I was looking at the Federer Forehand articles and was reminded of the issue concerning Roger's head facing sideways for so long, and why it's turned so much.
A lot of players keep their head still, but none completely sideways.
But what about Roger's eyes? Most people have a dominant eye that is proven to send information to the brain at least 10 times faster than the non dominant one.
So for Roger, if his left eye was dominant, it'd make much more sense to turn his head further sideways than normal to give his left eye better vision of the contact point.
I guess. That's just my two cents on a possible explanation. On another note, if his right eye is dominant, or if he's one of the rare people where both eyes are equal, turning his head a little more might reduce the mishits. But I'm not really qualified to give someone like Federer technical advice.
Would that explanation be plausible though? For a dominant left eye?
A lot of players keep their head still, but none completely sideways.
But what about Roger's eyes? Most people have a dominant eye that is proven to send information to the brain at least 10 times faster than the non dominant one.
So for Roger, if his left eye was dominant, it'd make much more sense to turn his head further sideways than normal to give his left eye better vision of the contact point.
I guess. That's just my two cents on a possible explanation. On another note, if his right eye is dominant, or if he's one of the rare people where both eyes are equal, turning his head a little more might reduce the mishits. But I'm not really qualified to give someone like Federer technical advice.
Would that explanation be plausible though? For a dominant left eye?
Comment