I love what you had to say about Robert's teaching methods. I've tried to go back and look at some of his articles again. I hear all this stuff about new strokes etc, but I just feel the basic stroke has to be ground in before you can start to play with all the other stuff. Once you can hit through the ball like the 9 y.o. Sampras in that classic forehand video (or is it 11 y.o depending on where you look, I think more likely 11), then you can start to use all the other finishes including the wiper and even the reverse. But when I see my players bailing out of a ball that is a little bit deep and going into a reverse because they didn't get there early enough or get down low enough to hit through the ball, I am all over them. Even Robert seems to say Maria is using the reverse too much of the time (it is hard to tell from the archived articles when they were written and which Maria we are talking about. I think John should consider adding an original publishing date,although I know you could find it by searching through all the past issues for the original publishing).
I don't want to introduce even the wiper until the player knows how to hit through the ball. I spend a lot of time trying to correct young kids who have been taught to finish on the left ear(forehand) or right ear(2-handed backhand -rightys). It's better than a lot of things they could be doing, but it doesn't get them to hit through the ball. I saw Guga hit the ball when he was at the top. There was a difference between his ball and almost everyone else's at the time. He went through the ball and hit it absolutely huge. There was that extension John went into in that article on extension on rotation a couple of months ago. If indeed Guga learned that forehand by bringing the back of his right hand to his left ear, how did he learn to hit through the ball so visciously? I think he probably started with something more like Robert's extension and eventually found he had to add more topspin and adapted to the wiper type of shot when he got stronger and already know how to hit through the ball.
So the question is, how solid do I need to see that "Lansdorp Drive" (2 feet over the net to within 4 feet of both lines in the corner with some pretty good topspin) before I allow the kid to start to monkey around with what he sees all the pros doing? I hold them off as long as I can.
Hope I get some responses on this one.
Just about the tennis please!
don brosseau
I don't want to introduce even the wiper until the player knows how to hit through the ball. I spend a lot of time trying to correct young kids who have been taught to finish on the left ear(forehand) or right ear(2-handed backhand -rightys). It's better than a lot of things they could be doing, but it doesn't get them to hit through the ball. I saw Guga hit the ball when he was at the top. There was a difference between his ball and almost everyone else's at the time. He went through the ball and hit it absolutely huge. There was that extension John went into in that article on extension on rotation a couple of months ago. If indeed Guga learned that forehand by bringing the back of his right hand to his left ear, how did he learn to hit through the ball so visciously? I think he probably started with something more like Robert's extension and eventually found he had to add more topspin and adapted to the wiper type of shot when he got stronger and already know how to hit through the ball.
So the question is, how solid do I need to see that "Lansdorp Drive" (2 feet over the net to within 4 feet of both lines in the corner with some pretty good topspin) before I allow the kid to start to monkey around with what he sees all the pros doing? I hold them off as long as I can.
Hope I get some responses on this one.
Just about the tennis please!
don brosseau
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