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#1 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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not with the arm for volleys.
so on this one I think Oscar is off. leading with the hand is exactly most amateurs hit poor volleys.... i don't see what benefit can come with 'leading with the hand'. |
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#2 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,231
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Wouldn't that depend on old school or new school? Just like for groundies?
Martina is definetely old school, where you move your feet for every volley. Modern volleyers would like to move their feet for every volley, but sometimes the ball comes just too plain quick, and it's all hand to block off a winner. Then you add volleying off hard backspin balls, and hard topspin balls, where a longer sweetspot/strikepoint is important, so bring back the feet. |
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#3 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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there is old school new school for volleys?
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#4 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,231
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There's new and old school for serves, groundies, volleys, and every stroke.
New is adapting to make it work in today's better fitness, hard hit topspin shots, including more topspin lobs, dipping passing shots, and low slice teasers. Old needs to deal more with fast incomers and heavy slice attempts. And today's slower courts make a difference too....coupled with more powerful rackets that seem to aid groundies, but do little change for volleys. |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: NY
Posts: 271
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Personally, I like a compromise between two extremes: leading with the shoulder. This always forces me to move forward to meet the ball (as I've had problems with hitting volleys to my side or almost behind me).
It also reduces unnecessary help from the wrist/elbow, which is a common problem with tennis players unaccustomed to hitting volleys. |
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#6 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 25,920
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I heard that too. I think she was also talking about strokes in general - that it is a bad idea to rely only on the hands, the feet and body should be used.
I would certainly go with what a top player like her says. |
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#7 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 360
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From a new player perspective, what I see at lower level is bad footwork, standing flat footed, not having the racquet up and not catching a volley out front, but more of a last minute upward swipe to deflect the ball. I like when I hit a great heavy topspin ball from the baseline in dubs and know the net player is gonna to try to approach it in that way. Fun way to draw an error. I do plenty of that myself as well but I'm working on it
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#8 |
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Professional
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 1,066
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Paraphrasing Rod Laver... he said for volleys he keeps the racquet work simple and is aggressive with his feet.
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#9 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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Quote:
the hand... well... just too 'out there'. |
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#10 |
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Professional
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 1,066
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#11 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Los Angeles, California
Posts: 107
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Quote:
Since new people to tennis already know how to move the feet but not how to strike a ball perfectly with the volley, I teach them this aspect first: how to find the ball perfectly with the hand and racquet and the technique within the volley. It would be like teaching the person, since they already know how to move, how to shake a hand, how not to squeeze a ladies hand too hard, how to do it firmly but not overdue it, etc. The problem with teaching the feet first is that the person learns to adjust the stroke with their feet and lose the adjustment with the hands, which is the final touch. With advanced players, and I had this case with a top junior player two weeks ago,because of the tendency of adjusting the feet for the volley rather than doing the final adjustment with the hand, at high speeds he lost precision. So I told him to keep the racquet close to his body (using the non playing hand as a restraint by holding onto the racquet longer than usual), first lean and slide the leading foot out, and then jumping with a cross over while finding the ball and firmly tightening up the grip at impact. The results were extraordinary. He found that he had at least 50% more court coverage, more precision, more control overall, and more power as well. So that is probably what Martina Navratilova was referring to. You move your body first, than you execute your stroke. But she had great hands on the volley. So did John McEnroe, who, in my opinion, is the best volleyer ever. By the way, this is in my first book in 1989, which ended up in Eastern Europe, and Patrick McEnroe told me it helped him fix his own forehand when he was ion the tour. And on my latest works as well. I am glad you queried me on this, because many of my works have been misunderstood by posters in these threads.
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Oscar Wegner Modern Tennis Methodology |
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#12 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 25,920
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Martina was merely pointing out that the guy volleyed (twice in a row) with his hand disengaged from the body and kind of floating around. She wanted the arms tucked in closer to the body and the feet and body to be behind the shot, rather than it being all arm, and (I think) she generalized this use of feet and body to all strokes, if I caught her comments properly.
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#13 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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thanks Oscar for the clarification.
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#14 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: somewhere in calif
Posts: 2,357
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| tennisdad65 |
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#15 |
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Professional
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Boston
Posts: 889
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Mac's heavy racquet helped him knock in his volleys. That and genius.
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sharp < > lucid |
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#16 |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,294
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well, mac's volley fundamentals are really not different from the others, he just does it better.
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