Okay, Geoff, we had a little issue today. The guy that has the tape is taking the day off, and it is in his car, and I did not want to wake him.
Now, Milana said: "No need for the tape, I get it, I can hear the difference." She also said she could feel it.
I have always had her use a old fashioned leather grip for two reasons (1) If your technique is bad, and if you are weak on the racket, you will get blisters, and for us that tells us it's time to take a break as things have broken down. You can tell what you need to know by the location of where their is friction as well. (2) I feel you can "feel" the ball and the racket head better with the leather grip. The pro's hate what I do, and tell me to use over grip, however, I think that's a bad technical pathway.
As I know shit all about tennis Geoff, I just want to check with you and see if that sounds right or not to you?
I will use the tape tomorrow, however, you really got her thinking, and I guess it's fortunate their was no tape today as she started to consciously think about (1) why she is hitting in the right spot, (2) what the feel is, and (3) what the sound is. She even went as far today as saying "I will hit the ball in the middle of the racket, and let you hear the noise, and then I will hit in the correct spot and you will hear the noise."
By the way, today is a soft training day, where she's been given hand fed balls right dropped in a VERY sweet spot, and we are working on backhand drill that I copied from Robert Lansdorp.
I initially did not like his idea of stopping the racket out in front as I thought it would be a bad idea because it did not dicipitate force which isn't what I wanted to do with a young arm. I had a ton of conversations with worldsbesttenniscoach on the matter (yes, worldsbesttenniscoach had a few holes in his understanding of bio-mechanics, physics and motion, however, I thought some of his stuff was just insanely brilliant and original. It's to bad the guy had a career outside of tennis, other interests in life and wasn't at the tennis courts for 60,000 hours of experience because he has some superlative raw coaching talent in my opinion).
Anyways, old school works, and Geoff's idea has great merit (tape on the racket), especially for a young kid who can hold their focus, and Robert's idea is superlative although I have to say I have butchered what he is doing in his instructional lesson for the most part, and changed it to suit my player.
Now, Milana said: "No need for the tape, I get it, I can hear the difference." She also said she could feel it.
I have always had her use a old fashioned leather grip for two reasons (1) If your technique is bad, and if you are weak on the racket, you will get blisters, and for us that tells us it's time to take a break as things have broken down. You can tell what you need to know by the location of where their is friction as well. (2) I feel you can "feel" the ball and the racket head better with the leather grip. The pro's hate what I do, and tell me to use over grip, however, I think that's a bad technical pathway.
As I know shit all about tennis Geoff, I just want to check with you and see if that sounds right or not to you?
I will use the tape tomorrow, however, you really got her thinking, and I guess it's fortunate their was no tape today as she started to consciously think about (1) why she is hitting in the right spot, (2) what the feel is, and (3) what the sound is. She even went as far today as saying "I will hit the ball in the middle of the racket, and let you hear the noise, and then I will hit in the correct spot and you will hear the noise."
By the way, today is a soft training day, where she's been given hand fed balls right dropped in a VERY sweet spot, and we are working on backhand drill that I copied from Robert Lansdorp.
I initially did not like his idea of stopping the racket out in front as I thought it would be a bad idea because it did not dicipitate force which isn't what I wanted to do with a young arm. I had a ton of conversations with worldsbesttenniscoach on the matter (yes, worldsbesttenniscoach had a few holes in his understanding of bio-mechanics, physics and motion, however, I thought some of his stuff was just insanely brilliant and original. It's to bad the guy had a career outside of tennis, other interests in life and wasn't at the tennis courts for 60,000 hours of experience because he has some superlative raw coaching talent in my opinion).
Anyways, old school works, and Geoff's idea has great merit (tape on the racket), especially for a young kid who can hold their focus, and Robert's idea is superlative although I have to say I have butchered what he is doing in his instructional lesson for the most part, and changed it to suit my player.
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