Way Way Out Front
You can do whatever you want so long as you have the talent.-- Jim Kacian, Winchester, Virginia haiku poetry editor and teaching pro
Way out front.-- Sebastien Foka, Detroit pro teaching short angle to Michelle Snyder, who crosses the Canadian border for her continuing lessons with him.
In a sense of course each tennis stroke is a haiku poem, brief and effective.
And Sebastien is far from the first or last teaching pro to tell a tennis student to hit out front.
As Michelle at a garden party was demonstrating just where Sebastien was having her make contact for her short angle, however, I saw that it was WAY WAY WAY OUT FRONT.
So how can I screw up such simple and effective advice? As the host of a dinner party explained to the other guests the night before the other party, "He intellectualizes tennis strokes."
"Yes," I said. "I spoil tennis strokes."
Well, this weekend has been very social, and today at noon another couple is taking us to a Detroit Tigers baseball game to see in action the shortstop Jose Iglesias.
So what about my current technical ideas? Are they to prove counter-effective? Not if I have the talent.
I see a confluence of choice arising from straight arm palm down preparation to the side. After half-mondoeing at forearm (racket tip laying down with wrist remaining straight) I can:
1) brush up from loaded shoulder twist (internal arm rotation)
2) brush up from loaded forearm (pronation) which will create vertical lift that is more unalloyed with change of direction
3) brush up from both for best direction and racket head speed.
I do not want the easy answer.
Also, as the non-host of a popular home improvement show I see the possibility of more snap down here through starting core rotation to hit the shot while straight arm is still gliding out to side.
You can do whatever you want so long as you have the talent.-- Jim Kacian, Winchester, Virginia haiku poetry editor and teaching pro
Way out front.-- Sebastien Foka, Detroit pro teaching short angle to Michelle Snyder, who crosses the Canadian border for her continuing lessons with him.
In a sense of course each tennis stroke is a haiku poem, brief and effective.
And Sebastien is far from the first or last teaching pro to tell a tennis student to hit out front.
As Michelle at a garden party was demonstrating just where Sebastien was having her make contact for her short angle, however, I saw that it was WAY WAY WAY OUT FRONT.
So how can I screw up such simple and effective advice? As the host of a dinner party explained to the other guests the night before the other party, "He intellectualizes tennis strokes."
"Yes," I said. "I spoil tennis strokes."
Well, this weekend has been very social, and today at noon another couple is taking us to a Detroit Tigers baseball game to see in action the shortstop Jose Iglesias.
So what about my current technical ideas? Are they to prove counter-effective? Not if I have the talent.
I see a confluence of choice arising from straight arm palm down preparation to the side. After half-mondoeing at forearm (racket tip laying down with wrist remaining straight) I can:
1) brush up from loaded shoulder twist (internal arm rotation)
2) brush up from loaded forearm (pronation) which will create vertical lift that is more unalloyed with change of direction
3) brush up from both for best direction and racket head speed.
I do not want the easy answer.
Also, as the non-host of a popular home improvement show I see the possibility of more snap down here through starting core rotation to hit the shot while straight arm is still gliding out to side.
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