I really liked the article. I'm afraid an awful lot of it is going to go right over the head of the average tennis pro, much less player. I have to use all the skills of an engineering degree and the biomechanics I've learned as a chiropractor to follow the physics and mathematics of what he is saying, much less the anatomy.
But I'm wondering if I've got this right. I break this down to the power comes from the bottom up. If you are off the ground you can't add any more power. It's all a question of how you transfer the power to the end of the kinetic chain. We all know you can serve almost 80 kneeling, but getting that other 40 to 60 mph requires great leg and torso action. What he is saying is if you tilt too much you can get more rotation, but you limit the speed you can generate with transfer from your legs and torso and you overstess the upper body and particularly the upper extremity to make up for that lost power.
I'm on board with all of this analysis, but I have a problem with the fact that everyone is so obsessed with power. Success on the tennis court is and always has been and always will be determined by CAP, consistency, accuracy and power. The more powerful player beats the more accurate and consistent player by making him play at a pace at which he is no longer more consistent or more accurate; at least that's my explanation. But in serving, everyone is so concerned about how to generate the maximum amount of power, while paying little attention to the other aspects of the service motion that contribute to consistency of the toss and accuracy of the service placement. There is such a thing as the kinesthetic imagery we utilize to enable us to hit the ball to a specific spot. The motion of the racket and its momentum in the preparation to hit the ball effect the way we are able to be consistent and accurate, as well as powerful. The toss is just as important to that consistency and accuracy as it is to putting the body in a loaded position that enables it to bring real power to the serve, probably more important to consistency and accuracy.
But I never hear anyone talking about this. I'm so fed up with commentators talking about the "modern abreviated toss" that is more effective. I don't buy it. Gonzales adopted that toss late in his career because of shoulder problems, but he had already hit a couple of million good serves and when his arm got anywhere near the "backscratch", his body knew exactly what to do. But when a kid tries that toss today, his racket swings is a plane perpendicular to the plane to the target and he has to overcome that perverse momentum as he tries to get the racket back on the line to the target. Furthermore, when you just lift the arm up from an abbreviated position at the bottom, you lose the benefit of the automatic rhythm of a gravity drop. The players of the past almost all had that simple hands down and up together motion. They also had a more consistent and accurate serve. I don't know what the data shows, but I suspect it would show that great servers of the 60's and 70's served a much greater percentage of first serves, admittedly at a lower mph, but with other technology. Guess what, that's what Federer does when he has it working as he did at the recent ATP Championships.
anyway, its late. I hope someone has a response.
don
But I'm wondering if I've got this right. I break this down to the power comes from the bottom up. If you are off the ground you can't add any more power. It's all a question of how you transfer the power to the end of the kinetic chain. We all know you can serve almost 80 kneeling, but getting that other 40 to 60 mph requires great leg and torso action. What he is saying is if you tilt too much you can get more rotation, but you limit the speed you can generate with transfer from your legs and torso and you overstess the upper body and particularly the upper extremity to make up for that lost power.
I'm on board with all of this analysis, but I have a problem with the fact that everyone is so obsessed with power. Success on the tennis court is and always has been and always will be determined by CAP, consistency, accuracy and power. The more powerful player beats the more accurate and consistent player by making him play at a pace at which he is no longer more consistent or more accurate; at least that's my explanation. But in serving, everyone is so concerned about how to generate the maximum amount of power, while paying little attention to the other aspects of the service motion that contribute to consistency of the toss and accuracy of the service placement. There is such a thing as the kinesthetic imagery we utilize to enable us to hit the ball to a specific spot. The motion of the racket and its momentum in the preparation to hit the ball effect the way we are able to be consistent and accurate, as well as powerful. The toss is just as important to that consistency and accuracy as it is to putting the body in a loaded position that enables it to bring real power to the serve, probably more important to consistency and accuracy.
But I never hear anyone talking about this. I'm so fed up with commentators talking about the "modern abreviated toss" that is more effective. I don't buy it. Gonzales adopted that toss late in his career because of shoulder problems, but he had already hit a couple of million good serves and when his arm got anywhere near the "backscratch", his body knew exactly what to do. But when a kid tries that toss today, his racket swings is a plane perpendicular to the plane to the target and he has to overcome that perverse momentum as he tries to get the racket back on the line to the target. Furthermore, when you just lift the arm up from an abbreviated position at the bottom, you lose the benefit of the automatic rhythm of a gravity drop. The players of the past almost all had that simple hands down and up together motion. They also had a more consistent and accurate serve. I don't know what the data shows, but I suspect it would show that great servers of the 60's and 70's served a much greater percentage of first serves, admittedly at a lower mph, but with other technology. Guess what, that's what Federer does when he has it working as he did at the recent ATP Championships.
anyway, its late. I hope someone has a response.
don
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