I Want to Try...
Fill in the blank. Surely there's something you'd like to try but won't because you don't have time, and besides... Fill in the blank again.
I want to try a forehand with a feel of "winding up into a catch." I'm thinking of an abbreviated forehand. If it works, of course I'll apply it (or try to!) to my 360-degree version as well.
I'm thinking, "How utterly left-brained to vote for double-bend or straight arm while neglecting all the possibilities in between."
So, when you catch a ball your fingers tighten around it. You want to preserve that feel. This is the bridge between soft hands and thrust of body and arm or subdued driving of racket (up more than forward though both) including a controlled wiper to spin the ball vertically like a golfer's putter.
The racket is what throws things off. So make it disappear. Put the feeling back in hands and balls of feet.
And whom am I stealing from? And whom did he steal from? Does that matter? Do we want to play exciting tennis or get picayune about attribution?
Keep focus on the middle of a racket propeller. That would be a piper cub propeller formed by your holding two rackets together by their handles with the heads facing out. Or maybe a drum major's baton.
Whirl this contraption but not so fast that the ergs flow to the racket tips like water in a hose.
(And is tennis technique rumination one of the few places where a mixing of metaphors could be permitted?)
I'm thinking of an abbreviated forehand starting out with a lift past right shoulder as in a Federfore. As left arm goes out toward right fence to maximize body turn, however, the hitting arm just straightens a little, then re-bends a little to "wind up into the catch" and help make the racket disappear.
Can't wait to try this. Right now, though, I've got to get my cross-country skiis ready to go.
Fill in the blank. Surely there's something you'd like to try but won't because you don't have time, and besides... Fill in the blank again.
I want to try a forehand with a feel of "winding up into a catch." I'm thinking of an abbreviated forehand. If it works, of course I'll apply it (or try to!) to my 360-degree version as well.
I'm thinking, "How utterly left-brained to vote for double-bend or straight arm while neglecting all the possibilities in between."
So, when you catch a ball your fingers tighten around it. You want to preserve that feel. This is the bridge between soft hands and thrust of body and arm or subdued driving of racket (up more than forward though both) including a controlled wiper to spin the ball vertically like a golfer's putter.
The racket is what throws things off. So make it disappear. Put the feeling back in hands and balls of feet.
And whom am I stealing from? And whom did he steal from? Does that matter? Do we want to play exciting tennis or get picayune about attribution?
Keep focus on the middle of a racket propeller. That would be a piper cub propeller formed by your holding two rackets together by their handles with the heads facing out. Or maybe a drum major's baton.
Whirl this contraption but not so fast that the ergs flow to the racket tips like water in a hose.
(And is tennis technique rumination one of the few places where a mixing of metaphors could be permitted?)
I'm thinking of an abbreviated forehand starting out with a lift past right shoulder as in a Federfore. As left arm goes out toward right fence to maximize body turn, however, the hitting arm just straightens a little, then re-bends a little to "wind up into the catch" and help make the racket disappear.
Can't wait to try this. Right now, though, I've got to get my cross-country skiis ready to go.
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