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#1 |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: korea but NZer
Posts: 906
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hi...i always liked Ivan Lendl when I was a kid....disliked becker funnily enough
and of course edberg's back-arch serve was famous...but to get to the point..I was watching some vids and I realised just how good lendl's technique must have been considering the racquet he's using> what is the sq in total? what is the frame made of (hard to tell)? what strings is he using? How tight did he like the strings? Would really appreciate any answers to these questions. There was a recently a thread about best backhands..the usual suspects came up..agassi/safin/kuerten/connors etc...didn't see lendl much. what's more..lendl has this awesome looking running backhand where he often hits the ball up the line..I remember watching this as a kid. PS: scary how mcuh lendl's strokes reming me of fed..or is it vice versa? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MFsPbYBLDE
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So does he have a weakness? yeah..he can't cook - chang talking bout sampras |
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| obsessedtennisfandisorder |
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#2 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 10,505
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His secret on fh was a perfect timing and execution helped by a long arm
Backhand improved and was great on the passing but not as good and reliable as his fh
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" I have watched plenty of matches of the 70īs and 80īs" ABMK, the historian |
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#3 |
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New User
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Loved Lendl too. My tennis coach still corrects my FH prep which is modeled after Lendl - says too demanding on my pec and shoulder blade muscles.
His racket was an Adidas made of either carbon or graphite. I think its 85 sq inch. And he used natural gut |
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#4 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Houston / Perpignan
Posts: 2,569
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The GTX and GTX pro he used from adidas was graphite/fiberglass......and it was not a midsize....like 70sqin. He started using a midsize frame at the end of his career and at Wimby when he was desperate to win a title.
I'm sure some of the GTX adidas experts here will chime in with exact specs. I first remember seeing him at the orange bowl in the late 70s when he was using if I remember right a Maxply Fort....still had a HUGE forehand! Solid serve and his backhand got better and really strong after 1982.....had a wicked slice as well. |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: The Future
Posts: 377
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I enjoy hitting a topspin backhand with a high racquet take-back, using a non-extreme backhand grip. I also find the Lendl topspin backhand more aesthetically pleasing than Federer's topspin backhand, with the low take-back.
![]() ![]() TW should consider selling Lendl's stylish hat.
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"The illusion which exalts us is dearer to us than ten thousand truths." Pushkin |
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| Mike Bulgakov |
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#6 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: The Future
Posts: 377
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Quote:
By 1980, the young Ivan Lendl had established himself firmly in the top ten. He played a Kneissl White Star Pro at that time, the very first model of the famous White Star line. In December 1980, Kneissl introduced the White Star Ivan Lendl which was similar to the White Star Pro, but additionally featured the component kevlar. However, the name of the new White Star racquet actually was an anachronism, as the Kneissl/Lendl era should very soon come to an end: Beginning from 1 January 1981, Lendl was contracted with adidas, from then on playing the Adidas GTX Pro Graphite which was identical with the White Star Pro, a true paint job. Shortly before his contract with Adidas began, on occasion of the Davis Cup final CSSR vs Italy (4:1) in December 1980, Lendl had already played a Kneissl White Star Pro revarnished into Adidas design. But Lendl`s shift to Adidas actually was a name game only, as Kneissl produced the GTX Pro Graphite for Adidas in Austria. Later on, the Adidas GTX Pro Graphite Ivan Lendl was made in a separate factory in France on behalf of Adidas, but evidently Kneissl still sold Adidas the respective molds. Lendl used to play the GTX Pro and soon thereafter the personalized and slightly modified version, the GTX Pro Graphite Ivan Lendl (again, a paint job, as this racquet was identical with the Kneissl White Star Lendl) until 1985, then switching to the GTX Pro-T, a slightly modified GTX Pro Graphite Ivan Lendl with a new design. However, at Wimbledon 1985, by way of exception Lendl used the black Adidas GTX Mid-T frame and lost to Henri Leconte in the fourth round. In the course of the 80ies, Adidas produced quite a large variety of other rackets carrying Lendl`s name (e.g. the CF series), almost exclusively midsize rackets, but not all of these proved to be really good tennis rackets. In 1985, Adidas wanted Lendl to switch to the Adidas Ivan Lendl CF 25-G, but Lendl didn`t come to grips with the 25% larger head size, sticking to his GTX Pro Graphite Ivan Lendl. As a consequence, Adidas launched the GTX Pro-T in the aftermath. Lendl terminated his Adidas contract as of 31 Decemver 1989, moving to Japan company Mizuno. He entered a multi-year 15 million USD (plus bonus) deal with Mizuno for both racquets and clothes that should last from 1990 until 1995 (Lendl resigned in 1994). Nevertheless Lendl still played his GTX Pro-T for a bit, until Mizuno made him his old Kneissl/Adidas racquet with a Mizuno paint. They even sold an exact version of this model in Japan only. The rest of the world got the frame Lendl used to play solely on grass at Queens and Wimbledon, the 90si version which had a considerably larger head size than the GTX Pro-T paint job. With the Mizuno Lendl 90si, Lendl at least won Queens in 1990. Mizuno Ivan Lendl racquets are highly expensive, much sought-after collector racquets. http://www.80s-tennis.com/pages/ivan-lendl.html
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"The illusion which exalts us is dearer to us than ten thousand truths." Pushkin |
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| Mike Bulgakov |
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#7 |
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Professional
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,369
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Loved his running BH pass - thing of beauty.
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| Paul Murphy |
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#8 |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Bloomington, IN
Posts: 6,772
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#9 |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 5,476
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80's Indoor Tennis -
I think of Lendl hitting a forehand into McEnroe's gut. |
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#10 |
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Professional
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,146
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I advocate high take back as well. In fact higher than Lendl. a la Gasquet or Almagro.
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#11 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 10,505
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Quote:
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" I have watched plenty of matches of the 70īs and 80īs" ABMK, the historian |
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#12 |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 83
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I learned tennis in the 80s and it's funny to see the backhand of players like Lendl--what I learned in tennis camp as the ideal bh seems so different from what even the one-handers hit now. To me, one of the main differences seems to be the way players like Borg, Lendl or Mac bend their knees and step into it; Almagro, Gasquet and Fed are usually completely upright. I take it one of the reasons for this is the game is faster now and the players don't have the time they once did, so even a one handed bh seems to engage the core more rather than the legs. it's interesting how these things have evolved over time.
Check out the difference in Lendl's follow-through, back in the day vs. 2011. The latter looks much more to me like Almagro, Fed, Gasquet, etc. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFjgkbN4xnc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeJBdlqwpmg |
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#13 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 744
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I think maybe the best forehand the game has seen. I can't imagine how good it might have been with today's racquets and poly strings. And before the *******s jump in here, yes Fed has an excellent fh but I think Lendl's was more consistant day in and day out.
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#14 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,751
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Wilson had the Solar Eclipse hat a few years ago. Columbia has one in their line up.
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GAMMA 4000 + WISE | PRINCE SPEEDPORT GOLD |
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#15 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Houston / Perpignan
Posts: 2,569
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Those "legionnaire" style caps very common down in OZ (that's where Lendl first saw them and started wearing' em). But now Prince, Wilson....others have brought them over, you can find them online or in some of the larger online tennis shops.
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#16 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 866
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Quote:
Always felt like a zombie wearing them though... once Rochie started coaching him they became in fashion. |
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#17 |
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New User
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My such visual is a Lendl forehand winner so powerfull that I could hardly follow the balls path. Heck many of those times I could not see the ball at all after being struck by Lendl
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#18 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Bierlandt
Posts: 9,964
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Quote:
It has a small head, weighs 14 ounces or so, and is stiffer than a board. It is a brutal beast.
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The smart man thinks he knows a lot; the wise man is aware that he knows little. Last edited by hoodjem : 12-08-2012 at 02:26 PM. |
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#19 |
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Professional
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 1,066
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