I've had to change my thinking about this. I did believe that the lefty forehand idea explained the technical model. Now I say they call it a two-handed backhand for a reason. The role of the front arm makes the torso rotation somewhere inbetween a one and a two. If you look at the shoulders and hips they are far more closed than on the forehand.
Having said that I still actually agree with you about teaching the stroke. It's like learning outside leg set up and neutral stance on the forehand and evolving to more radical open stances later. I think the way to teach the two is the same way. Outside leg set up and neutral. The lazy, reaching closed stance backhand is not the pro version. So I often have players do exactly what you say. Set up and learn to hit open. Again it is a pretty high level where the closed thing applies--but elite juniors probably yes.
Having said that I still actually agree with you about teaching the stroke. It's like learning outside leg set up and neutral stance on the forehand and evolving to more radical open stances later. I think the way to teach the two is the same way. Outside leg set up and neutral. The lazy, reaching closed stance backhand is not the pro version. So I often have players do exactly what you say. Set up and learn to hit open. Again it is a pretty high level where the closed thing applies--but elite juniors probably yes.
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