Originally posted by tennis_chiro
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IIII,
Certainly, if you get a deeper drop it is easier to get the racket around and have a longer path up to the ball during which you are able to accelerate the racket head and increase the momentum of the racket head in the direction you want to hit the ball, but...
I
you don't get the benefit of that deep drop. If you swing across on an angle (which most players do to a small degree), you only get a glancing blow. Your power is not going to the target. But someone with a relatively shallow drop can hit the ball pretty fast (I try not to use the word "hard" when talking about speed), if they can get on this line that I am referring to at the bottom of their relatively shallow drop.
Imagine if you were hitting a nail with a hammer. You want to bring the hammer to the nail right in line with the direction it has to go.
Or let's try a little different image: Let's say you are trying to get a car up to a high speed in a hurry. I will give you two choices:
1. You can have a long approach, say 300 ft., to a turn before a straightaway, but the straightaway is relatively short, say 1/8th of a mile and you can control the car through the turn at up to say 40mph.
or
2. You can have a short approach, say 100 ft., to the same turn, but then you have a full 1/4 mile to see what kind of speed you can get up to.
I'm not a car expert, but unless you have some super-charged dragster, you are not going to be able to get up to full speed in that 1/8th of a mile and the difference you got in the speed coming into the turn is relatively insignificant. The part that counts is when you can get the car on the straightaway and put the pedal to the metal. Since most of us do not have turbocharged arms and shoulders, we need as much "straightaway" as possible to accelerate the racket to the impact and we need to do that in the direction we want to hit the ball, not only for speed, but also for consistency and accuracy. Those qualities can not be overlooked, although they often are in these discussions.
You can place someone in a static "backscratch" position, even one of maximum depth, and they will not be able to get the racket head over to this line I'm talking about without wasting a lot of potential power. You need the momentum of the racket head as it approaches its low point in the "drop" to swing the head over to the right when the body swings the hips and then shoulders forward. You can see that on my clip
and also in the clip of Djokovic that Phil just posted with the two rackets
Hope that clarifies what I am trying to say.
And Phil,
It's only the "pro drop" if you get over to the right near the bottom of the drop of the racket head and have a long approach to the ball to accelerate to contact.
don
Certainly, if you get a deeper drop it is easier to get the racket around and have a longer path up to the ball during which you are able to accelerate the racket head and increase the momentum of the racket head in the direction you want to hit the ball, but...
I
f you don't swing the racket head over to the line towards the target,
Imagine if you were hitting a nail with a hammer. You want to bring the hammer to the nail right in line with the direction it has to go.
Or let's try a little different image: Let's say you are trying to get a car up to a high speed in a hurry. I will give you two choices:
1. You can have a long approach, say 300 ft., to a turn before a straightaway, but the straightaway is relatively short, say 1/8th of a mile and you can control the car through the turn at up to say 40mph.
or
2. You can have a short approach, say 100 ft., to the same turn, but then you have a full 1/4 mile to see what kind of speed you can get up to.
I'm not a car expert, but unless you have some super-charged dragster, you are not going to be able to get up to full speed in that 1/8th of a mile and the difference you got in the speed coming into the turn is relatively insignificant. The part that counts is when you can get the car on the straightaway and put the pedal to the metal. Since most of us do not have turbocharged arms and shoulders, we need as much "straightaway" as possible to accelerate the racket to the impact and we need to do that in the direction we want to hit the ball, not only for speed, but also for consistency and accuracy. Those qualities can not be overlooked, although they often are in these discussions.
You can place someone in a static "backscratch" position, even one of maximum depth, and they will not be able to get the racket head over to this line I'm talking about without wasting a lot of potential power. You need the momentum of the racket head as it approaches its low point in the "drop" to swing the head over to the right when the body swings the hips and then shoulders forward. You can see that on my clip
and also in the clip of Djokovic that Phil just posted with the two rackets
Hope that clarifies what I am trying to say.
And Phil,
It's only the "pro drop" if you get over to the right near the bottom of the drop of the racket head and have a long approach to the ball to accelerate to contact.
don
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