Watching the Federer - Djokovic US Open final solidified an observation I've had for a while now.
Too many players have been seduced by heavy topspin, and try to generate it on blazing returns by their opponent, when the difficulty of such an attempt makes it highly unlikely to produce the results they desire.
I think we can all agree that accurately hitting a tennis ball traveling over sixty miles-per-hour to within a few inches of a line seventy-eight feet away is an extraordinary physical feat, requiring a high level of athletic ability and years of practice to do consistently.
It is a difficult enough feat to accomplish using a flat or near flat shot. But when a player attempts to add heavy topspin, that degree of difficulty rises considerably. And the difficulty rises exponentially the deeper and faster moving the ball he is trying to hit.
Add in nervousness arising from a pressure filled point in the match, and you have the perfect storm. Too often, I watched Federer take a smoking shot hit right at his feet—a difficult return to accurately and effectively hit back flat for even the most talented players—and he'd try to whip it back with heavy topspin, only to have his shot land much too short and high to Djokovic's devastating forehand.
Federer makes so many miraculous shots seem routine that we might be tempted to see this as simply a one-time poor performance rather than a strategic flaw in his game. And, of course, he is a special case. But I've seen so many other highly-ranked players on the tour fall prey to this foolishness, seemingly attempting to set a personal topspin rpm record on fast travelling shots during critical points in a match, only to produce rather weak returns instead, that I wonder why it continues to be a popular habit.
Any thoughts?
Too many players have been seduced by heavy topspin, and try to generate it on blazing returns by their opponent, when the difficulty of such an attempt makes it highly unlikely to produce the results they desire.
I think we can all agree that accurately hitting a tennis ball traveling over sixty miles-per-hour to within a few inches of a line seventy-eight feet away is an extraordinary physical feat, requiring a high level of athletic ability and years of practice to do consistently.
It is a difficult enough feat to accomplish using a flat or near flat shot. But when a player attempts to add heavy topspin, that degree of difficulty rises considerably. And the difficulty rises exponentially the deeper and faster moving the ball he is trying to hit.
Add in nervousness arising from a pressure filled point in the match, and you have the perfect storm. Too often, I watched Federer take a smoking shot hit right at his feet—a difficult return to accurately and effectively hit back flat for even the most talented players—and he'd try to whip it back with heavy topspin, only to have his shot land much too short and high to Djokovic's devastating forehand.
Federer makes so many miraculous shots seem routine that we might be tempted to see this as simply a one-time poor performance rather than a strategic flaw in his game. And, of course, he is a special case. But I've seen so many other highly-ranked players on the tour fall prey to this foolishness, seemingly attempting to set a personal topspin rpm record on fast travelling shots during critical points in a match, only to produce rather weak returns instead, that I wonder why it continues to be a popular habit.
Any thoughts?
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