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#41 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
I would recommend more of a focus on the deeper cone, which is pretty deep, but still provides some extra margin. When you catch one strong and fly it, you will still have a great shot and some variety. Working the shorter aspects of the target have more specific intents such as working an angle off a nice short sitter from near the middle of the court (center T).
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#42 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: On my iPhone
Posts: 13,608
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I definitely have been doing that. Especially pushed wide. I can get a lot of spin with the 6.1 to hit winners that bounce off the allay side near the T of the service line/alley.
I think the main thing is the ralley balls. Setting up those winners. That is what I have to work on a little. I will work on the deeper cone you are talking about.
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#43 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
This diagram of hit placement shows that DJ does not hit as deep and close to lines as many would have you believe. There is no intent to say he uses these targets or ends up in them the majority of the time. I think many will see a relevance between what his shots show and how these targets work. It may be misleading to some for us to use this overlay, so I'm glad you asked this question. Thanks
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#44 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
1st is they are very broad and lack more specific guidance that helps shots to be more accurate. 2ond is the obvious lack of margin for error since the target is includes the lines and corners. 3rd is their use may be just backwards. Notice how the counter attack includes area near the center T. We have not posted it yet, but the next diagram I intend to get posted will show an "avoid zone" near the center T for singles play. Also on the attack aspect it includes the middle area that is deep to BL. That would be better on the counter attack chart and why hit there when on the attack? (yes there are some reasons, but they would be exceptions to the rule, not in the rule) Hitting a ball (even deep) gives the opponent a chance to reclaim center control and put you on the move to a weakness. Make sense?
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************ MTM Instructor -Pro Supex Big Ace Last edited by 5263 : 02-13-2012 at 07:32 AM. |
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#45 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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in that drill? Not the ideal for her. I expect if you were doing the drill with her on court it would be more clear for you about that. Also that is just a drill. Sometimes they drill using only half the court including the doubles ally. That does not mean they want you to use the doubles all in singles play though. BTW, the point of that drill is to have players learn to target within the boundaries consistently, NOT to hit at the boundaries -Svc line are. On court they make it very clear you are to greatly exceed that min acceptable svc line, often with comments like missing long is far more acceptable than being short of the svc line. I ask you-In a match, had you rather hit a solid shot 1" into the svc box or monster shot 1" pasts the BL?
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************ MTM Instructor -Pro Supex Big Ace Last edited by 5263 : 09-28-2012 at 10:24 AM. |
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#46 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
I hope that soon I can ask BU to add red box at the center T as an "Avoid Area" to the diagram shown in post #24. This square box should be about 7ft on the sides and centered on the center T (hint, hint BU)
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#47 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: expanding my Ignore List
Posts: 3,383
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A Head Microgel Radical, a Neos 1k, and a Silent Partner Star. Life is good. |
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#48 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
I wish it showed the misses as well. Things like that are what jumped out at me in my study and charting. Commentators and coaches often give such compliments for line shots and those that catch both lines as the "Perfect Placement" and such. Can really lead you to believe that they are good targets and pros hit there often. Tricky part here is that a lot of folks say a lot of things. It all goes into the brain and leads to certain ideas about the game. No coach or commentator has it all right or wrong, so we are being critical of certain ideas, not coaches. Coaches do their best, and here we are looking at some tools that might help us do better. My experience is broad having raised two D1 college players and coached about 20 yrs. We delt with the top Jr academies and several local ones. My kids were also picked for USTA high performance as top players, so we have seen a lot of what's out there. I just look to address some of these things that IMO could use improvement. Clearly the old stuff is not cutting it anymore for US players.
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************ MTM Instructor -Pro Supex Big Ace Last edited by 5263 : 02-13-2012 at 11:23 AM. |
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#49 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 160
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pros of hitting your shots deep:
-gives less time for your opponent to react -doesnt allow your opponent to step in to the court -makes your opponent return short/without pace balls so you can easily step in and hit an approach -as your opponent is far behind the court you can easily have the court open to hit an angle or a drop shot which will turn into a winner -doesnt allow oponent to attack or dictate -cons of hittinh your shots deep: NONE seriously guys its better to hit soft but deep balls than hard but short balls thats the key to win, the deeper you hit the shorter your opponent will hit then you step inner to the court and do whatever you want if you want an example watch federer play in those years where he played with absolute dominance, watch those guys running from side to side screaming those short return they hit while federer easily doesnt have to move to win the point and if you dont want to spend hours looking for a federer video then just watch the 2011 us open semi against djokovic, i assure you the 90% of the time that any of them hit a short ball the other ended up winning the point with a winner Last edited by andry16 : 02-13-2012 at 08:39 AM. |
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#50 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
-deep does not keep them from stepping into the court. they can step in and volley -notice you had to add the "no pace" to try and make this true, not just depth and you forget the importance in shot line on this -opponents can attack and dictate from deep balls -cons of hitting very deep none?? guess you never missed long? Con is lots of deep misses giving up free points Fed didn't hit as deep back in the days of his best. He didn't hit as deep to beat Del Potro as he did in his AO loss. Joker didn't hit so deep to win the AO. You can be assured they hit winners on far less than 20% of the shorter balls and probably less than 10%. Sorry, but little of your comments holds water.
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************ MTM Instructor -Pro Supex Big Ace Last edited by 5263 : 02-13-2012 at 11:26 AM. |
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#51 |
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Playnice
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Interesting concept here.
I don't think the point is counting how many balls are in each given area - it is obvious from a cursory glance that balls are clustered in certain parts of the court - no need to count the balls in the triangles IMO...It would be interesting to compare diagrams of one player over several matches, and from one player to the next to see unique or mutual patterns of play. I disagree that nobody can hit topspin like Nadal - not perhaps with his power and expertise, but even rec players can use heavy topspin to great advantage and that's being taught by some of us, with specific techniques and purpose. I agree it is also interesting how few balls are right at or on the baseline. For those who believe that a high percentage of shots land deep when watching a match live or on TV they must be focusing more on where the player is standing and how far back from the bounce the contact point is, not where the ball actually touches the court (as this charting suggests), but the speed of the ball is so great that it's difficult to see that. How would you suggest incorporating it into coaching at different levels? Tape, cones, line markers (as those used for quickstart?) Would you go for percentages (ie: practice 10 shots per area until you get a consistent percentage level)? I would also like to see the opposite perspective - where the ball lands and what the targets look like from the hitter's POV. My first reaction is to keep it simple, perhaps with larger triangles at first that could be reduced in size as the player reaches a certain percentage of consistency, on a gradient. I will try it out myself. Good work, 5263. |
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#52 |
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Playnice
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Posts: n/a
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Interesting how some posters just come on and start arguing rather than going out on the court and working with the concept, then coming back and discussing results and findings...Opinions hold less significance than results, IMHO (LOL)
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| Playnice |
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#53 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
On the other hand, the purpose of Smart Targets is to train to focus on a smaller area with your intent, but train our expectations to include a good result that is close enough to the target. I think larger/expanded targets could be great for beginners and kids.
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#54 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
I like to feed to parts of the court and have them hit to the targets from the various areas using their TS, Slices, and volleys. I also have the set up the cones to make sure they a familiar with the areas.
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#55 |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 860
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Great discussion, in this and other threads, which I have been silently following - thanks all.
I played a friendly set with a 4.5 USTA player and tried playing to smart targets. I lost 6-4. But this exposed some major weaknesses in my game that my opponent took advantage of, and pointed out areas where I need to do some work. First of all, even though I landed my shots approximately right, I sent the balls straight into my opponent's power zone (he's 6'3"), and he was hitting them back DTL. The tactic was right, but I needed to hit with more zip, and I think that will come with practice - I was definitely being too mindful of the target and too cautious with my stroke as a result. The second problem was my movement... I think I spent so much time looking at my handiwork that I didn't recover in time to respond to the DTL shots well, and couldn't take advantage of the open court. A third problem was that the court was very fast, and the ball kept lower than usual - I like higher bouncing courts where I can get more power and spin. This was taking some zip out of my shots, I am sure. And my opponent clearly realized this, and he was slicing many of his shots really low, making it hard for me to change direction even on inside balls. Perhaps I should have hit the difficult ones back to where they came from... oh well, live and learn, I suppose. Anyway, I am quite excited since I have some new goals now... it's great to have something new to work on. Last edited by bhupaes : 02-13-2012 at 01:13 PM. |
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#56 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 423
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Quote:
i prob forgot to mention that the the two zones of attack and counter are reactionary to the incoming ball from the op. so the attack zone is an attacking ball coming to you and so a counter would be appropriate. Note they are only guidelines it follows from the directionals but simply with zones so i know what to truly react at an instant. Given how the balls fly these days you don't have time to think whether a 'variable' depth is suitable for a certain type of play i 'm in the belief in the axiom you can only deal with what you've been dealt with so what you do is always response to what the op has given you. The dimension of space is accounted for in this thread but time isn't so much. A holistic scheme is the holy grail i guess, but that mystery is the reason for why the game is so fun
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#57 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
Maybe it would be more helpful for you to give a couple of examples of when hitting to one of your targets would be routinely better than to the smart targets and explain why? I'd be interested in what you have, especially considering the triangles are within your targets, right? thanks for your insights,
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#58 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
Glad it exposed some areas for you to work on and that is definitely part of the plan here. Also remember that the margin of error on these targets is to help you to let loose the power and spin, so don't get carried away with hitting the targets. Tagging a ball well and flying the long cone target by inches is not a bad thing!
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#59 | ||
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 860
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#60 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 7,443
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Quote:
Notice how this also is evidence (not proof) against the assumption that a ball landing closer to the BL would be a better shot. Notice only 2 winners near the BL, but several much shorter. More evidence would be there if 3-4+ misses were shown going long that would off set the risk incurred to elicit those 2 winners, leaving us with a net winner for that error in the neg zone. maybe BU or jmnk can draw in the smart target triangles on this one as well, along with the 7ft square avoid zone centered on the center T? I think we can see how most of the shots not landing in the targets, likely have been hit on the shot lines created bythe triangles, some shots just longer and some just short of the targets. thanks
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************ MTM Instructor -Pro Supex Big Ace Last edited by 5263 : 02-14-2012 at 10:27 AM. |
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