Babolat vs at 62lbs sounds splendid. Before I played with Luxilon Big Banger Rough, I used to string my frames with vs and other natural and syn gut strings between 65-70lbs. Felt amazing. Always enjoyed string feel on the tighter range.
As for the "archer's bow" conundrum, What the player's do and how they contort their bodies may look like something unique and groundbreaking to us, and it could be. But to them, it's being able to deliver the best shot in the right situation over and over again.
The way the body turns, dips, leans and loads on the serve gives the human eye many things to see, analyze and interpret. It's how we implement it that really matters. I've heard of the "archer's bow" term many times before but personally, I've never consciously thought about or attempted the "Archer's Bow" position when I'm serving or when I'm teaching my students. Although the serve is unique to everyone, the players who seem to have the best serves also meet the basic fundamental checkpoints as well. Not a coincidence. It is these checkpoints that often create a certain image during the motion across the board of world class servers that people seem to latch onto as "the secret trick". Some physical position that can be spotted, frozen and duplicated "in the moment". Truth be told, there are no secrets to make this moment happen, just great technique following the fundamentals. A specific point in the motion cannot just be gotten to at will, it is a chain of events that creates it.
Great article.
Kyle LaCroix USPTA
Boca Raton
As for the "archer's bow" conundrum, What the player's do and how they contort their bodies may look like something unique and groundbreaking to us, and it could be. But to them, it's being able to deliver the best shot in the right situation over and over again.
The way the body turns, dips, leans and loads on the serve gives the human eye many things to see, analyze and interpret. It's how we implement it that really matters. I've heard of the "archer's bow" term many times before but personally, I've never consciously thought about or attempted the "Archer's Bow" position when I'm serving or when I'm teaching my students. Although the serve is unique to everyone, the players who seem to have the best serves also meet the basic fundamental checkpoints as well. Not a coincidence. It is these checkpoints that often create a certain image during the motion across the board of world class servers that people seem to latch onto as "the secret trick". Some physical position that can be spotted, frozen and duplicated "in the moment". Truth be told, there are no secrets to make this moment happen, just great technique following the fundamentals. A specific point in the motion cannot just be gotten to at will, it is a chain of events that creates it.
Great article.
Kyle LaCroix USPTA
Boca Raton
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