Modified McEnroe in a One-hander
Hit some great shots imitating that man but not enough of them to my mind, and so am carrying Ed Faulkner's idea of leading back-swing with racket tip to a dive-bombing extreme.
This simply means more opening of the racket during the take-back instead of performing the same action later as part of the hit the way John McEnroe does.
Why? Because simplification is good in tennis except when it isn't. Now, in my count five I'll simply have to roll wrist straight as body swings and have a non-rolling section as body brings racket around to complete that swing. Body is to stop as I roll arm mightily (upper and lower both) as wrist becomes concave again.
Four elements will have been reduced to three.
This allows more time for stiffening of core muscles perfectly to create deceleration-acceleration every time. Watch this stiffening process in the same McEnroe sequence I showed before:
Look for the mid-stroke body moment where McEnroe sets himself. He looks
casual overall. That particular moment, by contrast, is dramatic and assertive.
Among the many elements I'll retain is the slight segmenting of body (count four) to bring the racket, open now, part way down before I do anything with my wrist.
Divide forward upper body swing fifty-fifty between rolling wrist straight and keeping it straight. Then try different combinations, e.g., one-third/two-thirds, two thirds/one-third in a search for what works best.
Hit some great shots imitating that man but not enough of them to my mind, and so am carrying Ed Faulkner's idea of leading back-swing with racket tip to a dive-bombing extreme.
This simply means more opening of the racket during the take-back instead of performing the same action later as part of the hit the way John McEnroe does.
Why? Because simplification is good in tennis except when it isn't. Now, in my count five I'll simply have to roll wrist straight as body swings and have a non-rolling section as body brings racket around to complete that swing. Body is to stop as I roll arm mightily (upper and lower both) as wrist becomes concave again.
Four elements will have been reduced to three.
This allows more time for stiffening of core muscles perfectly to create deceleration-acceleration every time. Watch this stiffening process in the same McEnroe sequence I showed before:
Look for the mid-stroke body moment where McEnroe sets himself. He looks
casual overall. That particular moment, by contrast, is dramatic and assertive.
Among the many elements I'll retain is the slight segmenting of body (count four) to bring the racket, open now, part way down before I do anything with my wrist.
Divide forward upper body swing fifty-fifty between rolling wrist straight and keeping it straight. Then try different combinations, e.g., one-third/two-thirds, two thirds/one-third in a search for what works best.
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