Thanks very much.
I see a lot of players with the ground stroke rhythm of jaleel khan here, particularly on the forehand side.
Good, I'd say, but maybe not great.
For the short angle forehand I'm trying to birth, it makes sense.
But is this what Roger does? Or what J. Donald Budge did on his forehand? Or other players in any age who slow down higher up most often in a loop?
I return to my slap-shot analogy in which there is either a fall or slap which becomes part of the kinetic energy of the shot along with the fast-moving sap coming up from the ground.
Where in other words does or should forward part of somebody's forehand actually start? Tyler Weeks, Braden Tennis College owner, once asked that question and concluded that there wasn't a single answer. He was agnostic on this question as it pertained to Federer.
I see a lot of players with the ground stroke rhythm of jaleel khan here, particularly on the forehand side.
Good, I'd say, but maybe not great.
For the short angle forehand I'm trying to birth, it makes sense.
But is this what Roger does? Or what J. Donald Budge did on his forehand? Or other players in any age who slow down higher up most often in a loop?
I return to my slap-shot analogy in which there is either a fall or slap which becomes part of the kinetic energy of the shot along with the fast-moving sap coming up from the ground.
Where in other words does or should forward part of somebody's forehand actually start? Tyler Weeks, Braden Tennis College owner, once asked that question and concluded that there wasn't a single answer. He was agnostic on this question as it pertained to Federer.
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