Essential Solo Volleyball Drills: Train Anywhere Without a Partner
A complete guide to solo volleyball drills for passing, setting, hitting, and serving — with rep counts and progressions you can run against a wall or in the backyard.
Di VolleyLab Coaching Staff
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Il resto di questo articolo è disponibile in inglese mentre completiamo la traduzione.
Leggi la versione completa in ingleseYou do not need a full gym or a partner to make real progress. A wall, a ball, ten square metres of flat ground, and 30 focused minutes is enough to sharpen every contact you make in matches. This guide is the same solo template we hand club-level players who want to keep gaining on their off-days.
Why solo work still moves the needle
Skill retention is a reps game. In a 90-minute team practice you might touch the ball 60–120 times per session; a focused 20-minute solo block gives you 200+ purposeful contacts, all in your weak areas. The key word is purposeful — random wall-banging does not count.
Warm-up (5 minutes, do not skip)
- 40 arm circles (20 forward, 20 backward) to open the shoulders
- 20 walking lunges with a torso rotation on each step
- 2 × 30 seconds of pogo hops — soft ankles, tall posture
- 20 ball squeezes with each hand to wake up the forearms
Passing: wall control blocks
Stand 2.5–3 m from a smooth wall. The goal is not power — it is a clean platform and a repeatable target line on the wall roughly at head height.
- Two-arm passes, 3 sets of 25 — target the same spot on the wall each rep
- Alternating one-arm digs (10 left / 10 right, 2 sets) — elbow locked, thumb down
- Move-and-pass: shuffle 1 m left, pass; shuffle 1 m right, pass. 3 sets of 20
Between sets, reset your feet: shoulder-width, weight on the balls of your feet, chest over knees. If the ball keeps drifting right, your platform is angled right — square your shoulders to the target.
Setting: solo hand contacts
Setting is the easiest skill to grow alone because the mechanics are internal. Focus on hand shape and a symmetrical release.
- Ceiling sets, 3 sets of 30 — set the ball 2 m above your head, catch on the fingertips, reset
- Wall sets, 3 sets of 25 — target a spot 3 m up the wall, land soft
- Back sets against a wall, 2 sets of 15 — chest opens up, ball comes off the middle of the pads
Hitting: approach and armswing without a target
You cannot spike a real ball alone safely, but you can train the two things that decide most of your kill percentage: footwork rhythm and armswing.
- Approach reps, 5 sets of 6: left-right-left (or right-left-right), swing at nothing but a real jump each time
- Towel snaps, 3 sets of 20: rolled towel over the shoulder, snap it forward the same way you finish a swing — trains the wrist snap without a ball
- Wall self-tosses, 3 sets of 12: toss the ball high, approach, hit it into the wall at a downward angle. Track your landing balance more than the contact
Serving: 40 balls, one target
If you have any outdoor space or an empty gym, this is the highest-leverage solo work you can do. Put a cone or a towel in your target zone (deep corner) and serve 40 balls into it. Count the makes. Track the number each week.
Rules for the block: same toss height every rep, same pre-serve routine every rep, walk to collect after every 10. Ten quality serves beat forty sloppy ones.
Conditioning finisher (optional, 6 minutes)
- 30 seconds of block jumps, 30 seconds rest — 4 rounds
- 20 broad jumps, walk back to start
- 60-second plank with alternating shoulder taps
A sample 30-minute solo session
Warm-up 5 min → wall passing 8 min → setting 6 min → serving 8 min → cool-down stretch 3 min. Do this three times a week between team practices and you will feel the difference inside a month.
Common mistakes when training alone
- Rushing between reps — solo work rewards pace control, not volume
- Ignoring footwork because no one is watching
- Practising only what you are already good at
- Skipping the cool-down and paying for it the next day at team practice
Solo training is not a replacement for team practice — it is the multiplier that makes your team practice count. Bring a notebook, log your best set of the day, and come back tomorrow.
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