tennisplayer,
after more thought and some experimentation today paying attention to the muscles involved, i have to correct my original reply about what muscles are involved. i was initially thinking that i didn't want to emphasize any musclular contraction because as soon as you do that all of the analytical thinkers run out and start conciously contracting muscles and there you have it, a double bender, or worse.
i did notice today that the pec muscle does contract shortly after or right at the shoulders torquing open, the bicep tendon feels some pull and maybe a little anterior deltoid, but they do not pull the arm through, they instead are helping initiate the arm whip (kinetic chain) that is occurring.
the interesting thing from my experiences is that i have not told a single student at any level to contract any muscles, their bodies figure that out as a result of good shoulder turn and then reversing that turn. by the body doing its thing correctly, the arm can just go along for the ride after it initially pops the proverbial clutch.
after more thought and some experimentation today paying attention to the muscles involved, i have to correct my original reply about what muscles are involved. i was initially thinking that i didn't want to emphasize any musclular contraction because as soon as you do that all of the analytical thinkers run out and start conciously contracting muscles and there you have it, a double bender, or worse.
i did notice today that the pec muscle does contract shortly after or right at the shoulders torquing open, the bicep tendon feels some pull and maybe a little anterior deltoid, but they do not pull the arm through, they instead are helping initiate the arm whip (kinetic chain) that is occurring.
the interesting thing from my experiences is that i have not told a single student at any level to contract any muscles, their bodies figure that out as a result of good shoulder turn and then reversing that turn. by the body doing its thing correctly, the arm can just go along for the ride after it initially pops the proverbial clutch.
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