I have finally experienced the absolute straight-arm, no-biceps forehand that Carrerakent so passionately promotes (if I'm understanding it correctly), but have not tried it in play yet because it presents new challenges -- besides not bending my elbow at all, I need more leg-propulsion and must make sure that I'm at the right distance from the incoming ball. Since no elbow-bending is allowed, it's either get set up in just the right place, or lean a little this way or that. For a 6'4" character such as Bottle, it will pose an even bigger problem, like getting jammed a lot.
To help myself and others (but not with mastering the footwork), I have thought of an orthopedic training device, one that holds the arm straight at all times. I was inspired by Brad Gilbert's Wrist-Assist TV ads. My script will be, "Learn how it feels to hit a Robin Soderling forehand just once in your life! Like Jimmy Connors used to! It will be the best $120 you have ever spent. Allow six weeks for delivery."
It will force you to hinge shots only at the shoulder, while revolving on the ball of your front foot.
The beauty part is that the Soderfore trainer can be used effectively on backhands, too -- even on overheads like Connors' signature skyhook overheads, even for slow, Connorslike serves, before he figured out how to put juice into them, late in his career.
Did you see how Soderling faltered in Paris last week? He was a shadow of the Soderling who massacred Nadal at the French with effortless sharp, crosscourt forehands. Why? Because he was bending his right arm. Maybe not much, just enough to engage his biceps. He needed my rigid-elbow device to help him through his bent-arm relapses. Not having one of my lightweight orthopedic braces must have cost him hundreds of thousands of Euros. Someday I will post a mini-video of training with this device.
To help myself and others (but not with mastering the footwork), I have thought of an orthopedic training device, one that holds the arm straight at all times. I was inspired by Brad Gilbert's Wrist-Assist TV ads. My script will be, "Learn how it feels to hit a Robin Soderling forehand just once in your life! Like Jimmy Connors used to! It will be the best $120 you have ever spent. Allow six weeks for delivery."
It will force you to hinge shots only at the shoulder, while revolving on the ball of your front foot.
The beauty part is that the Soderfore trainer can be used effectively on backhands, too -- even on overheads like Connors' signature skyhook overheads, even for slow, Connorslike serves, before he figured out how to put juice into them, late in his career.
Did you see how Soderling faltered in Paris last week? He was a shadow of the Soderling who massacred Nadal at the French with effortless sharp, crosscourt forehands. Why? Because he was bending his right arm. Maybe not much, just enough to engage his biceps. He needed my rigid-elbow device to help him through his bent-arm relapses. Not having one of my lightweight orthopedic braces must have cost him hundreds of thousands of Euros. Someday I will post a mini-video of training with this device.
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