Finger-Feather and Reverse Wrist for Kick by Rotorded Server
One wants to get racket handle snuggled deep in cleft between forefinger and thumb.
I propose doing this rather late in the serving cycle.
I am the coyote trying to squash the road-runner with a helium-filled boulder. But no one will laugh if it works. Think of King Henry V or Novak Djokovic in their transition from funnyman to number one who is a slight bore.
Listing all elements crucial to this plot would be tedious.
Features include a pitching forward of the racket to tilt over the ball since sport physicists tell us that is one of the factors generating upward/forward turbo-spin. Not the only one for sure, but those sport physicists are right. I plan to do this with arm more than upper body this time.
That will leave upper body to provide a small amount of lift to the spin mix.
The finger-feather or twiddle I'm talking about will be achieved by holding a thin-handled racket with thumb and second down joint of the middle finger. This notion comes from watching a film on pitching a curve in baseball although that grip is farther out nearer both fingertips.
Weight will stay on rear foot for a long time. The rear leg will bend to load late.
The arm wind-up by contrast will be quicker than in most serves, but that doesn't mean that arm speed won't be gravity-determined as the hands first fall.
Serve or rather arm starts accelerating from point when racket is down by the ground, a flowing and liquid time appropriate to collecting energy and well-being and wit.
Arm starts bending early simultaneous with the toss. Twiddle-- if one believes in twiddle-- can happen as late as when two halves of arm have finished squeezing together and begin to open. One can simultaneously hump the wrist to prepare for its reverse action. It then will unfurl.
This serve won't resemble any other including my own others what with its arm before body action and its reverse wrist.
Reverse wrist? Didn't you mean "reverse twist," bottle? No, I meant reverse wrist. What else can you expect, reader, from someone who believes in helium-filled boulders?
Gravity takes the racket down. Smooth and early arm throw including the squeezing together of both halves of the arm takes it up.
Because this server-- so what if it's I-- can't get his racket tip as low as he would like on any serve, he has decided to delay the three main power packages available to him.
These are first, upper arm rotation, second and third hip rotation braked to fly upper body up and over-- up on contact, over on follow-through.
Part of the plot is to cock the upper arm and forearm against one's arm extension. And racket tip already started working to outside with the twiddle. Twiddle doesn't provide muscle but every racket head in motion carries momentum which will flow in this case into pre-load of the whole arm which by now is also twisting to the outside against increasing resistance, i.e., build-up.
As arm finally reverses its twist, racket snuggles down in the yoke. Then wrist and arm whirl strings around and up and arm carries racket way out toward side fence before returning to conventional follow-through.
Just another design.
One wants to get racket handle snuggled deep in cleft between forefinger and thumb.
I propose doing this rather late in the serving cycle.
I am the coyote trying to squash the road-runner with a helium-filled boulder. But no one will laugh if it works. Think of King Henry V or Novak Djokovic in their transition from funnyman to number one who is a slight bore.
Listing all elements crucial to this plot would be tedious.
Features include a pitching forward of the racket to tilt over the ball since sport physicists tell us that is one of the factors generating upward/forward turbo-spin. Not the only one for sure, but those sport physicists are right. I plan to do this with arm more than upper body this time.
That will leave upper body to provide a small amount of lift to the spin mix.
The finger-feather or twiddle I'm talking about will be achieved by holding a thin-handled racket with thumb and second down joint of the middle finger. This notion comes from watching a film on pitching a curve in baseball although that grip is farther out nearer both fingertips.
Weight will stay on rear foot for a long time. The rear leg will bend to load late.
The arm wind-up by contrast will be quicker than in most serves, but that doesn't mean that arm speed won't be gravity-determined as the hands first fall.
Serve or rather arm starts accelerating from point when racket is down by the ground, a flowing and liquid time appropriate to collecting energy and well-being and wit.
Arm starts bending early simultaneous with the toss. Twiddle-- if one believes in twiddle-- can happen as late as when two halves of arm have finished squeezing together and begin to open. One can simultaneously hump the wrist to prepare for its reverse action. It then will unfurl.
This serve won't resemble any other including my own others what with its arm before body action and its reverse wrist.
Reverse wrist? Didn't you mean "reverse twist," bottle? No, I meant reverse wrist. What else can you expect, reader, from someone who believes in helium-filled boulders?
Gravity takes the racket down. Smooth and early arm throw including the squeezing together of both halves of the arm takes it up.
Because this server-- so what if it's I-- can't get his racket tip as low as he would like on any serve, he has decided to delay the three main power packages available to him.
These are first, upper arm rotation, second and third hip rotation braked to fly upper body up and over-- up on contact, over on follow-through.
Part of the plot is to cock the upper arm and forearm against one's arm extension. And racket tip already started working to outside with the twiddle. Twiddle doesn't provide muscle but every racket head in motion carries momentum which will flow in this case into pre-load of the whole arm which by now is also twisting to the outside against increasing resistance, i.e., build-up.
As arm finally reverses its twist, racket snuggles down in the yoke. Then wrist and arm whirl strings around and up and arm carries racket way out toward side fence before returning to conventional follow-through.
Just another design.
Comment