Backhand Eastern Grip In Pickleball: Why Players Use It, Tradeoffs, And A Fast Track For Switching

Backhand Eastern Grip In Pickleball

The backhand eastern grip is showing up on more courts every season. Players are learning that a stronger backhand can unlock cleaner dinks, heavier rolls, and more confident returns. If you are debating a change, this guide explains why the grip works, what you give up, when to make the switch, and a simple plan to adopt it quickly.

What Is The Backhand Eastern Grip

From a neutral handshake on the paddle, turn your hitting hand a little toward the backhand side until your index-finger knuckle and heel pad are on the backhand bevel. The front of the paddle closes a little on the forehand side and opens a little on the backhand side. Think of it as a backhand-first setup that you can still use on forehands with a compact swing.

Why Players Use It

Backhand reliability. In the kitchen, the modern game makes you hit more balls with your backhand. A grip that favors the backhand makes it safer to block, dink, and reset when you’re under pressure.

Topspin on the roll.  You can brush up the back of the ball and roll through the middle or crosscourt lanes if you make contact a little in front and open the face a little more.

Cleaner defense.  It’s easier to handle the incoming pace when your wrist is stiffer on the backhand side. The paddle comes square, with no last-minute changes.

Two-hand options.  Adding a support hand to the eastern backhand orientation lets you hit drives, counters, and swinging volleys.

Advantages

Stable paddle face on blocks and resets. Less wobble in the face means fewer pop-ups.

Simpler mechanics at the kitchen.  You can use one grip for all the different types of dinks, pushes, and rolls.

Higher spin potential on backhand drives.  The path encourages brushing up and through.

Better reach on the off hip. The blade lines up with the forearm for short counterpunches.

Disadvantages

Forehand drive adjustment. To keep your forehands from sailing, you might need to shorten your backswing and turn your body more.

Over-closed face on low forehands.  Without a slight change in grip, touch forehands can hit the net.

Learning curve on serves and overheads. Some players like these strokes to feel more neutral or continental.

Transition period at the kitchen. Muscle memory from a forehand-first grip can help you fight the new angles for a few sessions.

When To Switch

Consider switching if three or more statements fit you.

• Your backhand dink or reset breaks down when the pace picks up.

• Your opponents aim for your backhand and win the hand battles.

• You depend on slice to get through backhand exchanges, and you have trouble adding a topspin roll.

• You’re getting ready to hit a two-handed backhand drive or counter.

• You already use a continental grip, but you want more spin and stability on your backhand shots.

The best time to make a full switch is during the two weeks of practice before a tournament or league cycle.

How To Train The Switch Fast

Day 1 to 3: Set the foundation

Grip checkpoints. Use a washable marker to make a small dot on the backhand bevel. Make sure your index knuckle and heel pad line up on the dot between reps.

Wall series, 10 minutes. Stand 12 feet away from a wall. Do 50 backhand blocks with a strong wrist, then 50 soft catches and pushes. Pay attention to your hands.

Kitchen ladder. Crosscourt backhand dinks in groups of 15. Add a soft roll to every third ball.

Day 4 to 7: Add offense and defense

Roll progression. Feed self tosses and rolls to small targets down the line, in the middle, and across the court. Maintain the contact point in front of your front hip.

Reset ladder.  Partner gives your body firm balls. Take in with as little backswing as possible and finish with the paddle tip touching the ceiling. Three sets of 12.

Hands battle rounds.  From the non-volley line, start with your backhand and play six ball exchanges. Practice short counters that hit your opponent’s feet.

Day 8 to 10: Blend forehand management

Forehand tune-up. Hit forehand dinks, pushes, and rolls while keeping the backhand in an eastern grip steady. To control launch angle, add body rotation and a shorter takeback.

Serve and third.  If the serves float, try moving a little bit toward neutral for the serve only, and then go back to backhand eastern for the drop or drive on the third shot.

Day 11 to 14: Pressure and measure

Goal games.  First to five points, but a rally only counts if you made at least one backhand roll or counter with the new grip.

Video check.  Ensure that contact is made in front, maintain a quiet wrist, and achieve a level finish. Change the angle of your face, not the speed of your swing.

Common Mistakes And Quick Fixes

Sailing forehands. Make the swing shorter and turn the body. To lower the launch, keep your wrist stiff.

Netted backhand rolls.  Lower your stance and touch farther away. Brush up, not across.

Late grip drift.  Set again between rallies. Use the dot until the position becomes second nature.

Bottom Line

The backhand eastern grip favors today’s fast exchanges and backhand-heavy patterns. You gain stability on blocks and resets and a clearer path to a topspin roll. You sacrifice a bit of forehand freedom, which you can solve with compact mechanics and smart rotation. Use the two-week plan above, track a few simple checkpoints, and you will switch with confidence and keep more points on your paddle.

Picture Source: I&G Pickleball