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#1 |
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New User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 83
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Is is too much to ask a young player (age 7-10) to be as technically sound as a pro with their serve? Does their lack of strength in the shoulders, core, and legs prevent them from reaching certain reference points on the serve?
I've found it difficult to help my 8 year old son avoid the Waiters Tray error (palm and racket face facing up) on his serve. At first, he tended to bypass the "Trophy" pose and immediately hold the Waiters Tray position. Now, after an adequate Trophy pose, he's dropping the racket to the Waiters Tray position at the beginning of his racket drop, or sometime after the racket drop. He's holding a continental grip; but he's obviously not successfully holding the racket "edge on" until the last split second (it seems he's pronating too soon). Is this a technical issue that young kids can master, or is it still somewhat a strength issue? Any tips out there on what one should be "feeling" when going from Trophy pose to the racket drop? I've heard that you want the uncoiling of the body and the powering up of your legs to happen first, and then the racket drop will happen rather naturally. But, will this altogether prevent the Waiters Tray error? Thanks for any thoughts and suggestions. |
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#2 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 402
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He's in the wrong grip. Cannot achieve the "waiters tray" with the continental grip. Needs to rotate grip 1 bevel counterclockwise. It's going to fell weird to him and he will complain. I would not be too concerned with the lower body yet. The grip, pronating and the swing is important.
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| coaching32yrs |
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#3 |
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Semi-Pro
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Have him start in a position like a big "L", with his hitting arm being the bend and toss arm the long part of L. Basically just before trophy pose, make sure racket is on edge, and have him toss and drop into the racket drop (back scratch, whatever) and get the feeling of the position. he can toss, drop in, and hit, do two or three practice tosses for each attempted hit. As he gets it, start to do full service motion incorporating the new transition. I could get more technical, just trying to keep it simple, I'm sure you will get more feedback.
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Wilson Ad Staff, 3 BLX Six One and 3 Blade Tour, Team K-Swiss |
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| Bash and Crash |
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#4 |
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New User
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 67
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Work one thing at a time. forget knee bend, forget lowerbody, forget hip rotation, i would not even give the ball to him initially. just hold it in trophy position, swing up and stop. the racquet face while dropping, you can tell him should be parallel to the his head/back. this way he CANNOT get a waiters tray position. break down each of the milestone positions. work on it and slowly build on each one. i would say for a smooth flow of basic full service it should take 1-2 years. this is just basic. then as he grows and gains strenght then add on more pro stuff.....
Also the key is to give him a 25inch racquet to begin with if not 23 inch. |
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| tennisfan69 |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 147
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I recommend you let him watch a video or show him how to serve instead of talking about it. It might be too much info to process for and adult(I know it is for me) and very difficult for a child. Have him watch the video right on the court and then tell him to imitate it. You are probably showing it to him as well, but if you find a player he wants to emulate that might be more productive. I read this in a book and then tried it with my son(forehand) and for the next 10 minutes his forehand was whipping and making winners like crazy. After that he forgot about it, so it needs to be a repeat process.
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#6 | |
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New User
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 70
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Quote:
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| nightfire700 |
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#7 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Irvine, CA
Posts: 143
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Quote:
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Director/Head-Coach Southern California Tennis Academy |
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#8 |
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New User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 83
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Thanks for the suggestions thus far.
When going from the Trophy Pose to the racket drop, is it good advice to feel gravity taking your racquet down (implying loose grip and loose arm)? Further, it is well established that pro's keep their racket "edge on" until just before making contact with the ball (pronating at the very last "second"). Are young kids able to replicate this? Is it ever OK for them to pronate a little bit sooner? Thanks. |
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#9 |
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New User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 83
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Would still love any insights that pertain to my last post.
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#10 |
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Semi-Pro
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Postpre, I've always felt that the pronating action takes care of itself if everything is done correctly. Have him drop a ball and try to hit the right side spinning it, like bounce down but with tons of spin, as he gets more spin and control hitting it down, then have him toss up and do it with a serve motion. Ball may shoot left(rightie) at first, but make adjustments, then try to have him brush more 7-2 across the back, if he gets a hang of it you will see the pronating happen on its own.
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Wilson Ad Staff, 3 BLX Six One and 3 Blade Tour, Team K-Swiss |
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| Bash and Crash |
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