Just a thought about balls
Don_budge, Bottle,
Are you using foam balls at all? It occurs to me you are trying to feel the ball in this new stroke (new for you). I love to use the foam balls with my students to warm-up and help them find their stroke which they tend to lose from lesson to lesson. Hitting a few balls with the foam balls (the ones about the size of softballs) gives my students a chance to feel the ball on the strings as they unwind through the shot (particularly on the backhand, but also forehands) with a speed of swing that enables them to feel the weight of the racket head more easily without having to worry about knocking down the back fence. I just do this for a couple of minutes and then I switch back to the regular balls, sometimes with an intermediate step with the "orange ball". The great thing with the QuickStart "orange balls" (or green PennStars) is that the ball sits on the strings for a longer period of time and you can actually feel that contact. I like to use the PennStars (mine are actually 10 years old) with advanced players to get them to feel what it is like to hold the ball on the strings and "hit through the ball". When you hit a regular ball, it jumps off the strings in that mandatory 4-thousanths of a second; it's especially hard to feel the transfer of the momentum of the racket head to the ball when you are swinging slowly.
It just occured to me it might really help you out, d_b, if you haven't already tried it. You too, Bottle, on that bangboard although the foam ball may not be as effective there (although it is great in the garage!).
don
Don_budge, Bottle,
Are you using foam balls at all? It occurs to me you are trying to feel the ball in this new stroke (new for you). I love to use the foam balls with my students to warm-up and help them find their stroke which they tend to lose from lesson to lesson. Hitting a few balls with the foam balls (the ones about the size of softballs) gives my students a chance to feel the ball on the strings as they unwind through the shot (particularly on the backhand, but also forehands) with a speed of swing that enables them to feel the weight of the racket head more easily without having to worry about knocking down the back fence. I just do this for a couple of minutes and then I switch back to the regular balls, sometimes with an intermediate step with the "orange ball". The great thing with the QuickStart "orange balls" (or green PennStars) is that the ball sits on the strings for a longer period of time and you can actually feel that contact. I like to use the PennStars (mine are actually 10 years old) with advanced players to get them to feel what it is like to hold the ball on the strings and "hit through the ball". When you hit a regular ball, it jumps off the strings in that mandatory 4-thousanths of a second; it's especially hard to feel the transfer of the momentum of the racket head to the ball when you are swinging slowly.
It just occured to me it might really help you out, d_b, if you haven't already tried it. You too, Bottle, on that bangboard although the foam ball may not be as effective there (although it is great in the garage!).
don
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