Happy holidays and Merry Christmas to the tennisplayer community – been a bit tied up lately but for those interested in my work I provide the following update:
In my article that broke down the speed of the racquet into contributions from the various joint rotations on the serve, I acknowledged that current methodology precluded precise differentiation of the contributions from shoulder internal rotation and forearm pronation when the elbow neared full extension (second half of the upward swing).
In my recently defended dissertation, I developed a method to make this differentiation and reevaluated the final instants prior to contact – my method allowed accurate measurement up to 0.007 s prior to contact for the twist rotations of the hitting arm segments (upper arm and forearm) – interesting values at this time:
Shoulder twist rotation: 43% of racquet speed.
Forearm twist rotation: -5% of racquet speed.
The implication is that the rotation observed in the forearm (pronation) is purely a result of the internal rotation of the upper arm at the shoulder joint - independent rotation of the forearm is actually in the direction of supination RELATIVE to the upper arm – an important coaching cue in my opinion.
Other findings were that flexion at the wrist accounted for 36% of racquet speed at 0.007 s prior to impact and 43% of racquet speed at impact – higher than previously measured – the kinetic source of the flexion was not investigated in this work.
Just prior to impact, shoulder internal rotation and wrist flexion combined accounted for 79% of racquet speed. Upper trunk twisting rotation and elbow extension combined kicked in an extra 17% (in about equal proportion). Combined, these four sources accounted for 96% of the racquet speed.
These values are averages of a group of nine D1 players, predominantly made up of members of the last two national championship teams (sorry – no pros).
On to the forehand … Happy New Year!!!
In my article that broke down the speed of the racquet into contributions from the various joint rotations on the serve, I acknowledged that current methodology precluded precise differentiation of the contributions from shoulder internal rotation and forearm pronation when the elbow neared full extension (second half of the upward swing).
In my recently defended dissertation, I developed a method to make this differentiation and reevaluated the final instants prior to contact – my method allowed accurate measurement up to 0.007 s prior to contact for the twist rotations of the hitting arm segments (upper arm and forearm) – interesting values at this time:
Shoulder twist rotation: 43% of racquet speed.
Forearm twist rotation: -5% of racquet speed.
The implication is that the rotation observed in the forearm (pronation) is purely a result of the internal rotation of the upper arm at the shoulder joint - independent rotation of the forearm is actually in the direction of supination RELATIVE to the upper arm – an important coaching cue in my opinion.
Other findings were that flexion at the wrist accounted for 36% of racquet speed at 0.007 s prior to impact and 43% of racquet speed at impact – higher than previously measured – the kinetic source of the flexion was not investigated in this work.
Just prior to impact, shoulder internal rotation and wrist flexion combined accounted for 79% of racquet speed. Upper trunk twisting rotation and elbow extension combined kicked in an extra 17% (in about equal proportion). Combined, these four sources accounted for 96% of the racquet speed.
These values are averages of a group of nine D1 players, predominantly made up of members of the last two national championship teams (sorry – no pros).
On to the forehand … Happy New Year!!!
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