Service Ladders
Like anybody else, I would prefer to hit a beautiful serve or see a beautiful serve over reading a lot of words on either subject.
On the other hand, the education editor in me thinks that the ability to describe one entire service cycle aids development of a service "ladder."
You just have to understand that what you said yesterday is going to change.
A service ladder to me is a way of learning opposite to the prescriptive.
To be sure, one derives prescriptions ("do this, do that!") but from one's personal foundation of failure and success.
Ironically, this long haul approach sensitizes you to a far wider frame of reference than most tennis players even know exists.
Does one find the ultimate serve (Sampras, Roddick, Pancho Gonzalez)?
No. The process of improvement, however, keeps one going forever.
Right now my serve looks nothing like the model I saw in a bookstore yesterday. (Okay, I lifted the CD from the new book for two hours and
then returned it-- nothing like the sex laundering crimes of Spitzer much less the torture crimes of Bush, Mukasey and McCain but a crime nevertheless.)
That serve has both hands go up together and then drop to both sides of the body. The racket then stays still during the toss, then creeps vertically up the back like a slow-moving, reversed waterfall.
It's a good serve that works pretty well even for me, the kind of dead stick approach used by Andy Murray's brother to win mixed doubles. But it's nothing like Bea Bielik, the former NCAA champion, with a slow sweep sideways, or Sasha Kulikova, the present similarly number one player at Wake Forest University, who starts with wrist turned in to the max and performs an ever-shrinking tight, abbreviated loop which then opens out into a huge pinpoint serve.
The Kulikova (ACC player of the week the day I studied her beating the number one, also Russian, of Indiana University) goes moderately fast and doesn't break in any specific direction after the bounce. It just kind of buzzes there loaded with spin, and nobody seems to get a clean hit on it.
My own serve right now starts with both hands going up together in a baseball pitcher's windup. The shoulders then revolve back 30 more degrees from hips and gut as hands descend, still linked-- this entire pre-toss movement just cannot be too slow.
Toss then goes up as open racket continues down on same shallow path already established.
On count three I start a basically level small forward rotation in the hips as arm bends to a right angle and hips go out toward net a little and head goes
back toward rear fence a little. I want the added leverage of hand far back and spinning with total body rotation, first horizontally and then vertically.
Romanticism may be rock hard common sense here; I am taken with the moving barrel animation presented in this website by Brian Gordon. I don't want to embroider this idea but do love to explore it. My experiment-- one in seeing serve in a slightly novel way perhaps-- is not conceptually to build everything on legs drive but rather apply legs drive to the transition from hips rotation to gut rotation and more end over end total body rotation (similar to the complex alteration of spinning brown barrel in the animation).
While all this is happening (in a single count) I see the arm reflexively folding together and the elbow knifing forward and the forearm winding back an extra amount all at a surprising low level. If this is very quick (simultaneous with leg thrust) the elbow, still under the shoulder, can allow the arm to start extending in a very natural, passive way during the subsequent cartwheel.
Did the two halves of arm bounce against each other? Maybe-- this can work.
What I personally get for this effort is a late low point for racket tip (where
"low point" is defined as that instant where racket points downward the most regardless of its level).
Similar to a Federer forehand where racket comes close to the body and then goes out again before acceleration, as if it had remained on the perimeter of the swing the whole time, this long lever serve picks up where it left off.
At least one fixed idea seems ready for shattering. The would be stopping the shoulders with opposite hand.
If one believes in the fantastic, altering 3D barrel, why stop the rotating gut at all when it just is going to help one generate more upwardness of spin?
Similarly, why get the knifing elbow high? Why not save final elbow lift until arm has already started the passive part of its extension?
If you save elbow lift this late and rotate the shoulders line up too, you give yourself longer upward acceleration before the racket divebombs.
What you want to stop is not your gut but your head, to end the cartwheel. You do this by fixing your head and staring up at the ball. You do it during the change of direction (COD) brusque muscular extension of arm at right fence. If you don't stop the cartwheel you lose control and generate downward spin-- miserable.
I don't believe in turning the wrist in like Kulikova, however-- at least not this week.
I take wrist and forearm action instead from C.M. Jones, Tennis: How to Become a Champion, Trans-Atlantic Arts, 1968 .
"Place your arm on the table so that the flat front of your wrist is fully on the surface. Raise the forearm slightly (No, don't do this!-- Bottle) and ascertain how much backward and forward wrist movement you can obtain. It will not bend back very far and forward movement is not very extensive either, 45 degrees or so just about covering the entire range of the movment.
"Now try moving the wrist from side to side. There is a valuable increase in the range of movement, the arc in my case covering about 90 degrees."
Do both things in other words.
Like anybody else, I would prefer to hit a beautiful serve or see a beautiful serve over reading a lot of words on either subject.
On the other hand, the education editor in me thinks that the ability to describe one entire service cycle aids development of a service "ladder."
You just have to understand that what you said yesterday is going to change.
A service ladder to me is a way of learning opposite to the prescriptive.
To be sure, one derives prescriptions ("do this, do that!") but from one's personal foundation of failure and success.
Ironically, this long haul approach sensitizes you to a far wider frame of reference than most tennis players even know exists.
Does one find the ultimate serve (Sampras, Roddick, Pancho Gonzalez)?
No. The process of improvement, however, keeps one going forever.
Right now my serve looks nothing like the model I saw in a bookstore yesterday. (Okay, I lifted the CD from the new book for two hours and
then returned it-- nothing like the sex laundering crimes of Spitzer much less the torture crimes of Bush, Mukasey and McCain but a crime nevertheless.)
That serve has both hands go up together and then drop to both sides of the body. The racket then stays still during the toss, then creeps vertically up the back like a slow-moving, reversed waterfall.
It's a good serve that works pretty well even for me, the kind of dead stick approach used by Andy Murray's brother to win mixed doubles. But it's nothing like Bea Bielik, the former NCAA champion, with a slow sweep sideways, or Sasha Kulikova, the present similarly number one player at Wake Forest University, who starts with wrist turned in to the max and performs an ever-shrinking tight, abbreviated loop which then opens out into a huge pinpoint serve.
The Kulikova (ACC player of the week the day I studied her beating the number one, also Russian, of Indiana University) goes moderately fast and doesn't break in any specific direction after the bounce. It just kind of buzzes there loaded with spin, and nobody seems to get a clean hit on it.
My own serve right now starts with both hands going up together in a baseball pitcher's windup. The shoulders then revolve back 30 more degrees from hips and gut as hands descend, still linked-- this entire pre-toss movement just cannot be too slow.
Toss then goes up as open racket continues down on same shallow path already established.
On count three I start a basically level small forward rotation in the hips as arm bends to a right angle and hips go out toward net a little and head goes
back toward rear fence a little. I want the added leverage of hand far back and spinning with total body rotation, first horizontally and then vertically.
Romanticism may be rock hard common sense here; I am taken with the moving barrel animation presented in this website by Brian Gordon. I don't want to embroider this idea but do love to explore it. My experiment-- one in seeing serve in a slightly novel way perhaps-- is not conceptually to build everything on legs drive but rather apply legs drive to the transition from hips rotation to gut rotation and more end over end total body rotation (similar to the complex alteration of spinning brown barrel in the animation).
While all this is happening (in a single count) I see the arm reflexively folding together and the elbow knifing forward and the forearm winding back an extra amount all at a surprising low level. If this is very quick (simultaneous with leg thrust) the elbow, still under the shoulder, can allow the arm to start extending in a very natural, passive way during the subsequent cartwheel.
Did the two halves of arm bounce against each other? Maybe-- this can work.
What I personally get for this effort is a late low point for racket tip (where
"low point" is defined as that instant where racket points downward the most regardless of its level).
Similar to a Federer forehand where racket comes close to the body and then goes out again before acceleration, as if it had remained on the perimeter of the swing the whole time, this long lever serve picks up where it left off.
At least one fixed idea seems ready for shattering. The would be stopping the shoulders with opposite hand.
If one believes in the fantastic, altering 3D barrel, why stop the rotating gut at all when it just is going to help one generate more upwardness of spin?
Similarly, why get the knifing elbow high? Why not save final elbow lift until arm has already started the passive part of its extension?
If you save elbow lift this late and rotate the shoulders line up too, you give yourself longer upward acceleration before the racket divebombs.
What you want to stop is not your gut but your head, to end the cartwheel. You do this by fixing your head and staring up at the ball. You do it during the change of direction (COD) brusque muscular extension of arm at right fence. If you don't stop the cartwheel you lose control and generate downward spin-- miserable.
I don't believe in turning the wrist in like Kulikova, however-- at least not this week.
I take wrist and forearm action instead from C.M. Jones, Tennis: How to Become a Champion, Trans-Atlantic Arts, 1968 .
"Place your arm on the table so that the flat front of your wrist is fully on the surface. Raise the forearm slightly (No, don't do this!-- Bottle) and ascertain how much backward and forward wrist movement you can obtain. It will not bend back very far and forward movement is not very extensive either, 45 degrees or so just about covering the entire range of the movment.
"Now try moving the wrist from side to side. There is a valuable increase in the range of movement, the arc in my case covering about 90 degrees."
Do both things in other words.
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