Thanks, NABRUG
Two questions:
1. Would you describe this as a different technique compared to the "old" one?
2. Did you try it on the BH side?
Good questions. On 1), do you see "old" one as my previous forehand or Roger's forehand which all sensible people have understood perfectly all along or classical as opposed to Roger's "modern retro"? If my previous forehand, this is a change. I was pushing the ball more with my arm off to the left. Twist that elbow up the least bit and you totally alter the swing pattern. You alter it too much. You clobber the ball toward left fence. That can be great and should be kept as an option, but is nowhere near as good for control. Two videos of Rod Laver's forehand in this website illustrate this distinction perfectly. In the first, the strings go up the ball, which leaves at a right angle. In the second, the strings follow the ball.
Still on question one, if the "old" technique is Roger's which other people have described in different ways, I'm not sure whether I've found a departure or not. For all I know, I'm doing something the same as Roger or something different. I only know it's working for me and think it might work for others. And I cheer when players other than myself tell their personal discoveries. These are not always superior to more generic discussion, but sometimes they're amazingly helpful because so specific, e.g., I hurt my shoulder rotors pitching in baseball and here's how I adjusted my serve (a real example in these posts right now). The generous man's observations might apply to someone with stiff (but not damaged) rotors as well.
I guess a third possibility for "old" technique could be swing straight ahead
with both ends of the racket moving at the same speed and "c-a-a-r-r-r-y"
the ball. I'd throw that one right in the waste basket on my home page and in fact did before I even had a computer.
2) I've been too busy applying the new principle (new to me, at least) to
my serves to get around to trying it on my backhand. But I'm getting excited.
My preferred backhand is very wide right now-- a good start. It MIGHT work.
Thanks for the suggestion.
Two questions:
1. Would you describe this as a different technique compared to the "old" one?
2. Did you try it on the BH side?
Good questions. On 1), do you see "old" one as my previous forehand or Roger's forehand which all sensible people have understood perfectly all along or classical as opposed to Roger's "modern retro"? If my previous forehand, this is a change. I was pushing the ball more with my arm off to the left. Twist that elbow up the least bit and you totally alter the swing pattern. You alter it too much. You clobber the ball toward left fence. That can be great and should be kept as an option, but is nowhere near as good for control. Two videos of Rod Laver's forehand in this website illustrate this distinction perfectly. In the first, the strings go up the ball, which leaves at a right angle. In the second, the strings follow the ball.
Still on question one, if the "old" technique is Roger's which other people have described in different ways, I'm not sure whether I've found a departure or not. For all I know, I'm doing something the same as Roger or something different. I only know it's working for me and think it might work for others. And I cheer when players other than myself tell their personal discoveries. These are not always superior to more generic discussion, but sometimes they're amazingly helpful because so specific, e.g., I hurt my shoulder rotors pitching in baseball and here's how I adjusted my serve (a real example in these posts right now). The generous man's observations might apply to someone with stiff (but not damaged) rotors as well.
I guess a third possibility for "old" technique could be swing straight ahead
with both ends of the racket moving at the same speed and "c-a-a-r-r-r-y"
the ball. I'd throw that one right in the waste basket on my home page and in fact did before I even had a computer.
2) I've been too busy applying the new principle (new to me, at least) to
my serves to get around to trying it on my backhand. But I'm getting excited.
My preferred backhand is very wide right now-- a good start. It MIGHT work.
Thanks for the suggestion.
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