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#21 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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Quote:
how would you hit that FH, you'd keep the core rotation going thru the shot, right? you wouldn't stop the core and just let the arm go. so I am saying in order to windshield wipe that 1hbh, you have to keep the rotation going.... don't worry about 'staying sideways'. staying sideways goes hand in hand with the old ways of hitting forward... this is a mirror image of the old ways of staying sideways and hitting 5 balls in a row on the classic FH. if you stay sideways and try to address the ball with the leading edge and windshield wipe, you will flip the face shut and ball ducks in to the net. FH works the same way.... if you stay sidways and try to hit WW FH, the faces shuts and ball ducks into the net. |
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#22 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 176
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Quote:
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#23 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: On the courts; hard & clay ...
Posts: 4,310
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look at slow motion of federer, gasquet and almagro (probably closer to your grip). you do hit in front and have torso/shoulder rotation, but you are more sideways during contactthan with the forehand, even though you do finish with your arm high on the other side, just not with the racquet pointing at the back fence like in the forehand.
just look at the slow-mo and then practice/experiment.
__________________
Disclaimer: I'm NOT a coach... Real tennis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDqnkLJ9BtM |
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#24 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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sure.... due to how the human body is made.
open up means more open than edberg, not nipples and belly button to the target. |
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#25 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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you can tell edberg/sampras/lendl address the ball with the strings... too obvious with their body language and how they finish.... well for these guys with that 70-85in head, too many shanks to address with the edge.
guys/gals today don't hit that way. |
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#26 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 176
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Yeah I'm aware I'm not supposed to open up too much on this stroke, I play with a 90 sq. inch head but will try the whole lead with the edge thing
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#27 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 176
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btw, who is Oscar?
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#28 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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Wegner... he has this 'addressing the ball with leading edge' thing in his thread.
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#29 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 377
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Quote:
You want to keep your hitting arm relaxed. As you're approaching your contact zone. Don't try to add any extraneous movements, or be flipping anything around. Resist the urge to slap at the ball. As you push off the ground and reach forward, your racket-head will come through the contact zone cleanly. Avoid extraneous movements right before contact. Just pull the racket through your contact zone. The structure of your hitting arm changes very little during contact. Fuzzy Yellow balls website has some very good slo motion videos where they show how little the hitting arm structure changes during the contact zone. As you make contact with the ball, you want your motion to be clean, simple and repeatable. If you're relaxed and you follow through properly, your wrist will move some and you will relax and uncoil during the follow through. I'm not a scientist, but my hunch is that a lot of this is happening after the ball has left the strings. This will happen on it's own if you get the fundamentals right. During the contact phase of your stroke you want to avoid any extraneous movements and keep the stroke clean. Don't be consciously trying to deviate anything. Focus on the fundamentals first. After you have the fundamentals down and are comfortable, and are generating more rackethead speed, Your follow-through might look a little more elaborate, but that's a consequence of solid fundamentals like pushing off the ground, getting good early preparation and shoulder turn etc. Edit: watch Ljubicic right before, during, and after contact. He keeps things simple. He reaches forward and lets his big muscle groups pull the racket head through contact. Notice how clean and smooth everything looks. Notice how on some of his slower warmup rally balls where he doesn't generate as much racket head speed, he finishes his backhand drive with his front arm reaching out forward and pointing at his target. Try nice easy relaxed strokes where you're finishing like that and see how it feels. If you watch the video I posted earlier of Fed and Ljubicic hitting you will see Ljubicic hit backhands like this at around 40 seconds in and at 1:06. Last edited by FrisbeeFool : 01-15-2013 at 09:58 PM. |
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