Mondo in Direction of the Shot
The context here is forehand progression/development along a line of emerging discovery, which sentence may sound too much like a word salad but really isn't.
One slowly finds a path through dense creepers out in a forest somewhere. And as one does this, one makes new discoveries-- simple as that.
I don't think too many people today are aware of the BAM forehand. The "BAM" of it is not some acronym such as "Bottle's Annoying Mess" but rather a cartoon word from the days of Joe Palooka or Captain Marvel.
BAM! would appear in a white balloon as Captain Marvel delivered an uppercut or Joe Palooka received one on his chin. Small stars or asterisks would fly through the air like projectiles of perspiration and emblems of the closed head injury underway.
I saw some of these forehands in the late twentieth century but never developed one for myself until now when I am 76 years old. A simple shot which I have lately been describing (and hitting) over and over.
The hand keys ahead as the elbow stays back. The elbow then flies forward up and maybe even back. Whichever the case, the knuckles brush one's own ear: a Captain Marvel uppercut.
This is a no wipe shot. It has a subtle or rather dramatic height adjustment meter built in.
A middling degree of arm bend figures into this. The arm is neither straight or right-angled. The keying action from stationary elbow therefore leads the forward action with one's hand down and forward as if one is about to push through a stuck cellar door with right palm turned back and down.
The blow is delivered straight ahead: Terms like "outside-in" or "inside-out" are irrelevant. It's an interesting if usually not great shot but becomes fabulous as a topspin lob, with only difference from a moonball being a very slight degree more of keying under before the delayed elbow release.
Flattening out this shot from same mondo produces a passable if somewhat mediocre shot since the different vectors don't quite line up.
Better to mondo as part of a roundabout swing with elbow still to delay. Roundabout swing (call this a different forehand now) equals roundabout mondo equals inside out swing. The hand stays at level of ball or even above it. The racket tip is what flips down then wipes up.
Wipe in a forehand, it seems to me, ought to be inside-out with the outside-in part of it from right fence to left fence only occurring after contact.
A slow motion sequence of Muguruza's forehand yesterday during French Open coverage showed no wipe until post-contact. Stanley Plagenhoef might say she was merely using wipe to relieve pressure on her shoulder.
In contrast, I remember similar slow-mo video of Roger where the wipe always begins well before the contact.
The context here is forehand progression/development along a line of emerging discovery, which sentence may sound too much like a word salad but really isn't.
One slowly finds a path through dense creepers out in a forest somewhere. And as one does this, one makes new discoveries-- simple as that.
I don't think too many people today are aware of the BAM forehand. The "BAM" of it is not some acronym such as "Bottle's Annoying Mess" but rather a cartoon word from the days of Joe Palooka or Captain Marvel.
BAM! would appear in a white balloon as Captain Marvel delivered an uppercut or Joe Palooka received one on his chin. Small stars or asterisks would fly through the air like projectiles of perspiration and emblems of the closed head injury underway.
I saw some of these forehands in the late twentieth century but never developed one for myself until now when I am 76 years old. A simple shot which I have lately been describing (and hitting) over and over.
The hand keys ahead as the elbow stays back. The elbow then flies forward up and maybe even back. Whichever the case, the knuckles brush one's own ear: a Captain Marvel uppercut.
This is a no wipe shot. It has a subtle or rather dramatic height adjustment meter built in.
A middling degree of arm bend figures into this. The arm is neither straight or right-angled. The keying action from stationary elbow therefore leads the forward action with one's hand down and forward as if one is about to push through a stuck cellar door with right palm turned back and down.
The blow is delivered straight ahead: Terms like "outside-in" or "inside-out" are irrelevant. It's an interesting if usually not great shot but becomes fabulous as a topspin lob, with only difference from a moonball being a very slight degree more of keying under before the delayed elbow release.
Flattening out this shot from same mondo produces a passable if somewhat mediocre shot since the different vectors don't quite line up.
Better to mondo as part of a roundabout swing with elbow still to delay. Roundabout swing (call this a different forehand now) equals roundabout mondo equals inside out swing. The hand stays at level of ball or even above it. The racket tip is what flips down then wipes up.
Wipe in a forehand, it seems to me, ought to be inside-out with the outside-in part of it from right fence to left fence only occurring after contact.
A slow motion sequence of Muguruza's forehand yesterday during French Open coverage showed no wipe until post-contact. Stanley Plagenhoef might say she was merely using wipe to relieve pressure on her shoulder.
In contrast, I remember similar slow-mo video of Roger where the wipe always begins well before the contact.
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