Tom Avery's Film
Tom, like me, is not afraid to concentrate on this one shot. Here is a whole video devoted to short angle, which, although not the same as 904 pages, offers significant variation to and perhaps even refreshment of my own point of view.
Again, fear is not the way to go. Leave fear to warmongers, climate deniers, science disbelievers and ugly philistines, with their fear of work, fear of coping, fear of thought, fear of beauty and new experience of any kind. You like these people, reader? You can have them.
Tom's is a really good film. Note how Tom tells us never to think of more than two things at once while immediately giving us extra rumination. We need to interpret here: Yes, two points is the limit right while we are hitting the shot. But how about short angle overnights six per year spread over three decades? Is this not a great way to bring new information to the subject of short angle without gumming up the short angle works?
A bit of wrist to make a vertical incision in the air, Tom tells us, combined with special lowering of the back leg. We can start there. Why not? It's good advice.
But will this open up our composite grip too much? Will we have to abandon it? If so, no problem. We've got many grips in our 904 pages.
And what about Tom's contact point, so much more around toward his target? We, Mr. Karp, are determined to be pointing racket tip during contact every time at right net post no matter what. The racket length angle may alter, in turn affecting elbow placement and full body stance, but netpost is our lighthouse and our rock.
Reader, are you the publisher Mr. Karp? Not likely, but like him, I know you think, "Too much thought here. Can't possibly appeal to the large and lazy audience. Would I wish to inflict this extraneous idea on a tennis student? Never."
The answer to that is simple. Assign the subject to a netpost overnight two years down the road.
Tom, like me, is not afraid to concentrate on this one shot. Here is a whole video devoted to short angle, which, although not the same as 904 pages, offers significant variation to and perhaps even refreshment of my own point of view.
Again, fear is not the way to go. Leave fear to warmongers, climate deniers, science disbelievers and ugly philistines, with their fear of work, fear of coping, fear of thought, fear of beauty and new experience of any kind. You like these people, reader? You can have them.
Tom's is a really good film. Note how Tom tells us never to think of more than two things at once while immediately giving us extra rumination. We need to interpret here: Yes, two points is the limit right while we are hitting the shot. But how about short angle overnights six per year spread over three decades? Is this not a great way to bring new information to the subject of short angle without gumming up the short angle works?
A bit of wrist to make a vertical incision in the air, Tom tells us, combined with special lowering of the back leg. We can start there. Why not? It's good advice.
But will this open up our composite grip too much? Will we have to abandon it? If so, no problem. We've got many grips in our 904 pages.
And what about Tom's contact point, so much more around toward his target? We, Mr. Karp, are determined to be pointing racket tip during contact every time at right net post no matter what. The racket length angle may alter, in turn affecting elbow placement and full body stance, but netpost is our lighthouse and our rock.
Reader, are you the publisher Mr. Karp? Not likely, but like him, I know you think, "Too much thought here. Can't possibly appeal to the large and lazy audience. Would I wish to inflict this extraneous idea on a tennis student? Never."
The answer to that is simple. Assign the subject to a netpost overnight two years down the road.
Comment