PARIS — A pair of 22-year-old Swedes has risen to the top of the beach volleyball world with an innovative technique that could prove to be as revolutionary as the forward pass in football or high jumping's Fosbury Flop.
The ''Swedish Jump-Set,'' as it has become known, is a move in which the player jumps as if to spike the ball but instead sets it to his partner. The misdirection forces the opponent to leave his feet, so that he is out of position when the ball is actually passed.
''We call it the modern style of beach volleyball,'' Australia's Mark Nicolaidis said after losing to the Swedish team of David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig in the preliminary stage at the Paris Olympics. ''Every sport gets to a point where what's been working for the last five, 10, 20 years doesn't work anymore. There have to be some people that innovate the game.
''Some of the work they've been doing was a big risk when they first came on the tour,'' Nicolaidis said. ''They've crafted a really good game style and it's been working consistently for the past few years.''
Volleyball, and its beach offshoot, are three-touch games where for decades the usual sequence has been bump-set-spike: One player receives the ball and passes it forward to a setter, who then lofts it above the net to set up his partner for the kill.
All teams occasionally hit the ball over the net on the second shot — whether as an element of surprise or because their partner, having dived for a ball, is out of position. But the Swedes are the first to rely on the jump-set as a first option.
''We know that if we're going to win matches we have to go for it every ball,'' Hellvig said. ''And, it's when we play normal 1-2-3 — that's when we don't perform as well. So we know that we just have to keep going for it, and have no doubts.''
Every sport evolves; fans of early basketball or American football wouldn't recognize the games as they are played today. Beach volleyball itself has seen some innovation — for example, the bump set giving way to the overhead set, or the jump serve being replaced by long, floating offerings.