A Small Saturday Morning Manifesto for Hitting CC Short Angle ("The Pro Shot"
We are conditioned to take the racket back. We think that's what we ought to do. I seek instead to employ the following ideas some of which are more reflective and philosophical than others:
1) Don't disguise the shot, even announce it.
2) Always be willing to adjust grip toward western one half-notch more which will make angle one half-notch more acute.
3) Face the target, i.e., get one's shoulders perpendicular to the targeted part of the ball before one undergoes the shot. Do this to avoid blocking the arm to which one now imparts more freedom.
4) Use a bi-dimensional loop combined with right-angled arm and carpenter's common sense to strike the ball with sufficient spin to bring it down then hop it into side fence.
5) Always start the loop in an overhand way as if using one's racket to form a breaking wave but immediately change racket direction to outside of that by 90 degrees.
6) People will tell you, when hitting any kind of a ground stroke, to "pull a rope" or "shine a flashlight at the ball." What they won't tell you is how briefly to maintain this image-- one passes through it rather than maintains it. I personally like to use the phrase "spear with the handle." Whatever the metaphor, the intention is the same: to create a hammer stroke in which the hammer head moves through an arc of 90 degrees.
7) The basic pre-stretch idea in tennis makes use of opposite motions that overlap with nothing in between. The overhead loop that turns into a sideways while downward loop followed by a horizontal power swing can accomplish this.
8) Initiation of loop in a vertical direction can provide a compass marker 90 degrees to the outside of the target. If an opponent were to figure this out, he could start speeding to the spot where the ball will be. That would be good. You as perpetrator would use the same time to slide into ideal volley position.
9) Any angular or linear body weight flowing into this shot is minimal. The racket work, which again follows the logic of a hammer stroke, needs to be perfect, i.e., to contain late but sufficient take-away.
10) No matter the grip, one will probably need a more closed racket face than that, so should keep elbow protruding to the outside of the shot.
11) Wrist is almost straight throughout. One does EVERYTHING for more acuity.
Note on how I came to write SHORT ANGLE, THE TENNIS BOOK. The idea came from the clear reluctance of other tennis writers to tackle this subject. And from one tennis book that simply advocated that the method by which one hits one's most acute crosscourt angles should be individual and figured out by oneself. I did not believe this contention for a single minute, and I therefore set out not to cop out like that author although I realized I would need to perform much lonely self-feed and research. There are things to say about this subject, of course there are. And things to say that others can learn from unless they have time, inclination and the stupidity for all of this experimentation themselves.
We are conditioned to take the racket back. We think that's what we ought to do. I seek instead to employ the following ideas some of which are more reflective and philosophical than others:
1) Don't disguise the shot, even announce it.
2) Always be willing to adjust grip toward western one half-notch more which will make angle one half-notch more acute.
3) Face the target, i.e., get one's shoulders perpendicular to the targeted part of the ball before one undergoes the shot. Do this to avoid blocking the arm to which one now imparts more freedom.
4) Use a bi-dimensional loop combined with right-angled arm and carpenter's common sense to strike the ball with sufficient spin to bring it down then hop it into side fence.
5) Always start the loop in an overhand way as if using one's racket to form a breaking wave but immediately change racket direction to outside of that by 90 degrees.
6) People will tell you, when hitting any kind of a ground stroke, to "pull a rope" or "shine a flashlight at the ball." What they won't tell you is how briefly to maintain this image-- one passes through it rather than maintains it. I personally like to use the phrase "spear with the handle." Whatever the metaphor, the intention is the same: to create a hammer stroke in which the hammer head moves through an arc of 90 degrees.
7) The basic pre-stretch idea in tennis makes use of opposite motions that overlap with nothing in between. The overhead loop that turns into a sideways while downward loop followed by a horizontal power swing can accomplish this.
8) Initiation of loop in a vertical direction can provide a compass marker 90 degrees to the outside of the target. If an opponent were to figure this out, he could start speeding to the spot where the ball will be. That would be good. You as perpetrator would use the same time to slide into ideal volley position.
9) Any angular or linear body weight flowing into this shot is minimal. The racket work, which again follows the logic of a hammer stroke, needs to be perfect, i.e., to contain late but sufficient take-away.
10) No matter the grip, one will probably need a more closed racket face than that, so should keep elbow protruding to the outside of the shot.
11) Wrist is almost straight throughout. One does EVERYTHING for more acuity.
Note on how I came to write SHORT ANGLE, THE TENNIS BOOK. The idea came from the clear reluctance of other tennis writers to tackle this subject. And from one tennis book that simply advocated that the method by which one hits one's most acute crosscourt angles should be individual and figured out by oneself. I did not believe this contention for a single minute, and I therefore set out not to cop out like that author although I realized I would need to perform much lonely self-feed and research. There are things to say about this subject, of course there are. And things to say that others can learn from unless they have time, inclination and the stupidity for all of this experimentation themselves.
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