Court positioning today on WTA & ATP circuits is pathetic, compared to what it was decades ago. Go back, for instance, to the 1972 Wimbledon final between Smith & Nastase. You will see ourt positioning & anticipation that puts today's players to shame.
Even Rafa often has poor anticipation. For example, in one point of US Open final, Rafa hit passing shot to Novak's backhand volley. Rafa was way too far behind the baseline to begin with, & then Rafa's first reaction was too move parallel to the baseline. Smith & Nastase would have anticipated a short volley to the open court, which is what happened. But Nada reacted poorly, with no wise anticipation, so Nadal could not touch Djokovic's easy shot.
It is especially easy to expect a crosscourt easy volley off Novak's backhand, due to his grip for the backhand volley.
Coaches today teach wrong things, give out misinformation. Players have good, eager hearts, so they listen to those coaches, unfortunately. As Mr. Miyagi said in the first Karate Kid movie, "no such thing as bad student, only bad teacher."
Players in the past were constantly put under pressure, because opponents took the ball earlier on groundstrokee, opponents were frequently coming to net, opponents were always looking for opportunities to make approch shots. Therefore, players would learn, almost subconsciously, how to counterpunch & use the best counterpunching tactics.
Nowadays, players do not face such pressure, so they do not unconsciously learn how to counterpunch. And coaches teach the wrong thing --coaches teach, "when in trouble, retreat."
Also, someone asked mw which players have premature backswings, too far back. My answer is, "In today's pro game, most players." That is why players don't hit where they aim. They throw away points so early in the rallies. The game has become boring to watch. That is why interest in the game has fallen.
Even Rafa often has poor anticipation. For example, in one point of US Open final, Rafa hit passing shot to Novak's backhand volley. Rafa was way too far behind the baseline to begin with, & then Rafa's first reaction was too move parallel to the baseline. Smith & Nastase would have anticipated a short volley to the open court, which is what happened. But Nada reacted poorly, with no wise anticipation, so Nadal could not touch Djokovic's easy shot.
It is especially easy to expect a crosscourt easy volley off Novak's backhand, due to his grip for the backhand volley.
Coaches today teach wrong things, give out misinformation. Players have good, eager hearts, so they listen to those coaches, unfortunately. As Mr. Miyagi said in the first Karate Kid movie, "no such thing as bad student, only bad teacher."
Players in the past were constantly put under pressure, because opponents took the ball earlier on groundstrokee, opponents were frequently coming to net, opponents were always looking for opportunities to make approch shots. Therefore, players would learn, almost subconsciously, how to counterpunch & use the best counterpunching tactics.
Nowadays, players do not face such pressure, so they do not unconsciously learn how to counterpunch. And coaches teach the wrong thing --coaches teach, "when in trouble, retreat."
Also, someone asked mw which players have premature backswings, too far back. My answer is, "In today's pro game, most players." That is why players don't hit where they aim. They throw away points so early in the rallies. The game has become boring to watch. That is why interest in the game has fallen.
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