Am really happy with the Eye Coach! Been using it 20 minutes every day. Really helps me maintain my level.
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Teaching with the Eye Coach
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Originally posted by gzhpcu View PostI train in my garage...
don
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Originally posted by hockeyscout View PostDoesn't that hurt your arm?
What do you think about using a weighted racket like that? You would be strengthening the arm and the whole hitting motion, but you would also be training a slower swing. On the other hand, when you actually went to play the racket would feel lighter and easier to swing and the impact you had experienced on the EyeCoach would be closer to the impact you would now feel on your actual live ball strokes.
don
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Originally posted by tennis_chiro View Post
Actually, hockeyscout, you have a point there. It's a lot easier to hit the ball when it has reversed direction and is moving away from you again, but then you are not training the eye properly to adjust as the ball completes its path to the contact point. When the ball is swinging at you on the EyeCoach, you have to overcome the momentum of the entire arm of the apparatus and this is a lot more than the 2 ounces of the tennis ball. It's not a question of holding tight at contact, but more a question of getting the momentum of the racket moving right through contact on the intended trajectory. If you make a mishit or strike a glancing blow with the EyeCoach, the racket will turn in your hand and it is not a good feeling. I love it as a device to demonstrate and train a new contact point or body position at the contact point and it seems that it would be really beneficial to a new student in the manner they suggest in the EyeCoach promotional materials. But I wonder if it wouldn't be better to put a couple of extra ounces of lead tape on a spare racket to use on the EyeCoach to overcome the additional momentum and inertia of the apparatus that each stroke has to overcome.
What do you think about using a weighted racket like that? You would be strengthening the arm and the whole hitting motion, but you would also be training a slower swing. On the other hand, when you actually went to play the racket would feel lighter and easier to swing and the impact you had experienced on the EyeCoach would be closer to the impact you would now feel on your actual live ball strokes.
don
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But, if it works for gzhpsu ... go for it. It appears he is working smartly with it, and is not overdoing it with the reps or going nuts with it. We have an appartatus you guys will see soon that does the same thing as this, but, maybe delivers a bit more kick for the dollar in developing the tools required for a world class stroke, punch, pitch or shot.
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Originally posted by hockeyscout View PostBut, if it works for gzhpsu ... go for it. It appears he is working smartly with it, and is not overdoing it with the reps or going nuts with it. We have an appartatus you guys will see soon that does the same thing as this, but, maybe delivers a bit more kick for the dollar in developing the tools required for a world class stroke, punch, pitch or shot.
don
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Why should the Eye Coach be hard on the arm? The ball is almost still, not like having to return a heavy, topspin shot.... I hardly notice it at impact... I still prefer to let it rebound until it is almost still, hit it and keep my head still...
I am not training my eyes in particular, as I always did keep my head still. I am training my strokes...Last edited by gzhpcu; 11-22-2016, 11:51 PM.
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Originally posted by hockeyscout View Postcan you make me a sketch tennis_chiro -- sounds interesting.
don
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