The Truth of the Pitch!
I regret that I’m joining this thread late. It made me laugh out loud when I saw that someone had raised “The Myth of the Pitch,” because just two weeks ago I sent John a three-page email rant about tennis coaches that talk baseball and don’t know what they’re talking about. Whoever said that “The Myth of the Pitch” is dead wrong falls into that category.
The only fault with “The Myth of the Pitch” is that it barely scratches the surface. Here’s a description of a tennis player serving (and please keep in mind that this applies to the way virtually EVERY tennis player serves, whether it's in the U.S., Japan, Cuba, or the Dominican Republic): The sever stands completely sideways to his opponent, not three-quarters, not nine-tenths, not at a 45 degree angle, totally sideways to the baseline and the net, and they ALL do it that way, there’s not one exception, every single tennis player puts his feet totally parallel to the baseline and his body completely sideways to his opponent. Every single tennis player in the entire world then lifts his front leg up so that his knee goes above his waist, then drops that leg back down and out, leading with the heel and thrusting it forward into the court, while also pushing off with his back foot, until his front foot hits the court about four feet (or more) inside the baseline, at which time, the braking action of that plant foot on the court’s surface triggers his whole upper body to come forward as it rotates into a completely open position with the arm (and the racket) still dragging behind. And then when all of that linear and rotational kinetic energy has traveled up the arm, he finally strikes the ball with his racket, extending his arm straight out in front of him toward his opponent, causing his torso to become completely parallel with the court as his back gets as level as a table, at which point the server's rear leg automatically swings up as a counterbalance, with his back foot going up over the level of where his head is now--keeping in mind that the server's head is now at or below the level of where his waist was when he started. And, as I said, 99.9999% of servers around the world serve that way!
Oh wait. That’s not a description of a server! It’s a description of a pitcher—but the two motions are sooooo “biometrically similar” I just got them completely confused. COME ON!!!!
I regret that I’m joining this thread late. It made me laugh out loud when I saw that someone had raised “The Myth of the Pitch,” because just two weeks ago I sent John a three-page email rant about tennis coaches that talk baseball and don’t know what they’re talking about. Whoever said that “The Myth of the Pitch” is dead wrong falls into that category.
The only fault with “The Myth of the Pitch” is that it barely scratches the surface. Here’s a description of a tennis player serving (and please keep in mind that this applies to the way virtually EVERY tennis player serves, whether it's in the U.S., Japan, Cuba, or the Dominican Republic): The sever stands completely sideways to his opponent, not three-quarters, not nine-tenths, not at a 45 degree angle, totally sideways to the baseline and the net, and they ALL do it that way, there’s not one exception, every single tennis player puts his feet totally parallel to the baseline and his body completely sideways to his opponent. Every single tennis player in the entire world then lifts his front leg up so that his knee goes above his waist, then drops that leg back down and out, leading with the heel and thrusting it forward into the court, while also pushing off with his back foot, until his front foot hits the court about four feet (or more) inside the baseline, at which time, the braking action of that plant foot on the court’s surface triggers his whole upper body to come forward as it rotates into a completely open position with the arm (and the racket) still dragging behind. And then when all of that linear and rotational kinetic energy has traveled up the arm, he finally strikes the ball with his racket, extending his arm straight out in front of him toward his opponent, causing his torso to become completely parallel with the court as his back gets as level as a table, at which point the server's rear leg automatically swings up as a counterbalance, with his back foot going up over the level of where his head is now--keeping in mind that the server's head is now at or below the level of where his waist was when he started. And, as I said, 99.9999% of servers around the world serve that way!
Oh wait. That’s not a description of a server! It’s a description of a pitcher—but the two motions are sooooo “biometrically similar” I just got them completely confused. COME ON!!!!
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