I've been thinking more about Roger's forehand (I can hear the groans of the TennisPlayer.Net editor from California to North Carolina). The coaches who say they believe in hitting through the ball are the ones most apt to prevent ordinary players such as myself from playing even remotely like Roger.
Hitting like Roger, to me, means generating a maximum of racket head speed to produce a combination of topspin and sidespin similar to a good serve.
At 65, I don't want to hit this shot all the time, but I do want to hit it some of the time. Interestingly, it's more consistent than medium, straight-up
topspin, which I also find useful, or punchy-line-drive-with-mild-topspin.
The first employs passive, feely arm and the second active arm as part of the propulsion; but, they both rely on an exaggerated straight line hitting interval.
A big danger therefore lies in the way that pitch notoriously changes as the elbow moves forward from the body. One can compensate with a slow, finessed, in-place racket roll similar to feathering an oar, or one can start with closed racket face and wistfully rely on one's uncanny ability always to set up the exact same distance from the ball.
When one emulates Roger, one enters a different realm. Nobody can ever know exactly where another player stops his finesse and starts his power, but consider this. If, when the racket starts back, you bend your upper body to the right and your butt to the left, you've retained balance. If, as the racket then folds, you straighten the right leg, the hips can ply into the ball, the human head can retreat from the ball, and the racket tip can topple under the ball. This means good architecture with hand and arm firmly behind the ball yet with everything in close for added strength. All this can be achieved in one natural (if perfectly understood) motion.
Now, if you didn't let your hand go into the cavern formed by your overhanging shoulders...and wisely relegated the idea of hitting inside out to golf...and set up out in the slot like Roger...you have the chance to be a bear.
Yes, a bear doesn't throw a straight right. He whaps right to left using his pec and bicep (whether there is separate movement at the elbow or not).
Combine this with heavy wiping rotation from hand, forearm and shoulder
for significant racket head speed while hitting through the ball just a little.
Mostly, you're deflecting or crossing the hitting line, which produces 45-degree combination spin.
Hitting like Roger, to me, means generating a maximum of racket head speed to produce a combination of topspin and sidespin similar to a good serve.
At 65, I don't want to hit this shot all the time, but I do want to hit it some of the time. Interestingly, it's more consistent than medium, straight-up
topspin, which I also find useful, or punchy-line-drive-with-mild-topspin.
The first employs passive, feely arm and the second active arm as part of the propulsion; but, they both rely on an exaggerated straight line hitting interval.
A big danger therefore lies in the way that pitch notoriously changes as the elbow moves forward from the body. One can compensate with a slow, finessed, in-place racket roll similar to feathering an oar, or one can start with closed racket face and wistfully rely on one's uncanny ability always to set up the exact same distance from the ball.
When one emulates Roger, one enters a different realm. Nobody can ever know exactly where another player stops his finesse and starts his power, but consider this. If, when the racket starts back, you bend your upper body to the right and your butt to the left, you've retained balance. If, as the racket then folds, you straighten the right leg, the hips can ply into the ball, the human head can retreat from the ball, and the racket tip can topple under the ball. This means good architecture with hand and arm firmly behind the ball yet with everything in close for added strength. All this can be achieved in one natural (if perfectly understood) motion.
Now, if you didn't let your hand go into the cavern formed by your overhanging shoulders...and wisely relegated the idea of hitting inside out to golf...and set up out in the slot like Roger...you have the chance to be a bear.
Yes, a bear doesn't throw a straight right. He whaps right to left using his pec and bicep (whether there is separate movement at the elbow or not).
Combine this with heavy wiping rotation from hand, forearm and shoulder
for significant racket head speed while hitting through the ball just a little.
Mostly, you're deflecting or crossing the hitting line, which produces 45-degree combination spin.
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