I thought the introduction of the "ideal" forehand from Dimitrov might be a good time to put up the clips from a student I've been working with for 4 years. He's about the same height as Grigor, but probably 20 or 30 lbs lighter. He won't turn 17 for another 4 months. I've been working with him and his younger sister for 4 years. I've given him almost 150 lessons, about 90 in 2011 and 2012, but only 57 or so in the last two years. I basically have been seeing them once every two weeks. I usually do a 3 hour session split between he and his sister, including about 20-30 minutes when I have them serve together. He works a lot with his father who is not a tennis player, but feeds a lot of balls and tries to help his kids. Dad doesn't speak a word of English to me so it's a little hard to communicate. On top of that, there have been a lot of other pros influencing the development of his strokes which can be very frustrating when you are trying to figure out why a particular change in technique appears from nowhere just when you think you had something on the right path.
Nevertheless, he is a hard worker and really has made a lot of progress. Sometimes I can get him hitting the ball so well, I don't understand why he doesn't have better results. But, of course, competing is a whole different realm from simple stroke production. I try to see and tape some matches, but I am not there constantly like a lot of high level coaches. Sometimes I think if I could just have this kid 3 times a week for just an hour I could get the elements I want to see and do see in the sessions with me to become real solid habits.
In any case, we are trying hard and we are having or at least he is having a hard time with his forehand. I've included some clips over the course of the four years so you could see where he was coming from. Originally he had a big problem with having the racket head come to a complete stop at the point where the racket head was low and pointed at the rear fence; there is still some hint of that, but it is a pretty continuous stroke. I try to get my students to break the stroke into two parts: first the unit turn (where I like to see the racket head basically in front of the right shoulder (righty) and the racket head barely closed and also about shoulder or chest height and then, second, the rest of the stroke in a continuous c-type or candy-cane type motion in the parlance we used to use before we knew about the ATP Type III forehand, which is basically what I want to see.
The problem for my young friend here is that he doesn't let the racket head drop low enough at the back of the backswing below the actual contact point. He does get below the ball, but just barely. The result is a fabulous looking ball a little too much like a Janowicz forehand, but probably with even less spin. Geez, he just hits the bloody bejeezus out of the ball. I keep trying to get him to hit with a little more topspin and drop a little more below, but I really don't want to change too much because he hits such a wonderful driving ball and still manages to put a pretty good tail on it.
I keep trying to get him to keep his left hand on a little longer and keep the racket near the right shoulder (in the parlance that has been used by other posters here, perhaps have a more forward emphasis stroke and really track the ball with the racket head). I feel if he kept it there a little longer his racket would approach the rear-most point of his swing with more downward racket head momentum and that would drive the racket head a little lower below the contact point and everything would be fine. But I seem to be ineffective in getting him to feel the racket head dropping. He feels, probably correctly, that the problem is he reaches the low point of the racket head path after he begins pulling forward instead of reaching that point just before he actually starts the pull. It's a subtle difference, but significant. I'm only talking about dropping the racket head a couple to at most 3 or 4 inches lower, but when you watch the slow motion, you will see he doesn't get much below the ball.
He has no problem playing the "pro type" heavy rising topspin ball; it plays right into his flat stroke. Gee, I wish I could have hit a high ball anything like that. And he's at least 6' 2" tall and still growing; not super fast, but pretty fast for a big man. It's the lower ball that is sitting or dropping that he has more trouble with because he doesn't easily get below those balls.
Again, I think the basic shape of the swing is excellent, SSC and all, but he does need to pause a little closer to his right shoulder for a little longer, maybe keep the right hand on a little longer, so that the momentum of the loop drives the racket head a little lower. He gets too wrapped up in little details and doesn't have enough confidence in his forehand. I'm telling him I think he's hitting essentially ATP quality forehands and he's saying it doesn't feel good. He wants to change the backswing so the racket head starts lower and that's the last thing I want him to do; he's already too close to an Enqvist type forehand with the slow down he has in the back which makes the stroke too posterior emphasized.
So I hope you will take a look and give me your suggestions and draw on your experience when you've had this kind of problem.
Details of viewing the video:
You can view a youtube version of the clips I've put together from this 4-year journey right here:
I've taken the clips and made them all MP4's so you can view them frame by frame in QuickTime on Macs as well as Windows platforms. This reduces the quality of the videos, but you can still see everything and get the frame by frame analysis, but if you want to do that, you will have to download the videos. In total, they are about 55 MB so it will take just a few seconds to download. Use the link below and it will take you to links for each of the videos in the youtube edition. A lot of the original video is really clear, but it takes me all night to get all the files to upload to the server. The original files are more than 10 times the size of the MP4's.
Here's the link for downloading just the one file with what's on youtube;
And here's the link for downloading as many of the individual files as you want. You'll get a prompt that let's you choose which of the files you want to download.
Let me know if you have any trouble. I'm really looking forward to see what kind of suggestions the Forum can come up with for me.
thanks,
don
Nevertheless, he is a hard worker and really has made a lot of progress. Sometimes I can get him hitting the ball so well, I don't understand why he doesn't have better results. But, of course, competing is a whole different realm from simple stroke production. I try to see and tape some matches, but I am not there constantly like a lot of high level coaches. Sometimes I think if I could just have this kid 3 times a week for just an hour I could get the elements I want to see and do see in the sessions with me to become real solid habits.
In any case, we are trying hard and we are having or at least he is having a hard time with his forehand. I've included some clips over the course of the four years so you could see where he was coming from. Originally he had a big problem with having the racket head come to a complete stop at the point where the racket head was low and pointed at the rear fence; there is still some hint of that, but it is a pretty continuous stroke. I try to get my students to break the stroke into two parts: first the unit turn (where I like to see the racket head basically in front of the right shoulder (righty) and the racket head barely closed and also about shoulder or chest height and then, second, the rest of the stroke in a continuous c-type or candy-cane type motion in the parlance we used to use before we knew about the ATP Type III forehand, which is basically what I want to see.
The problem for my young friend here is that he doesn't let the racket head drop low enough at the back of the backswing below the actual contact point. He does get below the ball, but just barely. The result is a fabulous looking ball a little too much like a Janowicz forehand, but probably with even less spin. Geez, he just hits the bloody bejeezus out of the ball. I keep trying to get him to hit with a little more topspin and drop a little more below, but I really don't want to change too much because he hits such a wonderful driving ball and still manages to put a pretty good tail on it.
I keep trying to get him to keep his left hand on a little longer and keep the racket near the right shoulder (in the parlance that has been used by other posters here, perhaps have a more forward emphasis stroke and really track the ball with the racket head). I feel if he kept it there a little longer his racket would approach the rear-most point of his swing with more downward racket head momentum and that would drive the racket head a little lower below the contact point and everything would be fine. But I seem to be ineffective in getting him to feel the racket head dropping. He feels, probably correctly, that the problem is he reaches the low point of the racket head path after he begins pulling forward instead of reaching that point just before he actually starts the pull. It's a subtle difference, but significant. I'm only talking about dropping the racket head a couple to at most 3 or 4 inches lower, but when you watch the slow motion, you will see he doesn't get much below the ball.
He has no problem playing the "pro type" heavy rising topspin ball; it plays right into his flat stroke. Gee, I wish I could have hit a high ball anything like that. And he's at least 6' 2" tall and still growing; not super fast, but pretty fast for a big man. It's the lower ball that is sitting or dropping that he has more trouble with because he doesn't easily get below those balls.
Again, I think the basic shape of the swing is excellent, SSC and all, but he does need to pause a little closer to his right shoulder for a little longer, maybe keep the right hand on a little longer, so that the momentum of the loop drives the racket head a little lower. He gets too wrapped up in little details and doesn't have enough confidence in his forehand. I'm telling him I think he's hitting essentially ATP quality forehands and he's saying it doesn't feel good. He wants to change the backswing so the racket head starts lower and that's the last thing I want him to do; he's already too close to an Enqvist type forehand with the slow down he has in the back which makes the stroke too posterior emphasized.
So I hope you will take a look and give me your suggestions and draw on your experience when you've had this kind of problem.
Details of viewing the video:
You can view a youtube version of the clips I've put together from this 4-year journey right here:
I've taken the clips and made them all MP4's so you can view them frame by frame in QuickTime on Macs as well as Windows platforms. This reduces the quality of the videos, but you can still see everything and get the frame by frame analysis, but if you want to do that, you will have to download the videos. In total, they are about 55 MB so it will take just a few seconds to download. Use the link below and it will take you to links for each of the videos in the youtube edition. A lot of the original video is really clear, but it takes me all night to get all the files to upload to the server. The original files are more than 10 times the size of the MP4's.
Here's the link for downloading just the one file with what's on youtube;
And here's the link for downloading as many of the individual files as you want. You'll get a prompt that let's you choose which of the files you want to download.
Let me know if you have any trouble. I'm really looking forward to see what kind of suggestions the Forum can come up with for me.
thanks,
don
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