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#1 |
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New User
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 10
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I just started taking lessons from my friend, he's not a well established tennis pro, but I feel that he helps my game more than any other person I've taken lesson from. He feels that I should switch to an eastern grip from my current semi-western grip. He says that using an eastern grip gives me easier power and exerts less energey. I plan on taking four lessons a week until the end of december. Would not changing my grip effect my lesson in a negative way? I'm at a 4.0 level and want to basically adapt my game to be similar to my coaches, does this mean it's necessary to change my grip to get the most benefit from his lessons? I've experimented with using an eastern grip and it doesn't feel comfortable. I'm not sure how long it would take for me to be comfortable using an eastern grip but do you guys think it would pay off?
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#2 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,765
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You've answered it yourself already, it didn't feel comfortable to you. Why jeopardize your entire game just to play like someone else? It's perfectly OK to deviate from your coaches.
Since you already have a semi-western grip, there's nothing you can do with an eastern that you can't already do with a semi-western. The notion of "easy power" really means a flatter shot, which you can already do with a semi-western. Also, a change to certain grips doesn't mean you'll advance to another level. Changing grips changes a lot of things, your footwork, your swing path, and most importantly, your contact point. I have an eastern grip, and I wouldn't advise anyone to change to it for the same reasons I won't change to a semi-western.
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Wilson BLX Six.One Tour 90. 374g, 8pts HL, SW=355 (according to TW's calculator) |
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#3 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 2,348
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This is really the kind of question that you need to answer yourself- based on your own feelings and knowledge of your own game.
If it were me and I was deciding for myself; I would ask my self if I felt comfortable with my SW grip, if I felt any discomfort of shortcoming from using it, if I had confidence in it and if it suited my style of play and my concept of how the game should be played. I would base my decision on the answers to those kinds of questions. |
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| Bagumbawalla |
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#4 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 1,232
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Quote:
-------------------------------------- OP: You get a pretty easy and fluid swing using an eastern grip, both on the FH and BH side, that's probably what he means by exerting less energy. I'm guessing that if you're at 4.0 and using a SW grip, you can take a pretty good rip at meduim height to high balls. Trying an eastern grip, have someone hit you a couple of high bouncing moonballs, a few high paceless shots, and a few lobs at the baseline. You'll probably find that it is quite difficult to attack these shots with the Eastern grip in comparison to the SW grip. You could find your answer right there.
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Travelling the world!
Posts: 137
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I've been playing over 20 years and my coach taught the traditional eastern but now I wish I grew up with a sw. To me e doesn't have the margin for error as the sw.
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Ozone-Athletics |
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#6 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,629
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Stay with your SW, start hitting the wall once in a while to flatten out your stroke. The wall allows you to listen and see the results of your swing. Usually, shortening the backswing also flattens out the shot, and you use less effort hitting the shot.
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#7 |
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New User
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 90
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Eastern grip allows u to hit flatter balls which gives more power
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#8 |
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New User
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 90
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your not comfortable with SW grip is because u r too used to eastern and haven't got used to it yet.. when u have hit 5000 balls with SW grip i m sure u will be used to it... as for what u should used i recommend SW grip as it allows for more spin which means it's more consistent.. it also doesn't mean u can rotate grip during a rally.. there r balls that u can hit with an eastern grip when u want the power or change it to sw grip if u want more spin
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#9 |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 9,287
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| Limpinhitter |
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#10 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 154
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You can be successful with any forehand grip (Eastern, SW, Western); it's just a matter of preference and which one suits YOUR game more. You certainly have successful examples of each at the pro level.
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#11 |
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Legend
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i use sw, but on some shots that are real wide or bouncing high i switch to eastern and just kind of tap it back in play. i didint used to be able to do that but i am finding as i get better, i can actually hit the ball using different grip
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Member of TW MAC. yes, we are better than you. and we bout to hop on a court to make another 'mil |
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#12 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Northern NJ
Posts: 317
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I sort of do a side swipe with my sw grip on high balls. I can't be the only one to do this and can say the results have been fairly positive.
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Yonex VCORE 95D - Pacific Classic 16 x MSV Co-Focus 1.18 @ 54/45 lbs |
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#13 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 3,159
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I hereby confess that I switch grips depending on what I am trying to do.
generally, the deeper in the court I am (or the higher the incoming ball), the further around I take my grip (towards W) I don't know if I would recommend this to anyone, as I have been playing 35 years and can hit a FH with pretty much any grip, it's probably better to find a grip that works and stick to it. to OP, if I were you, I wouldn't make the switch.
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| Timbo's hopeless slice |
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#14 |
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New User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 81
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You are right, but I don't think that he was referring to power and spin potential of the different grips so much. What I got was that he meant since you are using less racket-head speed to brush up for topspin, the ball has more pace for the same effort. At the same swing speed, less topspin equals more pace. That is what I think he meant at least
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#15 |
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Legend
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side swipe? do you mean like a squash shot a la sharapova type?
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Member of TW MAC. yes, we are better than you. and we bout to hop on a court to make another 'mil |
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#16 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Northern NJ
Posts: 317
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If it's the shot I'm recalling from memory then I would say yes. I tried a quick search to see what you were talking about to no avail.
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Yonex VCORE 95D - Pacific Classic 16 x MSV Co-Focus 1.18 @ 54/45 lbs |
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#17 |
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Legend
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what i used to do is that. on a real wide shot i would have eastern grip and actually hit a forehand slice chop side swipe thing. but lately i have been more trying to step in a lil more and use eastern grip, and hit more a flat shot back so my racket face is perpendicular to the court vs. open from before
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Member of TW MAC. yes, we are better than you. and we bout to hop on a court to make another 'mil |
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#18 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,629
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Nothing at all wrong with your wide slice forehand reply...
I just like to use a heavy slice for that ball, one that buys me time to recover and start to head back towards center of intersect, and one where the spin would give most players problems to take on a NML volley. Height over the net is usually safely low, like 3' above the net, so it goes deep to neutalize baseliners and low enough to force net people to hit UP on their approach volley. |
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#19 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 582
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I've always used the eastern on faster hardcourts. One thing people don't mention is that, if you want on certain shots, you can make the full eastern grip act like a semi-western grip by keeping the racquet face a bit closed and brushing up at contact. That way you can get the benefit of both types of grips. The drawback is that it takes a strong grip and a strong wrist to do that trick. I like the eastern for serve return and for hitting low flat shots. Most new young players are taught the SW nowadays, I think.
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| rufus_smith |
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#20 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,176
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Quote:
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