Theory vs. Practice in the Serve
Must re-try what produced an effect years ago-- a backward turn of the hips angulated the body in such a way that the racket tip pointed farther down toward the court.
This premise can be tested by anybody. One puts a racket in one's hand and, with elbow in generally agreed upon high position, simulates the lowest point of one's racket drop. The rotorded server, i.e., thousands of servers, won't be able to produce verticality toward the court. But if he, she, you, I then rotates the hips slightly backward, the racket tip may glide down seven more inches in unison with the backward hips stretch regardless of stance, count, service method or anything else.
Granted, backward stretch of the upper body and hips takes place early in most good serves and therefore should create the desired slot for the extra amount of drop which then should actually happen during energy release from front toes on up.
But DOES final lowering of racket tip happen this way for the rotorded server? If it does, fine, he need not think about the problem any further. But if it doesn't...if he somehow gives away the extra seven inches, he might consider transplanting this little demonstration maneuver into the serve, and late.
Of course one might have to restructure serve to accomodate the late turn, which might have deleterious effect on other aspects of the serve-- there's the challenge.
Here's one way this approach might work. In a rapid coil 2-count serve the knees bend while the racket goes down, they bend more while the racket and toss go up with weight also shifting forward, they bend more as hips turn an extra bit to establish the 7-inch maneuver very late.
But this last instant extra backward turn of the hips also takes the racket AROUND more, which may threaten therefore the edge-on component necessary for properly spun serves, i.e., produce too flat a contact. So I'll try this experiment from an open or semi-open stance.
Must re-try what produced an effect years ago-- a backward turn of the hips angulated the body in such a way that the racket tip pointed farther down toward the court.
This premise can be tested by anybody. One puts a racket in one's hand and, with elbow in generally agreed upon high position, simulates the lowest point of one's racket drop. The rotorded server, i.e., thousands of servers, won't be able to produce verticality toward the court. But if he, she, you, I then rotates the hips slightly backward, the racket tip may glide down seven more inches in unison with the backward hips stretch regardless of stance, count, service method or anything else.
Granted, backward stretch of the upper body and hips takes place early in most good serves and therefore should create the desired slot for the extra amount of drop which then should actually happen during energy release from front toes on up.
But DOES final lowering of racket tip happen this way for the rotorded server? If it does, fine, he need not think about the problem any further. But if it doesn't...if he somehow gives away the extra seven inches, he might consider transplanting this little demonstration maneuver into the serve, and late.
Of course one might have to restructure serve to accomodate the late turn, which might have deleterious effect on other aspects of the serve-- there's the challenge.
Here's one way this approach might work. In a rapid coil 2-count serve the knees bend while the racket goes down, they bend more while the racket and toss go up with weight also shifting forward, they bend more as hips turn an extra bit to establish the 7-inch maneuver very late.
But this last instant extra backward turn of the hips also takes the racket AROUND more, which may threaten therefore the edge-on component necessary for properly spun serves, i.e., produce too flat a contact. So I'll try this experiment from an open or semi-open stance.
Comment