I watched the clip back again. I like his backhand a lot when he gets in position. His racket face is rather open on the take back but he seems comfortable with that and he hits it so sweetly off that wing at times. His sliced backhand lacks a bit of penetration but he has a nice feel for the shot and he could improve it quite easily by just knifing them a bit more. I find his forehand more of a liability and wouldn't want to rely on it when the bigger points come round.
His opponent seems a workhorse and nothing more...but he looks like he wants it.
But if Seiji just just had better footwork it would make all the difference in my view. It's not that he is slow, he just needs better footwork around the ball at times...micro steps....move out then back in type of stuff.
When I spoke with Sergio Casal about junior tennis development in Spain, he said, generally, Spanish coaches don't over obsess about technique but instead work very intensively on fitness, athleticism and footwork. Sergio is extremely skilled at hand feeding players from just a couple of feet away and getting them to work their socks off by just dropping balls around them from one side to the other or randomly.. He did a few of the drills with me and believe they are exhausting. But micro steps and positioning for Sergio is massive. For him it's the difference between making a shot or missing it....and misses, in Spanish tennis, he says, are deemed expensive.
His opponent seems a workhorse and nothing more...but he looks like he wants it.
But if Seiji just just had better footwork it would make all the difference in my view. It's not that he is slow, he just needs better footwork around the ball at times...micro steps....move out then back in type of stuff.
When I spoke with Sergio Casal about junior tennis development in Spain, he said, generally, Spanish coaches don't over obsess about technique but instead work very intensively on fitness, athleticism and footwork. Sergio is extremely skilled at hand feeding players from just a couple of feet away and getting them to work their socks off by just dropping balls around them from one side to the other or randomly.. He did a few of the drills with me and believe they are exhausting. But micro steps and positioning for Sergio is massive. For him it's the difference between making a shot or missing it....and misses, in Spanish tennis, he says, are deemed expensive.
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