In rereading this article, a couple of points jump out at me.
First of all, Rusedski had the fastest serve at the time (at 149 mph), pinpoint or platform, and the article makes the point he had the least knee bend of top servers.
Second, John is very clear the difference in servers with pinpoint or platform stances is very small vis-a-vis actual top speeds.
I continue to feel kids make too much of an effort to throw themselves into the court with a deep knee bend and upward explosion, when they really haven't mastered a simple good snap which involves all the elements of the kinetic chain from bottom up. Even if you can do everything right, the deep knee bend advocated in many quarters and seen by many top pros adds only a few mph while significantly negatively impacting first serve percentages and accuracy (which is not measured that I know of). You can check Brian Gordon's articles for a clearer outline of how much the big push from the platform stance (thought to be the stronger of the two stances in this regard) can contribute to ultimate service velocity. But I don't want a student to even move one foot across the line into the court until he/she can show me that he can hit 5 serves in a row into the box with at least some regularity without moving his/her feet.
It is necessary to get that kind of control of the motion before you start taking off like John Isner. No question being an additional foot off the ground when he contacts the serve helps Isner improve his already enviable contact position, but if he didn't have a decent snap (he has a great one) and good use of the kinetic chain, it wouldn't matter.
I'm all for maximizing the serve. After all the ball is in the server's hand. But most of the "advanced" juniors that I see, have little or no ability to control their body and balance when they go to hit a serve. Each and every toss is an "adventure". You can't learn to drive a car on the "autobahn". You need to start in the parking lot and work up before you hit 4th gear. They see all the pros using their legs and they don't know that those pros perfected the basic motion and got control of it before they started to improve it and get a few additional mph by hurling themselves upward. This confusion is making it harder for millions of kids to learn a good basic service motion and someday have a chance to be able to hurl themselves into space and get some real benefit from some upward lift, either from a platform or a pinpoint stance.
Comments?
First of all, Rusedski had the fastest serve at the time (at 149 mph), pinpoint or platform, and the article makes the point he had the least knee bend of top servers.
Second, John is very clear the difference in servers with pinpoint or platform stances is very small vis-a-vis actual top speeds.
I continue to feel kids make too much of an effort to throw themselves into the court with a deep knee bend and upward explosion, when they really haven't mastered a simple good snap which involves all the elements of the kinetic chain from bottom up. Even if you can do everything right, the deep knee bend advocated in many quarters and seen by many top pros adds only a few mph while significantly negatively impacting first serve percentages and accuracy (which is not measured that I know of). You can check Brian Gordon's articles for a clearer outline of how much the big push from the platform stance (thought to be the stronger of the two stances in this regard) can contribute to ultimate service velocity. But I don't want a student to even move one foot across the line into the court until he/she can show me that he can hit 5 serves in a row into the box with at least some regularity without moving his/her feet.
It is necessary to get that kind of control of the motion before you start taking off like John Isner. No question being an additional foot off the ground when he contacts the serve helps Isner improve his already enviable contact position, but if he didn't have a decent snap (he has a great one) and good use of the kinetic chain, it wouldn't matter.
I'm all for maximizing the serve. After all the ball is in the server's hand. But most of the "advanced" juniors that I see, have little or no ability to control their body and balance when they go to hit a serve. Each and every toss is an "adventure". You can't learn to drive a car on the "autobahn". You need to start in the parking lot and work up before you hit 4th gear. They see all the pros using their legs and they don't know that those pros perfected the basic motion and got control of it before they started to improve it and get a few additional mph by hurling themselves upward. This confusion is making it harder for millions of kids to learn a good basic service motion and someday have a chance to be able to hurl themselves into space and get some real benefit from some upward lift, either from a platform or a pinpoint stance.
Comments?
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