News & Stories

The Pickleball Mental Game: Anticipation, Patience & Closing Matches

By Jason Regan · July 2, 2026

Pickleball player focused during a match

The 30-second version

  • Anticipation — reading your opponent’s paddle and body a shot early — is what separates 4.5 from 5.0.
  • Stay patient and reset after every error; play one point at a time.
  • Control the tempo — slow the game down when you’re rattled, and use routines between points.
  • Closing a match is a skill: keep doing what got you the lead, and make your opponent earn every point.

Part of our guide to improving your pickleball game.

Pickleball player focused during a match

At the top levels, everyone can hit the shots — matches are decided by who reads the game better and who stays calmer under pressure. The mental game is a genuine skill you can train, and it pays off at every level, not just the pros.

Anticipation: read the game a shot ahead

Anticipation is positioning yourself for the shot that’s most likely coming, before it’s hit. You build it by:

  • Watching the paddle face and body. An open face and a low-to-high swing signal a lift; a closed face and a compact motion signal a speed-up. Read the cues, not just the ball.
  • Playing the percentages. If you hit a great dink to the backhand, expect a defensive dink back — and be ready for it. Your own shot tells you what’s likely to return.
  • Expecting the attack. Assume a speed-up is coming and keep your paddle up; it’s easier to relax than to suddenly get ready.

Patience and staying calm

  • One point at a time. Don’t replay the last error or jump ahead to the score — play the ball in front of you.
  • Reset after mistakes. Everyone makes errors; champions just forget them fast. A quick breath and a physical reset (tap paddles, adjust grip) clears the slate.
  • Don’t chase perfection. Aim to make the smart, high-percentage shot, not the highlight — patience beats hero-ball almost every time.

Control the tempo

When a match speeds up and you feel rushed, deliberately slow it down — take your time before serving, use a longer dink rally, breathe. Conversely, if an opponent is in a groove, changing the pace (a lob, a speed-up, a different serve) can break their rhythm. You control the tempo more than you think.

How to close out a match

Leads evaporate when players get tight and change what worked. To close:

  • Keep doing what built the lead — don’t suddenly play safe or go for more.
  • Make them earn it. Cut your unforced errors to zero and force your opponent to hit winners.
  • Stay in your routine — same breathing, same between-point reset — so pressure doesn’t change your game.

Mental-game drills

  • Call the shot: in practice, call your opponent’s shot type out loud as they wind up, to train your eyes to read cues.
  • Play from behind: start games down 0–5 to practice composure under pressure.
  • Error count: play games where the only goal is fewer unforced errors than your opponent — trains patience directly.

Which levels this skill helps

This skill shows up on these rungs of the skill ladder:

Frequently asked questions

How do I anticipate shots in pickleball?

Watch your opponent’s paddle face and body, not just the ball — an open face signals a lift, a closed face a speed-up. Play the percentages based on the shot you just hit, and expect the attack so you’re always ready.

How do I stop getting nervous or tight in pickleball?

Play one point at a time, use a between-point routine (breath, grip adjust, paddle tap), and slow the tempo down deliberately when you feel rushed. Aim for smart, high-percentage shots rather than perfection.

How do I close out a pickleball match?

Keep doing exactly what built your lead instead of playing safe or going for more, make your opponent earn every point by cutting your own errors, and stay in your normal routine so pressure doesn’t change your game.

How do I stay patient in pickleball?

Keep the ball low and dink until you earn a ball above the net, then attack that one. Track your unforced errors — most points are given away by impatience, and simply refusing to force shots wins matches.

Does the mental game really matter in pickleball?

A lot — especially as skills even out at higher levels. Anticipation, patience, tempo control, and composure decide close matches between players who can all hit the shots. It’s a trainable skill at every level.

Want a coach to fast-track it?

Reading is one thing — grooving it under pressure is another. I run private lessons and clinics in Central Mass that drill exactly these skills. Your first session is half off.

Book a lesson →

Get the Weekly Serve

New England pickleball — drills, tips to level up, gear deals, and weekend tournaments. One email a week. Free.

New England pickleball, in your inbox

Courts, tournaments, news, and paddle deals — one email each Sunday.