Everything in Tennis Ball comes down to when and where you make contact with the ball. Here is how to refine both.
Hit the ball at the peak of its bounce. Contacting the ball at its highest point in Tennis Ball gives you the most options for direction and the best margin over the net. Hitting too early catches the ball on the rise, which is faster but riskier. Hitting too late means the ball is dropping, reducing your control.
Position yourself behind the ball, not beside it. Standing to the side forces awkward contact angles in Tennis Ball that send the ball in unintended directions. Moving so the ball is directly in front of you produces the cleanest, most controllable shots.
Create angles by hitting from wide positions. When the ball pulls you to one side of the court in Tennis Ball, you gain access to sharper crosscourt angles that are impossible from the center. Use these wide positions to hit angled shots that stretch your opponent rather than trying to power the ball through them.
Recover to center immediately after hitting. The time between your shot and your opponent's return in Tennis Ball is your recovery window. Using that window to get back to the center of the baseline ensures you can reach the next shot regardless of where it goes.
Practice consistency before power. In Tennis Ball, a moderate shot that lands in the court is always better than a hard shot that misses. Build a foundation of reliable returns first, then gradually add pace as your timing becomes more precise. The players who make the fewest errors win the most points.