Same Tack-- Higgs boson Continued
Forty years of theoretics, some would say "diuretics," were followed by the actual discovery.
If one simply watches YouTube videos associated with Higgs boson, one may be surprised to learn how many scientists were rooting against the discovery.
They were tired of thinking about dark matter or molasses or the Higgs field everywhere in space and longed for a different real explanation of the universe, preferring to "go back to the drawing board."
Nope, Higgs boson it is.
And so will be my shot, under possibility 3), which concerns a right-handed poacher playing doubles in tennis and stationed forward in the deuce court while entertaining the nefarious scheme of leaping into the ad court and bunting the oncoming ball into the far tramline.
The best way of doing this is my arcane subject, arcane because, as shot choice, it's the worst.
Best for our poacher when receiver won't close toward the center-- that would be for me, John Poacher-- is to firmly block the ball between my two opponents.
If the receiver closes the center, best is to cut the ball into the tramline behind oneself.
Hitting the ball down hard at the netman's feet-- a classic move-- is overly apt to put the ball on a good player's sweet spot.
That de-values the main subject here or specialty shot of all specialty shots in my view; but, on the other hand, "Develop Superior Poaching Skills," axiomatizes the very good tennis player and writer Pat Blaskower.
Hey, where should one's weight go? Lacking an answer from a smart person, I plan to answer my own question (but not definitively, no not today).
Think of the bunts that fail in baseball.
And the hitting coach who bellows, "The ball doesn't tell you what to do, you tell the ball what to do!"
Think now of the line of the service returner's ball and how well it is hit.
Anything down the center is your ball. Take responsibility! Anything out wide and hit well is your partner's ball. Anything out wide and bloopy, high and soft is YOUR ball requiring significant running followed by scientific discovery.
If the ball is bloopy, less deflection should be involved than from a line drive.
But just think of two converging lines-- oncoming ball and path of the moving poacher.
Does he run parallel to net and then take a sharp right turn? Or does he run on a beeline for the ball, certainly advisable for down the center or at netman's feet (shots), but how about for the other two choices?
For cutting ball to tramline behind one, one's weight needs to be traveling longitudinally, i.e., shifting perpendicular to net and rear fence.
To make the Higgs boson equivalent discovery, all one really can say is, "Depends on the oncoming shot."
Forty years of theoretics, some would say "diuretics," were followed by the actual discovery.
If one simply watches YouTube videos associated with Higgs boson, one may be surprised to learn how many scientists were rooting against the discovery.
They were tired of thinking about dark matter or molasses or the Higgs field everywhere in space and longed for a different real explanation of the universe, preferring to "go back to the drawing board."
Nope, Higgs boson it is.
And so will be my shot, under possibility 3), which concerns a right-handed poacher playing doubles in tennis and stationed forward in the deuce court while entertaining the nefarious scheme of leaping into the ad court and bunting the oncoming ball into the far tramline.
The best way of doing this is my arcane subject, arcane because, as shot choice, it's the worst.
Best for our poacher when receiver won't close toward the center-- that would be for me, John Poacher-- is to firmly block the ball between my two opponents.
If the receiver closes the center, best is to cut the ball into the tramline behind oneself.
Hitting the ball down hard at the netman's feet-- a classic move-- is overly apt to put the ball on a good player's sweet spot.
That de-values the main subject here or specialty shot of all specialty shots in my view; but, on the other hand, "Develop Superior Poaching Skills," axiomatizes the very good tennis player and writer Pat Blaskower.
Hey, where should one's weight go? Lacking an answer from a smart person, I plan to answer my own question (but not definitively, no not today).
Think of the bunts that fail in baseball.
And the hitting coach who bellows, "The ball doesn't tell you what to do, you tell the ball what to do!"
Think now of the line of the service returner's ball and how well it is hit.
Anything down the center is your ball. Take responsibility! Anything out wide and hit well is your partner's ball. Anything out wide and bloopy, high and soft is YOUR ball requiring significant running followed by scientific discovery.
If the ball is bloopy, less deflection should be involved than from a line drive.
But just think of two converging lines-- oncoming ball and path of the moving poacher.
Does he run parallel to net and then take a sharp right turn? Or does he run on a beeline for the ball, certainly advisable for down the center or at netman's feet (shots), but how about for the other two choices?
For cutting ball to tramline behind one, one's weight needs to be traveling longitudinally, i.e., shifting perpendicular to net and rear fence.
To make the Higgs boson equivalent discovery, all one really can say is, "Depends on the oncoming shot."
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