The Blind Alley of all Blind Alleys?
The great effort to get racket tip low-- the huge emphasis on perpendicular drop can lead anyone to smudge the two basic types of arm windup.
In the videos of Chris Lewit manhandling small infants through promising patterns of topspin serve, the two halves of the arm are always in alignment. The elbow twists up but the racket remains directly below it.
In the videos of Dennis Ralston hitting low slice out wide, the arm squeezes only to eighty degrees, and the upper arm stays parallel to the court, and the forearm winds back (or back and down if you are very flexible like Pancho Gonzalez or Pete Sampras).
The two methods could not be more different, and any attempt to combine them is dementia not to mention Dementieva.
Shouldn't tennis instructors articulate this? I think so. They could save the world lots of grief.
The great effort to get racket tip low-- the huge emphasis on perpendicular drop can lead anyone to smudge the two basic types of arm windup.
In the videos of Chris Lewit manhandling small infants through promising patterns of topspin serve, the two halves of the arm are always in alignment. The elbow twists up but the racket remains directly below it.
In the videos of Dennis Ralston hitting low slice out wide, the arm squeezes only to eighty degrees, and the upper arm stays parallel to the court, and the forearm winds back (or back and down if you are very flexible like Pancho Gonzalez or Pete Sampras).
The two methods could not be more different, and any attempt to combine them is dementia not to mention Dementieva.
Shouldn't tennis instructors articulate this? I think so. They could save the world lots of grief.
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