Has anyone ever asked why tennis players, coaches, and teaching pros think a bent arm is a rational way to hit a tennis ball?
Look at other sports and neighborhoods and how it has been known for decades and taught at all levels, that the extension of the arm at the shoulder all the way to the wrist/hand completes the natural biomechanical motion of hurling or hitting an object. Javelin, discus, football, baseball, hockey, golf, throwing rocks at cars or cats, the list goes on and on of sports where they've known for decades... and our tennis friends are still confused. (See attached images)
Any kid that grew up throwing rocks, dirt clods, or a baseball knows that you just naturally extend to the point of release. So why is it that tennis players got the bright idea that in order to hit harder we have to shorten our arm and muscles.
And then a couple of guys come along recently that look like they are dragging a sack of potatoes with their "straight arm" forehand, they have a couple of good weeks of tennis and tennis enthusiasts wonder if that is the next evolution.
I really would like some help in understanding how this bizarre phenomenon came about in tennis only. Was it Jim Courier? He sure drug his arm through the hitting area like he was pulling a piano behind him.
I think it all came about because tennis players came to decide after over 100 years that it was okay to actually explode with all of their might into a ball (novel concept since athletes had been doing that forever already) but since tennis players have such limiting boundaries in which they can hit (the court), they didn't know how to trust their new found athleticism to not hurl the ball into the stands and they didn't understand how to perfectly align their bodies to get an extended contact over and over, so they evolved into a guiding motion.
Maybe the whole white long pants and skirts thing just got tennis off to a very very very slow beginning of confusion as to whether this was a sport or not. I guess it doesn't really matter...does it?
Look at other sports and neighborhoods and how it has been known for decades and taught at all levels, that the extension of the arm at the shoulder all the way to the wrist/hand completes the natural biomechanical motion of hurling or hitting an object. Javelin, discus, football, baseball, hockey, golf, throwing rocks at cars or cats, the list goes on and on of sports where they've known for decades... and our tennis friends are still confused. (See attached images)
Any kid that grew up throwing rocks, dirt clods, or a baseball knows that you just naturally extend to the point of release. So why is it that tennis players got the bright idea that in order to hit harder we have to shorten our arm and muscles.
And then a couple of guys come along recently that look like they are dragging a sack of potatoes with their "straight arm" forehand, they have a couple of good weeks of tennis and tennis enthusiasts wonder if that is the next evolution.
I really would like some help in understanding how this bizarre phenomenon came about in tennis only. Was it Jim Courier? He sure drug his arm through the hitting area like he was pulling a piano behind him.
I think it all came about because tennis players came to decide after over 100 years that it was okay to actually explode with all of their might into a ball (novel concept since athletes had been doing that forever already) but since tennis players have such limiting boundaries in which they can hit (the court), they didn't know how to trust their new found athleticism to not hurl the ball into the stands and they didn't understand how to perfectly align their bodies to get an extended contact over and over, so they evolved into a guiding motion.
Maybe the whole white long pants and skirts thing just got tennis off to a very very very slow beginning of confusion as to whether this was a sport or not. I guess it doesn't really matter...does it?
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