Go to a special massusie who will crush your shoulder's adhesions?
The comments about Jim McClennan are political, not substantive. His illumination of low toss serving-- that would be Ljubicic, Ivanisovich AND
Tanner-- is fascinating. I refer specifically to McClennan's mentor's practice of tossing blindfolded to his service motion. You guys have a bad record of demonizing people, maybe can't feel good if you're not doing it. (I know, I know. I used to do it to Vic Braden before I met him.) McLennan never does it to any of you. Braden of course is all about low toss serving. He is not a bad man just because the service motion he teaches contains a moment with arm out to the right like a pitcher in baseball (and he writes sometimes for TennisOne).
Abruptly stopping vs. abruptly slowing! C'mon, guys. How many angels can dance on the point of a pin.
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Flexible servers generate tension between their cartwheel and their racket tip fighting to stay low. The racket tip is far back and down enough so that when it finally releases it means something.
Inflexible servers (most tennis players) have a racket tip which unfortunately is too close to the cartwheeling front shoulder.
Two different kinds of body bend should be considered in trying to improve the service results of severely stiff-shouldered players. More self-imaging is romantic but not apt to do it!
Could these pathetic cripples crank hard and athletically if they were bowed backward from both sets of toes to their head?
Yes if they could fire simultaneously from lower and upper body. Lower would overpower upper creating the slight sequence everybody wants.
Wouldn't they lose height of contact, though, and open the racket too much compared to what they were probably used to?
Solution to first problem: Bend just a little. Solution to second: Toss further in front.
Throughout, they should altogether suppress the other kind of bodybend where hips are way out over the baseline, since this for them leads to downward spin.
It's just an idea.
The comments about Jim McClennan are political, not substantive. His illumination of low toss serving-- that would be Ljubicic, Ivanisovich AND
Tanner-- is fascinating. I refer specifically to McClennan's mentor's practice of tossing blindfolded to his service motion. You guys have a bad record of demonizing people, maybe can't feel good if you're not doing it. (I know, I know. I used to do it to Vic Braden before I met him.) McLennan never does it to any of you. Braden of course is all about low toss serving. He is not a bad man just because the service motion he teaches contains a moment with arm out to the right like a pitcher in baseball (and he writes sometimes for TennisOne).
Abruptly stopping vs. abruptly slowing! C'mon, guys. How many angels can dance on the point of a pin.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Flexible servers generate tension between their cartwheel and their racket tip fighting to stay low. The racket tip is far back and down enough so that when it finally releases it means something.
Inflexible servers (most tennis players) have a racket tip which unfortunately is too close to the cartwheeling front shoulder.
Two different kinds of body bend should be considered in trying to improve the service results of severely stiff-shouldered players. More self-imaging is romantic but not apt to do it!
Could these pathetic cripples crank hard and athletically if they were bowed backward from both sets of toes to their head?
Yes if they could fire simultaneously from lower and upper body. Lower would overpower upper creating the slight sequence everybody wants.
Wouldn't they lose height of contact, though, and open the racket too much compared to what they were probably used to?
Solution to first problem: Bend just a little. Solution to second: Toss further in front.
Throughout, they should altogether suppress the other kind of bodybend where hips are way out over the baseline, since this for them leads to downward spin.
It's just an idea.
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