Snaky Coil as Developmental Cue
A developmental cue, it seems to me, is a cue that gets forgotten once the development is assimilated.
Snaky coil will happen back toward the rear fence in a serve that starts with a level takeback.
The hips and shoulders reverse while keeping that sequence in both directions.
During forward hips rotation the up-till-then level traveling arm rises while tilting racket toward the net.
Anatomy, not willpower causes the bending turning elbow to rise.
If bod were not rotating forward, the arm and even the hand would go around it a bit more.
This is a delicate and crucial part of the serve. One might almost think of an oncoming something snagging itself in the crooking arm.
But hand doesn't go farther around since slow forward bod rotation cancels that out.
As sum of the little motions the hand stays stationary but rises.
One should enjoy having all forward serves initiate from the same known place.
Options during the hand rise include wrist 1) keeping flat, 2) tilting to max to left, 3) tilting a little to left, 4) opening back toward rear fence which some people would call "extension. The term "extending the wrist" confuses me however so I refuse to say it.
A certain strangeness can be good if it helps one remember something. The elbow could be thought to push the hand or to pass by the hand. In either case the hand always rises to the same spot straight above where it was.
Note: I realize that any wrist adjustment will change the locus of the hand. Roughly though that locus stays the same.
A developmental cue, it seems to me, is a cue that gets forgotten once the development is assimilated.
Snaky coil will happen back toward the rear fence in a serve that starts with a level takeback.
The hips and shoulders reverse while keeping that sequence in both directions.
During forward hips rotation the up-till-then level traveling arm rises while tilting racket toward the net.
Anatomy, not willpower causes the bending turning elbow to rise.
If bod were not rotating forward, the arm and even the hand would go around it a bit more.
This is a delicate and crucial part of the serve. One might almost think of an oncoming something snagging itself in the crooking arm.
But hand doesn't go farther around since slow forward bod rotation cancels that out.
As sum of the little motions the hand stays stationary but rises.
One should enjoy having all forward serves initiate from the same known place.
Options during the hand rise include wrist 1) keeping flat, 2) tilting to max to left, 3) tilting a little to left, 4) opening back toward rear fence which some people would call "extension. The term "extending the wrist" confuses me however so I refuse to say it.
A certain strangeness can be good if it helps one remember something. The elbow could be thought to push the hand or to pass by the hand. In either case the hand always rises to the same spot straight above where it was.
Note: I realize that any wrist adjustment will change the locus of the hand. Roughly though that locus stays the same.
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