Originally posted by GeoffWilliams
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Look at Sharapova. Not fast on her feet by any means, but her footwork is excellent and as slow as she is, she still manages to get herself very stilll to take those big swings she makes at the ball. I expect on pure agility and speed and movement, Halep would beat her hands down, but Maria managed to get herself set and hit stinging winners that were big enough to neutralize that disadvantage. And I would profer that one of the reasons she could get away with swinging so hard and going for such small targets (she didn't have a lot of margin for error) is that her footwork was so good and she was so well set up to make those swings.
Even when Federer is in the air, as he is so beautifully in the "Fed Not Gone" video, he still manages to "still" his head. Coil and turn into the shot with the power of your core - yes; create a nice SSC with a shorter stroke and a slightly delayed completion of the backswing - yes; but don't get carried away and start lunging at your shots out of control trying to jump into the shot.
Perhaps I'm too stuck in the past, but I think tennis is about learning to exchange the ball and engage in a "conversation" with your opponent. Players that think tennis is just "hitting their shots" are missing out on a major aspect of what makes this game great. You can never be successful if you are hitting your shots "carefully". No room for that. You have to learn to swing freely. But you should also never hit a shot without a specific target in mind.
I insist that a player learn to hit the ball correctly first before I worry about whether they get it in, but then there comes a time when they can hit great shots in a given drill or exercise. Wonderful stroke production that leaves me breathless. But then they have to learn to engage the opponent in a match. When these great players meet in the later stages of the majors, it feels like a prize fight. It's not just hitting your shots. It's much more than load and explode.
So don't lose the footwork and don't lose the sense of exchanging the ball. It seems HockeyScout's vision of the player of the future is a winner on every ball that he can reach. I don't think so. And I hope not. That would be very boring. It's almost the equivalent of reducing a hockey game to just the penalty shots, shootoffs or whatever they call it. Yeah, there is a lot of drama, but it isn't hockey!
don
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