John,
I am looking forward to studying in detail the footage of Pete's Forehand, in my opinion - biomechanically the forehand, period.
Seeing the footage of his 3 matches in Asia vs. Federer says a whole lot about his forehand vs. everything else today...
What happened to his backhand? Well he switched possibly 3 years too late, making the process more difficult - and traces of his old double hander stayed during the course of his career in his hitting arm.
If you see the footage of Pete at the age of 9, you see that his right arm then performed sort of "carrying" action or movement, which was not good if he was ever to make a switch to one hander.
What happened there with his right forearm (and upper arm action) was a consequence of elbow not "stopping" at the right moment (well, this could be put more correctly as upper arm action with elbow travelling too far or straight forward after the ball - looking at what happens on good one-handers you can easily see the difference), thus not allowing the forearm to continue acceleration - ending with wrist and racquet finishing the regular biomechanic chain on one-hander that comes "naturally" to people with exemplary one-handers. Of course, this was manifested in backhands that looked at times pushed, rather than hit.
Noticeable exception was US Open 1990, many times pointed out by Robert Lansdorp (also to Pete) as the occasion or tournament where he was hitting good drives on returns of serve and good backhands in general (drive backhands).
There are also other elements to this issue, but this one was, perhaps the most obvious one.
Although, through years, especially at Wimbledon, one could see how gifted a shotmaker Pete is when he was forced to pass on backhand side - he performed far better than in baseline rally.
There was a rumour of the hip flexor injury he sustained I think in 1997, some people cite it as a possible reason of his somewhat deteriorating form in that period and some problems with backhand due to that.
Truly looking forward to your analysis of this and all details in it.
I could write more on this to You, but I am sure you get many messages with similar content, so for now.
Best Regards from Sweden
Sejo
P.S - Couldn't agree more with you on the issue of the forearm and especially the myth of the wrist.
When is the study of what happened on that Federer's forehand with the closed angle of the racquet face on the ball coming? (the one some Australian physicist is working on)
Looking forward to that as well!
I am looking forward to studying in detail the footage of Pete's Forehand, in my opinion - biomechanically the forehand, period.
Seeing the footage of his 3 matches in Asia vs. Federer says a whole lot about his forehand vs. everything else today...
What happened to his backhand? Well he switched possibly 3 years too late, making the process more difficult - and traces of his old double hander stayed during the course of his career in his hitting arm.
If you see the footage of Pete at the age of 9, you see that his right arm then performed sort of "carrying" action or movement, which was not good if he was ever to make a switch to one hander.
What happened there with his right forearm (and upper arm action) was a consequence of elbow not "stopping" at the right moment (well, this could be put more correctly as upper arm action with elbow travelling too far or straight forward after the ball - looking at what happens on good one-handers you can easily see the difference), thus not allowing the forearm to continue acceleration - ending with wrist and racquet finishing the regular biomechanic chain on one-hander that comes "naturally" to people with exemplary one-handers. Of course, this was manifested in backhands that looked at times pushed, rather than hit.
Noticeable exception was US Open 1990, many times pointed out by Robert Lansdorp (also to Pete) as the occasion or tournament where he was hitting good drives on returns of serve and good backhands in general (drive backhands).
There are also other elements to this issue, but this one was, perhaps the most obvious one.
Although, through years, especially at Wimbledon, one could see how gifted a shotmaker Pete is when he was forced to pass on backhand side - he performed far better than in baseline rally.
There was a rumour of the hip flexor injury he sustained I think in 1997, some people cite it as a possible reason of his somewhat deteriorating form in that period and some problems with backhand due to that.
Truly looking forward to your analysis of this and all details in it.
I could write more on this to You, but I am sure you get many messages with similar content, so for now.
Best Regards from Sweden
Sejo
P.S - Couldn't agree more with you on the issue of the forearm and especially the myth of the wrist.
When is the study of what happened on that Federer's forehand with the closed angle of the racquet face on the ball coming? (the one some Australian physicist is working on)
Looking forward to that as well!
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