Wish I did. if he played regularly in the states in senior events I'd film him.
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You can see examples of Edberg's volleys in matches on you tube. His backhand volley and his speed in getting inside the service line post serve are incredible.
Since the you tube videos are often segments of the live tv coverage , they occasionally show a slow motion of his volley. That's the best I've been able to come up with.
Glenn S.
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Jacque
Hi John, I'm glad I'm getting this thing figured out, I've never posted on a forum before. I've got a few questions for you... One of Jacque's goals is to be a top ranked professional player. I'm wondering how much court time you'd recommend to accomplish that goal. Also, what are the most common injuries that come up in tennis players? And what's the best way to combat those? Thanks for any feedback, Talk to you soon!!! Dave
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Dave,
You aren't asking questions with simple answers for a written forum. Also appreciate the confidence but I am not a development coach and don't really have the expertise you are looking for. If you want to call me do that and I'll try to guide you to people who are a bit more knowledgeable about the process.
415-336-9439. Friday during the day California time would be good as we are driving down to Indian Wells.
John Yandell
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Originally posted by johnyandell View PostJon,
It's a Phantom high speed camera filming at 250 to 500 frames per second--the same camera American network TV uses at the Super Bowl etc. Yeah it might be a bit unaffordable for most players.
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I just had a look at the McEnroe/Lendl music video and to be honest, all that comes to mind is, wow.... These guys were long before my time but it's amazing how much control they have over the ball, how they hit up the line, crosscourt, whatever with amazing consistency and accuracy and with such ease, yet some of their technique looks strange to the eye and awkward.
I find McEnroes forehand technique to be especially awkward looking and wonder how he still hits the ball this well. Is that the natural talent coming into play? The timing? It really is a site to behold.
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What are Novak Djokovic's Forehand and Backhand Grips?
I want to practice Djokovic's strokes and have studied the high-speed video closely. It is still difficult to really see the grips without a super close-up of the hand (this would be a great feature for the site if you could get film of the hands for all players to clearly show grips!!).
By my best analysis so far, Novak's forehand seems to be a 4 1/2 / 4 1/2 like Nadal's. His index knuckle looks like it is about 4 1/2. When I try this grip, the racquet face naturally goes into the same positions throughout the swing pattern as in his videos without trying to force anything. It surprises me that he can generate so much pace with an extreme grip, but I think the swing pattern (compact, yet set up for a full, long power pull from the bottom of the drop) is key. Of course Nadal can generate huge pace also when needed with the extreme grip, but his straight-arm pattern is very different than Novak's standard bent-arm. And, if last week's Indian Wells matches are an indication, Novak can generate every bit as much and even more pace as Rafa (or Roger) with that forehand!
On the backhand side, Novak's grip with his left hand (the one of most interest) seems to be a 6 1/2 or 6 (like the equivalent of a 3 1/2 to 4 Federer or Agassi forehand grip). By the way, on Agassi's backhand left hand, it definitely seems to be a 7 (like a 3 eastern forehand) - is that correct?
I hope you have the answers for these grips - I am dying to know for sure and want to spend some hours on the ball machine and in play with his strokes right away. As you have explained so well, every stroke starts with the grip structure, and this must be correct to emulate anyone's swing properly!
Thanks so much for your analysis and ideas on this,
Erland Renslo
Roseville, CA
Johnson Ranch Racquet ClubLast edited by erland; 03-26-2011, 01:24 AM.
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Erland,
Good questions and yes I am going to get the players to stop play in the middle of points so that I can run out and take precise stills of their grips...
You see the difficulty right? On the forehand I would say 4 1/2 for sure on the index knuckle and maybe 4 on the heel pad. You're in the ball park for sure. And it is interesting that even with that grip his forehand looks so much less extreme than Nadal's. Think that may have to do with the hitting arm structure, but more likely where he plays in the court--trying to be up much closer and take the ball earlier with lower contact heights.
On the backhand with the top hand using the forehand terminology it looks more like a 3/3 to me. Agassi was probably up there around a 2 1/2.
It great to try to model these guys but as I saw in the grip articles this terminology is way more precise than the old naming system, but it's still not exactly. Players have different size hands, grips, grip shapes, and even switch hand position around a little sometimes from day to day.
So use this as a guide and build your own stroke from there. Just because you think Novak does this or that doesn't mean you'll end up an exact clone. That's impossible anyway as the archives themselves show.
John YandellLast edited by johnyandell; 03-26-2011, 01:37 PM.
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