"Rotorded" is a Neologism for the Physical Limitation you have Repeatedly Described
This is simple and not profound. Maybe it is so simple that you can't understand it. I don't understand this but it interests me.
You, Phil Picuri, did a your strokes article with John Yandell in which there was video of you serving. There was discussion too. The focus was on how far you do or don't get your racket tip to go down in the part of the serve that is behind your back and maybe a bit to your right side.
This is a universal problem with tennis players (not getting racket tip far down like Gonzalez, Sampras, Roddick or even Federer although he doesn't get as far as the three others).
It is a universal and important yet neglected by many tennis instructors aspect of our game. The test that seems best is to stand in serving position with arm bent at a right angle and see if you can wind humerus back until your forearm is parallel with the court.
This is ground that you and I have both covered many times in our various posts.
Just for fun I'll call anything less than parallel to the court "rotorded." That means that even Roger Federer is a bit rotorded, so maybe the rest of us shouldn't feel quite so bad.
But if you still are determined to misunderstand I'm sure you can. Maybe you would prefer to make up a different word. Before you abandon mine however please note that it is spelled with an "o" and not an "e." Or if you don't want to invent a better word or any word just say "I'm not as flexible as I like" or "A great tennis player ought to be able to point his racket tip at the ground on a perfect perpendicular at a certain point in his serve but I can't." Hmmm. Thirty (30) words.
Me, sorry but I'll use one.
Rotorded.
Originally posted by gzhpcu
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You, Phil Picuri, did a your strokes article with John Yandell in which there was video of you serving. There was discussion too. The focus was on how far you do or don't get your racket tip to go down in the part of the serve that is behind your back and maybe a bit to your right side.
This is a universal problem with tennis players (not getting racket tip far down like Gonzalez, Sampras, Roddick or even Federer although he doesn't get as far as the three others).
It is a universal and important yet neglected by many tennis instructors aspect of our game. The test that seems best is to stand in serving position with arm bent at a right angle and see if you can wind humerus back until your forearm is parallel with the court.
This is ground that you and I have both covered many times in our various posts.
Just for fun I'll call anything less than parallel to the court "rotorded." That means that even Roger Federer is a bit rotorded, so maybe the rest of us shouldn't feel quite so bad.
But if you still are determined to misunderstand I'm sure you can. Maybe you would prefer to make up a different word. Before you abandon mine however please note that it is spelled with an "o" and not an "e." Or if you don't want to invent a better word or any word just say "I'm not as flexible as I like" or "A great tennis player ought to be able to point his racket tip at the ground on a perfect perpendicular at a certain point in his serve but I can't." Hmmm. Thirty (30) words.
Me, sorry but I'll use one.
Rotorded.
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