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#1 |
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New User
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 3
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I have been playing for a few years and my flat serves are sort of consistent. But during those years I had no clue that pronation existed and basically I've been serving without pronation.
How do I add pronation to my serve? I try turning my forearm wrist to the left before contact point of the ball (I'm a righthanded) and it'd just go to the side (or miss). What am I doing wrong? |
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#2 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: On my iPhone
Posts: 13,602
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google essential tennis and sign up for the free serve course. He explains every aspect of the serve. If you just think about the pronation part you will struggle. You need to check all the boxes on the way to contact, and that series really helps a lot.
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#3 |
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Talk Tennis Guru
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 22,629
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Hold the racket continental grip, hit a flat first serve. That requires pronation.
Hold the racket continental-eBACKhand grip, hit a topspin second serve. |
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#4 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 3,564
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Quote:
If you are using continental, another way to get more pronation is to not try to hit the ball too high. The more your forearm and racket make a straight line at contact, the more difficult it is to pronate. If you drop the contact zone to a point where there is an angle between the forearm and the racket, the more natural it will be to develop pronation. |
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| WildVolley |
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#5 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Baltimore, MD
Posts: 1,369
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Quote:
For example, see Reply #18 http://tt.tennis-warehouse.com/showthread.php?t=440427 Watch the elbow rotate very rapidly in about 0.03 seconds- http://vimeo.com/27528347 There are probably many ways to hit a serve but the pros all use internal shoulder rotation for pace and sound biomechanics. Unless you understand what internal shoulder rotation is you can't understand the high level service motion. Search: internal shoulder rotation serve |
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| Chas Tennis |
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#6 |
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Professional
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: NorCal
Posts: 1,045
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This helps::
If you are using continental, another way to get more pronation is to not try to hit the ball too high. The more your forearm and racket make a straight line at contact, the more difficult it is to pronate. If you drop the contact zone to a point where there is an angle between the forearm and the racket, the more natural it will be to develop pronation. |
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