Rough then Refined Idea (Some Attention Span will be Required-- Sorry)
A tower shot with easily produced sharp angle and snappy spin.
The buggy-whip of fly fishing comes to mind.
You send out the racket on your extending arm toward far right fence post. (Fence post, not net post-- this image of a corner post implies single tennis court construction.)
Cleverly, you pull back in toward your body while allowing the whole arm to fall.
The setting of your elbow causes the racket to go around your body somewhat.
Now you brush. Speed or strength of the brush has been slightly increased by pull of the racket butt with your biceps.
"Tower," we said, referring to left arm, and the time has come to describe the two arms one by one.
Keeping left arm up to form a tower will work but is ungainly.
For comfort now, pull left arm back, scissoring it. At same time draw that hand to left to get it out of the way. Remember, the shoulders stay turned around in this shot. They do not release until the ball is gone. So if you want to get left arm out of the way you need willpower to do it by yourself.
Right arm, actually, requires less thought.
Simultaneous with left arm the right arm scissors. They both go out, they both draw in. This is a dance move though not with the feet.
Note however that left elbow points pretty much down while right elbow points more toward right fence.
Racket as The Titanic therefore approaches left arm as the iceberg. So get left arm out of the way.
Rhythm is 1-2-3: hitting arm out, racket down and in, hitting arm brush.
But what about the oncoming ball? What if its path (note curious but correct spelling of the word "its") is straight from right corner post?
Reader, you have good reason then not to hit a short angle. Hit a broad angle instead. Unless middle of the oncoming ball squarely hits the thin rim it will glance past the racket against your gut.
**********************************************
What are these asterisks? A sex scene? Well, actually, with encouragement, I did go back to bed. And I'm wondering why my left knee is swollen? The asterisks are for the couple of readers who think I am a fruit-fly to experience even more fruitiness than usual. I like those guys, incidentally, far more than the readers, publishers, literary agents (I've had five), old girlfriends etc. who stay away.
For the self-aggrandizing bottle the asterisks offer along with their complete stop an opportunity to reflect and become more Jovian, to take a long view if Mount Olympus is high enough.
The self-deprecating bottle, on the other hand, can find humility not just from being hit by an oncoming ball but by having to change his mind so often.
He learns now that just as TOWER was unnecessary, pointing across with left hand may not be necessary in this one unique forehand.
Before I address that subject, however, let me explain who I am and what I am trying to do here. I am a person who wishes to improve on the short angle possibilities of three forehands known to me as The Federfore, The McEnrueful and The Manny Pacquiao.
If I can't do it, sobeit, but the jury is out.
***********************************************
Why, I ask, or perhaps you do, the need for a shot that turns the shoulders but then doesn't use them, just keeps them turned?
So as to hit the ball less far out front, right? To turn the arm toward short angle target spot on top of net cord as when we practice a drop-shot. We don't want to be cramped but we want contact point back enough that we can have control.
Face it-- short angle is at the edge and even beyond the edge of a normal tennis stroke construct. God wants you rather to hit the tennis ball out into the opponent's court.
Well, speak with the devil then. If you don't need TOWER, and you don't need to swing forward, and you don't need to hit hard, why do you need to point across with opposite hand in the first place? And how good does shoulders turn have to be? Only good enough to find proper contact point out front.
A humbling realization.
Too theoretical though?
Sorry, too much cold rain right now to find out. (For the rain it raineth every day.)
Can see though that the way to run the experiment is to turn the shoulders neither by keeping opposite hand on racket or by pointing with it across, just set it down to the left side as shoulders turn from willpower alone.
The hitting arm however does not change procedure. It goes out toward fence post and then lowers and retracts, which automatically brings it around. Will it come round enough? If not, add a bit of coming around (there is a lot of willpower in this shot).
Did you run past the ball? Perhaps. Will you feel like you are using your tennis racket to swat a fly that made the mistake of speeding straight at you? Perhaps.
In many cases, though, balls one is apt to choose for a short angle have lost energy and bounced and are kind of just sitting there.
Some hard forehands and serves might qualify also since the angle between incoming and outgoing ball is not overly great.
As I mime this shot for the very first time I can see that one can use left arm to point directly at the target, also that the shot in its entirety can be quick enough not to telegraph itself.
A tower shot with easily produced sharp angle and snappy spin.
The buggy-whip of fly fishing comes to mind.
You send out the racket on your extending arm toward far right fence post. (Fence post, not net post-- this image of a corner post implies single tennis court construction.)
Cleverly, you pull back in toward your body while allowing the whole arm to fall.
The setting of your elbow causes the racket to go around your body somewhat.
Now you brush. Speed or strength of the brush has been slightly increased by pull of the racket butt with your biceps.
"Tower," we said, referring to left arm, and the time has come to describe the two arms one by one.
Keeping left arm up to form a tower will work but is ungainly.
For comfort now, pull left arm back, scissoring it. At same time draw that hand to left to get it out of the way. Remember, the shoulders stay turned around in this shot. They do not release until the ball is gone. So if you want to get left arm out of the way you need willpower to do it by yourself.
Right arm, actually, requires less thought.
Simultaneous with left arm the right arm scissors. They both go out, they both draw in. This is a dance move though not with the feet.
Note however that left elbow points pretty much down while right elbow points more toward right fence.
Racket as The Titanic therefore approaches left arm as the iceberg. So get left arm out of the way.
Rhythm is 1-2-3: hitting arm out, racket down and in, hitting arm brush.
But what about the oncoming ball? What if its path (note curious but correct spelling of the word "its") is straight from right corner post?
Reader, you have good reason then not to hit a short angle. Hit a broad angle instead. Unless middle of the oncoming ball squarely hits the thin rim it will glance past the racket against your gut.
**********************************************
What are these asterisks? A sex scene? Well, actually, with encouragement, I did go back to bed. And I'm wondering why my left knee is swollen? The asterisks are for the couple of readers who think I am a fruit-fly to experience even more fruitiness than usual. I like those guys, incidentally, far more than the readers, publishers, literary agents (I've had five), old girlfriends etc. who stay away.
For the self-aggrandizing bottle the asterisks offer along with their complete stop an opportunity to reflect and become more Jovian, to take a long view if Mount Olympus is high enough.
The self-deprecating bottle, on the other hand, can find humility not just from being hit by an oncoming ball but by having to change his mind so often.
He learns now that just as TOWER was unnecessary, pointing across with left hand may not be necessary in this one unique forehand.
Before I address that subject, however, let me explain who I am and what I am trying to do here. I am a person who wishes to improve on the short angle possibilities of three forehands known to me as The Federfore, The McEnrueful and The Manny Pacquiao.
If I can't do it, sobeit, but the jury is out.
***********************************************
Why, I ask, or perhaps you do, the need for a shot that turns the shoulders but then doesn't use them, just keeps them turned?
So as to hit the ball less far out front, right? To turn the arm toward short angle target spot on top of net cord as when we practice a drop-shot. We don't want to be cramped but we want contact point back enough that we can have control.
Face it-- short angle is at the edge and even beyond the edge of a normal tennis stroke construct. God wants you rather to hit the tennis ball out into the opponent's court.
Well, speak with the devil then. If you don't need TOWER, and you don't need to swing forward, and you don't need to hit hard, why do you need to point across with opposite hand in the first place? And how good does shoulders turn have to be? Only good enough to find proper contact point out front.
A humbling realization.
Too theoretical though?
Sorry, too much cold rain right now to find out. (For the rain it raineth every day.)
Can see though that the way to run the experiment is to turn the shoulders neither by keeping opposite hand on racket or by pointing with it across, just set it down to the left side as shoulders turn from willpower alone.
The hitting arm however does not change procedure. It goes out toward fence post and then lowers and retracts, which automatically brings it around. Will it come round enough? If not, add a bit of coming around (there is a lot of willpower in this shot).
Did you run past the ball? Perhaps. Will you feel like you are using your tennis racket to swat a fly that made the mistake of speeding straight at you? Perhaps.
In many cases, though, balls one is apt to choose for a short angle have lost energy and bounced and are kind of just sitting there.
Some hard forehands and serves might qualify also since the angle between incoming and outgoing ball is not overly great.
As I mime this shot for the very first time I can see that one can use left arm to point directly at the target, also that the shot in its entirety can be quick enough not to telegraph itself.
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