Algebra
I used to think short angle was about geometry, but now I think it is about algebra, figuring out the unknowns.
In my earlier studies of Tom Avery's short angle, I could see that his elbow stayed pointing down during his flick.
His flick therefore came from a roll of his forearm with his wrist only slightly laid back.
What is the news here? That that formula can work (Tom is a good player).
In a Roger Federer forehand the wrist is laid way back-- at a 90-degree angle to the arm. In an imitation Roger Federer forehand with lesser layback the full arm roll probably pushes through the ball a bit, which is bad, but one can still get close enough to hit a fairly good shot.
For good short angle though-- 100 per cent consistent and therefore "The Pro Shot"-- I suspect that most players should do like Tom and just use the forearm. And save full arm roll for their Federfore.
I used to think short angle was about geometry, but now I think it is about algebra, figuring out the unknowns.
In my earlier studies of Tom Avery's short angle, I could see that his elbow stayed pointing down during his flick.
His flick therefore came from a roll of his forearm with his wrist only slightly laid back.
What is the news here? That that formula can work (Tom is a good player).
In a Roger Federer forehand the wrist is laid way back-- at a 90-degree angle to the arm. In an imitation Roger Federer forehand with lesser layback the full arm roll probably pushes through the ball a bit, which is bad, but one can still get close enough to hit a fairly good shot.
For good short angle though-- 100 per cent consistent and therefore "The Pro Shot"-- I suspect that most players should do like Tom and just use the forearm. And save full arm roll for their Federfore.
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