John,
I have a question about torso rotation, stances, and the different hitting arm combos. To me, it seems, that the straight-bent combo can be hit more effectively with a closed stance than the bent-bent combo can. From my own experience, the straight-bent combo works better in the closed stance because the straightened back arm provides more extension through the shot, from a closed stance, than the bent arm does. I feel that the bent-bent combo, with the bent back arm, requires more body rotation to get the racquet going through the ball. Conversely, on open stance shots, it feels to me like the bent-bent combo works better than the straight-bent combo because the open stance fulfills the body rotation requirement for the bent-bent combo. But hitting bent-straight from an open stance is difficult for me because the straight back arm seems to come off the shot more and just feel awkward. Perhaps you can confirm my thoughts by answering this question: do you find bent-bent players hitting fewer closed stance backhands than bent-straight players; do you find bent-bent players hitting more open stance backhands than bent-straight players? Thanks for your time and consideration. BTW great new issue, especially the last installment on the two-hander and the music video! I'm sitting on pins and needles to see if some of my thoughts on Andy's two-hander are confirmed in your forecoming analysis.
Sincerely,
Lukman
I have a question about torso rotation, stances, and the different hitting arm combos. To me, it seems, that the straight-bent combo can be hit more effectively with a closed stance than the bent-bent combo can. From my own experience, the straight-bent combo works better in the closed stance because the straightened back arm provides more extension through the shot, from a closed stance, than the bent arm does. I feel that the bent-bent combo, with the bent back arm, requires more body rotation to get the racquet going through the ball. Conversely, on open stance shots, it feels to me like the bent-bent combo works better than the straight-bent combo because the open stance fulfills the body rotation requirement for the bent-bent combo. But hitting bent-straight from an open stance is difficult for me because the straight back arm seems to come off the shot more and just feel awkward. Perhaps you can confirm my thoughts by answering this question: do you find bent-bent players hitting fewer closed stance backhands than bent-straight players; do you find bent-bent players hitting more open stance backhands than bent-straight players? Thanks for your time and consideration. BTW great new issue, especially the last installment on the two-hander and the music video! I'm sitting on pins and needles to see if some of my thoughts on Andy's two-hander are confirmed in your forecoming analysis.
Sincerely,
Lukman
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