Cornering the Turn
We've come to believe that a one-hander appreciating sharpness of turn can employ it while controlling pitch through a combination of full arm roll and opening of the wrist.
But should there be sequence between these two acts? I would argue yes-- sequence with overlap, i.e., arm roll starts first and wrist opening chimes in to get you to contact.
My argument is that opening wrist brings the racket tip around a little, but rolling the arm, i.e., keeping the elbow in, brings tip around a lot. The same act most apt to destroy a forehand-- early roll of the elbow-- creates new excellence in a backhand.
So, with heel of hand glued on 7.5, we use bent-arm preparation. And wrist appears concave if your eyes are higher than your hand.
Working from obscure instruction in Talbert and Old, THE GAME OF SINGLES IN TENNIS, we know we want to straighten the wrist, make it flat, somehow integrate this transition in a positive way into the overall stroke. Some may differ-- it is their right-- but to me the question is not whether but when.
Elbow is stable. I don't want it to roll yet. Forearm can roll, however, as part of straightening of the wrist. The grip is light. Everything is about feel.
For that reason one wouldn't want to roll the wrist straight either too early or too late. If too early the focus will shift entirely to straightening the arm. If too late, the wrist closing and then opening again may all be too jammed together.
I want to be happy with the non-specificity of this. I'm not saying to roll halfway through the arm extension or at its beginning or end or to spread roll throughout but rather to find your own way through best feel. I do want full arm to roll between the two alterations of wrist.
It may be advisable here to watch a film of McEnroe again, exotic grip and all. About nine frames for slow part of stroke, two frames for fast, cornered turn, seven frames for rest of the stroke which is mostly rabbit punch.
Two frames for cornered turn is convenient. First frame: Start rolling the elbow. Second frame: Keep rolling but add your opening of wrist. Continue the stroke then with an absence of such minor actions which now are out of the way.
The exception might be an acute short angle. You might want to keep rolling then.
We've come to believe that a one-hander appreciating sharpness of turn can employ it while controlling pitch through a combination of full arm roll and opening of the wrist.
But should there be sequence between these two acts? I would argue yes-- sequence with overlap, i.e., arm roll starts first and wrist opening chimes in to get you to contact.
My argument is that opening wrist brings the racket tip around a little, but rolling the arm, i.e., keeping the elbow in, brings tip around a lot. The same act most apt to destroy a forehand-- early roll of the elbow-- creates new excellence in a backhand.
So, with heel of hand glued on 7.5, we use bent-arm preparation. And wrist appears concave if your eyes are higher than your hand.
Working from obscure instruction in Talbert and Old, THE GAME OF SINGLES IN TENNIS, we know we want to straighten the wrist, make it flat, somehow integrate this transition in a positive way into the overall stroke. Some may differ-- it is their right-- but to me the question is not whether but when.
Elbow is stable. I don't want it to roll yet. Forearm can roll, however, as part of straightening of the wrist. The grip is light. Everything is about feel.
For that reason one wouldn't want to roll the wrist straight either too early or too late. If too early the focus will shift entirely to straightening the arm. If too late, the wrist closing and then opening again may all be too jammed together.
I want to be happy with the non-specificity of this. I'm not saying to roll halfway through the arm extension or at its beginning or end or to spread roll throughout but rather to find your own way through best feel. I do want full arm to roll between the two alterations of wrist.
It may be advisable here to watch a film of McEnroe again, exotic grip and all. About nine frames for slow part of stroke, two frames for fast, cornered turn, seven frames for rest of the stroke which is mostly rabbit punch.
Two frames for cornered turn is convenient. First frame: Start rolling the elbow. Second frame: Keep rolling but add your opening of wrist. Continue the stroke then with an absence of such minor actions which now are out of the way.
The exception might be an acute short angle. You might want to keep rolling then.
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