Chi Troppo Pensa, Passo Diventa...
My new motto. Whoever thinks too much goes nuts. But whoever doesn't think enough already is nuts. So I am determined to think the right amount.
Should we remove all chess from tennis and play like Fabio Fognini? Remember, Fabio doesn't teach geometry like John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors or Novak Djokovic.
Ironically, an Italian professor of women's studies married to the editor of the Wake Forest (University) Press is the best authority on American anti-intellectualism I know.
And he who serves like Dementieva is dimenta.
Phil Picuri: "I noticed my grip occurs automatically... (only thing I don't think about...)"
No, hook thumb joint on 7.5 when hitting a Federfore. And don't wrap first thumb digit on left vertical panel. Just let it ride, barely in the air. The thumb joint is enough connection. This helps carry out the instruction delivered to me by the Winston-Salem Russian dentist now living west of Chicago, Ksenia. That name means otherness or individual or alienated one. She told me to hold the racket like a bird's nest even though I was her tennis instructor. I like the image. It makes me think of, besides grip...Oh, never mind.
In Ziegenfusses-- forehands in which the arm feels forward before the body core chimes in, I discovered in self-feed yesterday that I can do this with the McEnrueful, or if not that then with McEnrueful grip (1.5/2.5).
Ziegenfusses are shots that incorporate one's common sense contempt for the often too logical "kinetic chain."
I love shots that technically speaking follow ground force up and out but I love Ziegenfusses too.
If doing Ziegenfuss with 2/3 one can replace arm roll with arm scissor. If doing Ziegenfussisch McEnrueful one can replace arm scissor with arm roll.
How about that, Phil? You may be convinced that I am presenting too much information here and am trying overly hard to think too much, but isn't the way teaching pros sometimes talk about arm scissor and arm roll in the same breath outrageous, leaving some unsuspecting student to try to do both at the same time?
Outrageous, that's what.
Originally posted by gzhpcu
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Should we remove all chess from tennis and play like Fabio Fognini? Remember, Fabio doesn't teach geometry like John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors or Novak Djokovic.
Ironically, an Italian professor of women's studies married to the editor of the Wake Forest (University) Press is the best authority on American anti-intellectualism I know.
And he who serves like Dementieva is dimenta.
Phil Picuri: "I noticed my grip occurs automatically... (only thing I don't think about...)"
No, hook thumb joint on 7.5 when hitting a Federfore. And don't wrap first thumb digit on left vertical panel. Just let it ride, barely in the air. The thumb joint is enough connection. This helps carry out the instruction delivered to me by the Winston-Salem Russian dentist now living west of Chicago, Ksenia. That name means otherness or individual or alienated one. She told me to hold the racket like a bird's nest even though I was her tennis instructor. I like the image. It makes me think of, besides grip...Oh, never mind.
In Ziegenfusses-- forehands in which the arm feels forward before the body core chimes in, I discovered in self-feed yesterday that I can do this with the McEnrueful, or if not that then with McEnrueful grip (1.5/2.5).
Ziegenfusses are shots that incorporate one's common sense contempt for the often too logical "kinetic chain."
I love shots that technically speaking follow ground force up and out but I love Ziegenfusses too.
If doing Ziegenfuss with 2/3 one can replace arm roll with arm scissor. If doing Ziegenfussisch McEnrueful one can replace arm scissor with arm roll.
How about that, Phil? You may be convinced that I am presenting too much information here and am trying overly hard to think too much, but isn't the way teaching pros sometimes talk about arm scissor and arm roll in the same breath outrageous, leaving some unsuspecting student to try to do both at the same time?
Outrageous, that's what.
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