Most of my coaching (all volunteer) is for a charitable organization Norwalk Grassroots Tennis ( http://norwalkgrassrootstennis.org/ ) which is dedicated to changing the lives of children from lower income families through tennis, education and life skills. These are kids who would have no real chance to learn (or even exposure to) tennis if not for our organization. About a year ago, I started to coach (in a group situation) a boy I will call "J". Before that, he played for a year or so but not at all seriously. He is 14 and in 8th grade. I believe he is a very good athlete. He is a very good basketball player and football player (does flag football, I told him no tackle and getting injured). He is naturally strong (powerfully built). Hard to say how tall he will be. He has one brother who is about 6'2" but another brother who is shorter.
I thought it would be a fun project to use the Forum for ideas on his game (hopefully on an ongoing basis).
Let's start with the serve. I have posted four videos below (taken with the iphone 6 plus camera slow motion feature - amazing). The first is a serve using the Welby Van Horn balance method. The second and third are of his serve when I allowed him to jump. The fourth is of a jump serve but doing a "hop" drill to try to improve his balance when he did jump on his serve.
He uses a proper serving grip and I think he has an excellent archer's bow and racket drop. The snap/pronation on the serve is pretty good (but could stand for some improvement). When he jumps there is some loss of balance/collapsing from what I can see and he certainly does not go up and forward as much as he could and does not do the "kickback" of the back leg. He also does a little funky thing with his toss hand after he releases the toss.
I would love your thoughts.
One gating question is should he be doing much jumping on the serve at all given how little he has played (as I said, he has only really played one year). His accuracy is definitely better when he does the Welby balance type serve. But it is hard to get kids to stick with that when they feel there is more power when they jump.
He is willing to listen but does get frustrated at times if things do not go well. I am constantly telling him that tennis puts a premium on letting go emotionally and avoiding frustration.
Serve with Welby method:
Serve with jump, side view:
Serve with jump, back view:
Serve with hop drill:
I thought it would be a fun project to use the Forum for ideas on his game (hopefully on an ongoing basis).
Let's start with the serve. I have posted four videos below (taken with the iphone 6 plus camera slow motion feature - amazing). The first is a serve using the Welby Van Horn balance method. The second and third are of his serve when I allowed him to jump. The fourth is of a jump serve but doing a "hop" drill to try to improve his balance when he did jump on his serve.
He uses a proper serving grip and I think he has an excellent archer's bow and racket drop. The snap/pronation on the serve is pretty good (but could stand for some improvement). When he jumps there is some loss of balance/collapsing from what I can see and he certainly does not go up and forward as much as he could and does not do the "kickback" of the back leg. He also does a little funky thing with his toss hand after he releases the toss.
I would love your thoughts.
One gating question is should he be doing much jumping on the serve at all given how little he has played (as I said, he has only really played one year). His accuracy is definitely better when he does the Welby balance type serve. But it is hard to get kids to stick with that when they feel there is more power when they jump.
He is willing to listen but does get frustrated at times if things do not go well. I am constantly telling him that tennis puts a premium on letting go emotionally and avoiding frustration.
Serve with Welby method:
Serve with jump, side view:
Serve with jump, back view:
Serve with hop drill:
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