Let's discuss Pat Dougherty's article, "Why I Prefer the Pinpoint Stance"
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Why I Prefer the Pinpoint Stance
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I really like Pat's thought on the serve, the pinpoint, the limbo, winding the spring, and using the ball of the front foot as the base on the serve stance(toe of the foot pointing toward the netpost). He addresses all of this throughly in his outstanding Instructional Video "Serve MPH", which I bought years ago. I have one quick question for Pat. He points out how he likes sliding the back foot up to form the pinpoint. How about these players like Roddick and Monfils who basicly just start with a very narrow platform(pretty much a pinpoint) and just stay there? It seems to simplify the technique just taking out the back foot sliding up.
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You could certainly begin in a much more narrow stance if that's your style preference without impeding key fundamentals. I often do a drill where the weight starts on the front foot and the back foot rests on the tip of the shoe perpendicular to the ground. This trains the front side to be able to develop balance and the whole motion can be done from the front foot. I attached a video of me working with Ramos-Vinolas in Spain several years ago to create the winding/coiling hip and shoulder separation in set-to-launch. He really like the concept of feeling tightly coiled with the hitting elbow stretched back, chest aimed up and shoulder blades nearly touch each other, same as you feel when drawing an arrow fully back in a bow. I use many conceptual models as you can tell which helps overcome potential language barriers. https://youtube.com/shorts/JFE0rR9Cg...rIQXQPqnjI8t2DConceptual-based tennis instruction with renowned "Serve Doctor" Pat Dougherty, a stroke & movement technique specialist and current Head of Tennis IQ at IMG Academy. Pat created the breakthrough AP Belt Tennis Training System. "A.P. Belt Training provides the aspiring athlete in movement-based sports like Tennis, innovative tools along with a habit development program, to build themselves into the best athlete they can become. The patented A.P. Belt uses resistance to provide "real time" feedback during training to reinforce correct techniques and breakdown inefficient tendencies. A.P. Belt Training empowers athletes to accelerate the "developmental curve" by understanding how to lock in on the ideal "zone" of productivity." Find all products at WWW.APBELT.COM. Pat also created a best seller, "Serve Doctor presents, M.P.H." Digital download available at WWW.APBELT.COMLast edited by patdougherty; 04-04-2024, 04:53 AM.
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Well, after all these years listening to Mark Kovacs, the biomechanical king of tennis, talking about how insufficient back leg drive is one of the key deficiencies for most serves (and implementing his drills to get the back leg more involved), now Pat basically argues the opposite. Who knows what to believe.
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Originally posted by fedisthebest View PostWell, after all these years listening to Mark Kovacs, the biomechanical king of tennis, talking about how insufficient back leg drive is one of the key deficiencies for most serves (and implementing his drills to get the back leg more involved), now Pat basically argues the opposite. Who knows what to believe.
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I don't want to say anything disparaging about anyone in the industry but understand having a doctorate in one specific topic doesn't equate necessarily to expertise in everything. All I can say is, I have introduced and coined the terminology of "athletic foundation" into the industry in my "Killer Forehand" production work. And in that same video, also introduced the concept of my patented A.P. Belt system, In the R & D phase of my invention,I did extensive research on the fundamentals of movement which attracted David Bailey to studying my work many years ago as he shadowed me on the courts. Having been in person at Kovacs presentations on movement, several things I would disagree with in his understanding of movement techniques.
On Serve, there is little value to launching from the back foot side in the pinpoint and can conflicts from both sides trying to contribute to the upward launch often creates sync problems on platform. I can show you a laundry list of players of not just top players where I've contributed to their Serve development plus many others I haven't contributed to, who demonstrate exactly what I'm sharing in the article. Having said that, don't look to blindly follow anyone's words as gospel....do your own research and apply your own knowledge from what you learn from slo motion video as well as credible industry influencers.
Remember, some folks are truly in the industry to give back to the sport while others seem to be just in it to take from the sport without any track record of giving much back.
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Our soon to be #1 in the world Sinner recently switched from Platform to Pinpoint stance and his serve has improved immensely.Last edited by patdougherty; 04-13-2024, 03:07 AM.
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I would put it like that:
Used Symbols:
\ Front hip down
/ Front hip up
On a good platform Serve you start with
1: Weight on front foot, hip tilt \
2: Weight on back foot, hip tilt \
3: Weight on back foot, hip tilt /
4: Weight on front foot, hip tilt / and launch
On Pats serve technique phase 3 is lesser pronounced and you need the bringing in of the foot for the weight transfer and hip tilt reversal and on the platform serve you need a circular windup for this. Im thinking Mark Kovacs is advocating a more pronounced phase 3. I dont think anybodys wants to drive upward and forward with the back leg. So nobody here is really wrong.
I hope i could clear this up. I just say for the platform stance this 4 phases are getting me started now. With a static weight on both feet im stuck.
Kind regards
Gerd
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A great article which goes a little against the grain of conventional methods these days...as more and more coaches seem to err towards teaching platform, at least in my neck of the woods.
I am happy to teach pinpoint or platform but my most common concern when teaching young kids the pinpoint stance is where that rear foot ends up sliding up to. It can end up sliding all over the place if you don't watch it. The great thing about platform is that, to me, there is less to go wrong with it from a coaching perspective. It's simple and easy to teach.
I am curious if Pat teaches pinpoint exclusively or whether he lets players go with the flow of what feels right to them.
I can see the benefits pinpoint holds over platform in terms of the ability to drive up, and done well, like with Sinner, it can make for a great serve.
Stotty
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