Trick Shoulder Tricky Kick
While being aware (too aware) of having a trick shoulder, I don't know how much its lapsedness impairs or does not impair my ability within the complex structure of a tennis serve to get my elbow high.
Of first importance: At the end of downtogether-uptogether the racket must be perpendicular to rear fence or more.
Second, there needs to be space between one's elbow and one's bod. The farther back the elbow, the higher it already is.
Third, the more the elbow goes around the less it will go up. So plan not to let it go around at all. This will create something akin to a hook shot in basketball in which the elbow does go up.
Fourth, know exactly when you wish to lower left arm (not until beginning of triceptic extension) and when exactly you wish to drive the legs (simultaneous with triceptic extension). Fire the extensors baby!
What happens between the toss and the firing of the extensors is the prime time of loading without which nothing else matters.
The core elements for this are straightforward just as a somersault is straightforward.
The arm until now a mystery can hook the racket decisively forward from both shoulder and elbow joints.
As a believer in cues more than anything that actually happens, I choose a spot on the court a foot to the left of my left foot. If I drive the racket with full intention to murder that spot the elbow will go up. It has to.
And once arm is fully squeezed the upper arm twisting to load will take the racket head slightly to the right.
While being aware (too aware) of having a trick shoulder, I don't know how much its lapsedness impairs or does not impair my ability within the complex structure of a tennis serve to get my elbow high.
Of first importance: At the end of downtogether-uptogether the racket must be perpendicular to rear fence or more.
Second, there needs to be space between one's elbow and one's bod. The farther back the elbow, the higher it already is.
Third, the more the elbow goes around the less it will go up. So plan not to let it go around at all. This will create something akin to a hook shot in basketball in which the elbow does go up.
Fourth, know exactly when you wish to lower left arm (not until beginning of triceptic extension) and when exactly you wish to drive the legs (simultaneous with triceptic extension). Fire the extensors baby!
What happens between the toss and the firing of the extensors is the prime time of loading without which nothing else matters.
The core elements for this are straightforward just as a somersault is straightforward.
The arm until now a mystery can hook the racket decisively forward from both shoulder and elbow joints.
As a believer in cues more than anything that actually happens, I choose a spot on the court a foot to the left of my left foot. If I drive the racket with full intention to murder that spot the elbow will go up. It has to.
And once arm is fully squeezed the upper arm twisting to load will take the racket head slightly to the right.
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