Thanks Brian, your articles on the biomechanics of the serve are truly one of a kind. Keep picking something new up everytime I reread them. I have a couple of books on the biomechanics of tennis in my library, but nothing comes close. The serve is the most complex stroke in tennis, and you have gone a very long way in clarifying the many baffling points.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Thanks Brian Gordon
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by gzhpcu View PostThanks Brian, your articles on the biomechanics of the serve are truly one of a kind. Keep picking something new up everytime I reread them. I have a couple of books on the biomechanics of tennis in my library, but nothing comes close. The serve is the most complex stroke in tennis, and you have gone a very long way in clarifying the many baffling points.
Thanks so much for the nice words - actually John deserves much of the credit - while the concepts were mine he would not let anything through that he didn't feel was moderately understandable - most of it initially. Plus by last count I believe that makes you the 11th person to read it - but rereading, that's down right demented - seriously though, glad you got some clarifying stuff out of them - ultimately that was the goal. - Brian
-
The 11th person to read it? You must be kidding, aren't you? If true, then that would be a sad state of affairs indeed, as the analysis of the serve is so intriguing.
What makes is so special, I find, are the diagrams and animations and avi's. A picture is often worth a thousand words of explanation.
Kudo's to both of you...
Comment
Who's Online
Collapse
There are currently 10358 users online. 4 members and 10354 guests.
Most users ever online was 139,261 at 09:55 PM on 08-18-2024.
- johnyandell ,
- indnix1 ,
- bigloz ,
Comment