Spreading Out the Backward Turn
When one gets overly technical in tennis, which to most players means getting technical at all, one has to ask oneself, "Are the distinctions I'm making helpful? Am I being too left brain? Am I being left brain enough? How can I put this stroke together?"
For a while in these posts I've been having a discussion with myself and even conducting a series of experiments over when to turn the body backward during a serve.
The subject is big, e.g., it involves initial stance, stability of the tossing shoulder, using or not using change of direction to fold up the arm, loading axle-like twist into the upper arm, etc., etc. and of course depth of pro drop.
So which is better-- early or late backward turn? Or is that even a good question? Today I'm going to compromise by spreading the turn out to keep racket moving on a straight line for as long as possible as it falls and rises like a roller coaster per don_budge.
In this way, the shoulder will be moving backward a little but not very much as I toss (with body gliding slightly forward).
When one gets overly technical in tennis, which to most players means getting technical at all, one has to ask oneself, "Are the distinctions I'm making helpful? Am I being too left brain? Am I being left brain enough? How can I put this stroke together?"
For a while in these posts I've been having a discussion with myself and even conducting a series of experiments over when to turn the body backward during a serve.
The subject is big, e.g., it involves initial stance, stability of the tossing shoulder, using or not using change of direction to fold up the arm, loading axle-like twist into the upper arm, etc., etc. and of course depth of pro drop.
So which is better-- early or late backward turn? Or is that even a good question? Today I'm going to compromise by spreading the turn out to keep racket moving on a straight line for as long as possible as it falls and rises like a roller coaster per don_budge.
In this way, the shoulder will be moving backward a little but not very much as I toss (with body gliding slightly forward).
Comment