This is a great discussion. I think many interesting points have been raised, a lot of them having to do with complex issues of how the body and the kinetic chain work.
I want to make a couple of points that are a little simpler. The first is that the happenstance of how these clips were filmed actually shows us the pattern of acceleration.
Note that for both players the frames are clear and the racket advances in small, consistent increments during the backswing. This changes when the butt of the racket starts forward to the ball.
That's why the images blur. There isn't a high speed shutter. So as the racket moves faster it's too fast for the camera to see clearly. Hence the blurr equals racket head speed.
Obviously these are two very different balls. But note that the closed racket face happens before the real acceleration, and that the racket has come back on edge or partially on edge before that blurr starts forward. Sharapova actually closes the face somewhat, though not as much as Roger. But note Roger's ball is very low. That makes the closed face appear more prominant in this ball. Compare this to the Stroke Archive.
To me this is the role of a key position. The closed face may play a role but it only works if the racket squares before it starts forward.
The other point is that we lose the blurr a couple of feet after contact. When the racket becomes clear again that shows that the speed has dropped greatly. As is becoming better understood, the followthrough and the wrap serve as the deceleration phase.
That's all for now, more later!
I want to make a couple of points that are a little simpler. The first is that the happenstance of how these clips were filmed actually shows us the pattern of acceleration.
Note that for both players the frames are clear and the racket advances in small, consistent increments during the backswing. This changes when the butt of the racket starts forward to the ball.
That's why the images blur. There isn't a high speed shutter. So as the racket moves faster it's too fast for the camera to see clearly. Hence the blurr equals racket head speed.
Obviously these are two very different balls. But note that the closed racket face happens before the real acceleration, and that the racket has come back on edge or partially on edge before that blurr starts forward. Sharapova actually closes the face somewhat, though not as much as Roger. But note Roger's ball is very low. That makes the closed face appear more prominant in this ball. Compare this to the Stroke Archive.
To me this is the role of a key position. The closed face may play a role but it only works if the racket squares before it starts forward.
The other point is that we lose the blurr a couple of feet after contact. When the racket becomes clear again that shows that the speed has dropped greatly. As is becoming better understood, the followthrough and the wrap serve as the deceleration phase.
That's all for now, more later!
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