My Flippant Reason for not Liking the Term "Flip" in Tennis
Flip is a simple word. It therefore should apply to a simple act. Hand flip should be a simple thing but is not. Flip in a serve or forehand is at least two things: layback of the wrist and clockwise turn of the forearm. So I prefer "mondo." But the same person taught me both terms.
Recent forehand experiments in which one turns one's strings to face the side fence may create a technical and linguistic problem both. I ended by calling that situation a "half-mondo" and began to think I was on a diving board.
Forget that. I'd rather keep my wrist straight and moosh it much later into its hitting pose-- on both serve and forehand.
To do so, I am afraid I'll have to learn how to throw a curveball in baseball, something I never mastered in a lifetime. Perhaps some other reference would work. Reflect on all the great forehands that come from nations where there isn't any baseball.
Well, hardball has been in my blood ever since I caught a long fly ball on my forearms which led to a triple play. So I go with baseball.
On a serve, one will get the racket tip a slight degree less low by keeping wrist straight at teardrop. This could prove fatal but I've got to take the chance.
On a forehand I similarly will threaten the loss of all beneficial structure by trying to do much late but again I choose to take the chance.
Forehand: strings approach the ball from inside then catch the ball on backside then fling it from outside.
Serve: strings approach the ball under backside then catch it on outside and fling it from inside.
Life is pretty complicated if you ask me unless you can get all 28 persons in your kindergarten class to squeak like a mouse at once.
Flip is a simple word. It therefore should apply to a simple act. Hand flip should be a simple thing but is not. Flip in a serve or forehand is at least two things: layback of the wrist and clockwise turn of the forearm. So I prefer "mondo." But the same person taught me both terms.
Recent forehand experiments in which one turns one's strings to face the side fence may create a technical and linguistic problem both. I ended by calling that situation a "half-mondo" and began to think I was on a diving board.
Forget that. I'd rather keep my wrist straight and moosh it much later into its hitting pose-- on both serve and forehand.
To do so, I am afraid I'll have to learn how to throw a curveball in baseball, something I never mastered in a lifetime. Perhaps some other reference would work. Reflect on all the great forehands that come from nations where there isn't any baseball.
Well, hardball has been in my blood ever since I caught a long fly ball on my forearms which led to a triple play. So I go with baseball.
On a serve, one will get the racket tip a slight degree less low by keeping wrist straight at teardrop. This could prove fatal but I've got to take the chance.
On a forehand I similarly will threaten the loss of all beneficial structure by trying to do much late but again I choose to take the chance.
Forehand: strings approach the ball from inside then catch the ball on backside then fling it from outside.
Serve: strings approach the ball under backside then catch it on outside and fling it from inside.
Life is pretty complicated if you ask me unless you can get all 28 persons in your kindergarten class to squeak like a mouse at once.
Comment