I took a few months off from tennis and came back better than ever.
Wanted to share my biggest discovery along the way.
Regarding the arm action responsible for getting the hitting surface of the racquet to "flip" over immediately after contact:
As it was described in the recent Federer serve article, "pronation" is more about internal rotation from the shoulder than anything that occurs at the elbow or wrist.
I'm not sure how widespread this little technical flaw is, but before I figured this out, I was using too much wrist flexion and ulnar deviation. I was throwing a ton of momentum out into the racquet head and really never getting the right feel for the arm and racquet rotating as a unit. I was using too much kinetic chain.
In comparison, my improved serve feels like everything is one motion from the bottom of the drop to contact. Pull the whole thing over the top like swinging a sledgehammer, and use internal rotation to get the entire arm/racquet unit rotating from the bottom of the drop through contact.
I am now serving enormous bombs with what feels like very little effort and much better control. It no longer feels like I'm waiting and hoping for some magical "snapping" effect at the end of the kinetic chain to bring the ball down into the box or to put spin on it. Fewer moving parts to sequence together.
Probably what held me back the most was trying to "lead with the edge" of the racquet all the way until contact. Depending on your current motion, this may be good advice. For me, though, it was the wrong feel. Too much speed in that leading edge will prevent the weight of the sweet spot from coming through the ball. Now that I'm bringing the whole arm/racquet unit through the ball, I can bring the thunder without hoping for a bunch of delicately timed motions to come together at precisely the right time. My motion feels slower now, but the ball absolutely explodes off the racquet.
Good stuff. Hopefully there is a nugget of info here that might be helpful to you, especially if you can relate to what I was doing before.
Interestingly, I had a taste of this motion a few times before, but never enough to really understand it and incorporate the feel into an actual technical improvement.
Wanted to share my biggest discovery along the way.
Regarding the arm action responsible for getting the hitting surface of the racquet to "flip" over immediately after contact:
As it was described in the recent Federer serve article, "pronation" is more about internal rotation from the shoulder than anything that occurs at the elbow or wrist.
I'm not sure how widespread this little technical flaw is, but before I figured this out, I was using too much wrist flexion and ulnar deviation. I was throwing a ton of momentum out into the racquet head and really never getting the right feel for the arm and racquet rotating as a unit. I was using too much kinetic chain.
In comparison, my improved serve feels like everything is one motion from the bottom of the drop to contact. Pull the whole thing over the top like swinging a sledgehammer, and use internal rotation to get the entire arm/racquet unit rotating from the bottom of the drop through contact.
I am now serving enormous bombs with what feels like very little effort and much better control. It no longer feels like I'm waiting and hoping for some magical "snapping" effect at the end of the kinetic chain to bring the ball down into the box or to put spin on it. Fewer moving parts to sequence together.
Probably what held me back the most was trying to "lead with the edge" of the racquet all the way until contact. Depending on your current motion, this may be good advice. For me, though, it was the wrong feel. Too much speed in that leading edge will prevent the weight of the sweet spot from coming through the ball. Now that I'm bringing the whole arm/racquet unit through the ball, I can bring the thunder without hoping for a bunch of delicately timed motions to come together at precisely the right time. My motion feels slower now, but the ball absolutely explodes off the racquet.
Good stuff. Hopefully there is a nugget of info here that might be helpful to you, especially if you can relate to what I was doing before.
Interestingly, I had a taste of this motion a few times before, but never enough to really understand it and incorporate the feel into an actual technical improvement.
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