fatigued
or frustrated as they attempted to keep up their offense can
easily backfire as players can become fatigued against an
aggressive though cautious adversary.
4. Aggressive Form: relies on a combination of
power, strength, and speed. Practitioners are always on the
offensive, attacking with wide, fast, and powerful strokes.
Aggressive form practitioners have strong, fast, hard movements
and attacks. By training hard physically to condition their body,
they can hit the ball with incredible pace and perform amazing
deceptive shots on court, such as hitting behind their backs and
double swinging, not only for attacking shots but also to make
incredible gets and score points from anywhere on the court.
Players utilizing aggressive form incorporate all their training
to push themselves physically, including ranges of motion, speed,
and agility in order to be successful. Running, lunging, and
diving are all part of the elaborate kinetics of the aggressive
form.
Those who use aggressive form swing their rackets at high speeds
and can rain down stroke after stroke to pulverize opponents into
submission. Powerful and quick attacks from all angles, either
off the ground or out of the air, they appear like a blur to
their opponents, attacking from all directions—from the front,
the sides, overhead, and behind. Extreme conditioning allows
aggressive style players to perform athletic movements but
because it is such an aggressive style, it is not generally
optimal for prolonged matches, as the nature of aggressive form
could greatly tax the body.
Aggressive style is flashy, bold, and exciting as are the
personalities of those who practice it. Without strict
discipline, aggressive form can lead to flurries of mistakes and
leave the players out of position and open up the court to easy
winners. The player’s focus is often concentrated on generating
power often at the cost of precision and strategy. Aggressive
form actions flow from one to another in smooth transitions
represented by the three possible axes of rotation in
three-dimensional space allowing the player to generate pace from
anywhere, in any position, in any direction on the
court.
The form is intended to allow a player to quickly strike the ball
at the opponent without giving them a chance to react, and then
again and again before they have a chance to retaliate. Another
move that aggressive form users could use effectively includes
taking the ball earlier or later and hitting it with incredible
pace keeping the opponent sprinting to next shot or freezing them
in place and throwing them off balance.
Aggressive form places a heavy focus on brute strength and pure
power, with wide, powerful strokes and swinging volleys, while
perseverance form concentrates on using the opponent’s aggressive
actions to generate an equal attack with minimized effort.
Perseverance form is often a style adopted by larger players.
Strong attacks force an opponent behind the larger player,
throwing them off balance and leaving opponents vulnerable to
further brute force strokes and easy drop shots. The perseverance
form penetrates an opponent's defense and pushes them deeper in
the court, making it difficult to counter attack. The form is
always looking to counterattack, pressuring opponents to play
higher risk shots by overwhelming their defense. Emotion can
become an overriding factor of this style when practitioners
begin to focus too much on sheer power instead of redirecting an
opponents attack. Perseverance form can lead to the complete
domination of the opponent but if emotions aren’t kept in check,
it can also lead to the undoing of the player.
5. Perseverance form: is an evolution of the
resilience form. It combines the defensive maneuvers of
resilience form with the philosophy and tactics of aggressive
form which requires a higher level of physical strength due to
its focus on complete domination of opponents. The perseverance
form is described as being well adapted to guarding against
aggressive attacks without compromising one's ability to use
powerful counterattacks.
Perseverance form practitioners feel resilience form is too
passive and this form addresses the fact that although a
resilience user may be unbeatable, it is likewise they are unable
to overcome a skilled opponent. Utilizing a combination of lobs,
drops and volleys, a perseverance user maintains a proper
foundation in terms of defense against both hard hitting attacks
and well placed shots. While a resilience form user stays on the
defensive and only counterattacks when necessary or when an
opening appeared in his opponent's defense, a perseverance
practitioner is not nearly so passive. Immediately after
defending against an opponent's shot, a perseverance stylist
would follow with an attack of their own, using the pace of the
opponent's own shot against them and looking to end points
quicker.
6. Moderation Form: attempts to balance all elements of squash
forms, combining the techniques from the other 5 forms into a
less intensely demanding playing style. In practice, moderation
form was a combination of basic, refined, resilient, aggressive
and perseverance forms, and all of them in moderation. In
blending the forms, much of the individuality is lost, but the
strengths are spread evenly, and there is little weakness in it.
Due to its "jack-of-all-trades" nature, the success of this form
is largely dependent on the practitioner's intuition,
improvisation, and creativity on court rather than the rote
responses derived from other forms. Moderation form is not a weak
form, while many other forms bolstered the player's abilities in
one area, leaving them vulnerable in others, moderation form is
capable in all situations but had no dramatic
strengths.
It provides no edge in match situation, but achieves its worth by
allowing a player to attack, defend, counter attack and force
mistakes from an opponent. Its strength is its balance. The
moderation form is also considered a basis for more 'unorthodox'
squash forms, as player’s who use it are less frequently using
automatic reflex and are constantly thinking and often have time
to invent unusual strategies to win points. Moderation form’s
greatest strength is the way it allows a player to change the
focus of the match even during a point. The philosophy of
moderation form is "the leaf swept in the winds.” Users of this
squash form achieve a mindset of one who is not troubled by their
surroundings, but simply rides the current and adapts, being
well-balanced within. In practice this form is truly the mastery
of all squash forms, and if a player dedicated themselves
exclusively to moderation form, the player can expect to study
all styles for decades before achieving mastery.
Weakness in the moderation form comes when the user has not
mastered all forms. Being unable to execute all forms prevents
adaptability and eventually leads to confusion. All open level
players may eventually master moderation form, but usually favour
a form that is dictated by there body type and fitness
level.
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