This thread now has nothing to do with it's original purpose. Personally I don't care about Nastase's antiquated serve motion. I did learn a lot from watching Yandell boil the forehand down to a couple of images.
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A New Teaching System: The Forehand Keying Process
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The Wind-up...and the Pitch. Thwack!
Originally posted by dipperhitter View PostThis thread now has nothing to do with it's original purpose. Personally I don't care about Nastase's antiquated serve motion. I did learn a lot from watching Yandell boil the forehand down to a couple of images.
Incidentally you are invited to read the thread that surrounded this service motion. It's quite good...I assure you. That is...if you enjoy serve and volley classic tennis.
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4w...se-serve_sportdon_budge
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Originally posted by dipperhitter View PostThis thread now has nothing to do with it's original purpose. Personally I don't care about Nastase's antiquated serve motion. I did learn a lot from watching Yandell boil the forehand down to a couple of images.
Stotty
Stotty
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Originally posted by licensedcoach View Post
This happens all the time. Threads nearly always end up meandering. You can always bring it back on track of course by posting your own thoughts on the original subject matter. I have done this many times when I feel a thread has gone off topic too early.
Stotty
So, please Slotty stop playing moderator, whining, complaining and trying to bring the orderly LTA approach to this board. It doesn't work, and it holds the stallions back. And, why would we want to do that? The posts here lately have been at a whole new level this board hasn't ever seen.
Last edited by hockeyscout; 12-28-2016, 07:59 PM.
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As long as someone learns something it is a valid post. Let the learning begin. Visual imaging was the start of this thread and some great posts talked about it, it did meander, but these threads will often make a complete 360 and go back to its original idea, a natural cycle if you will. It may take time, or one greatest to wrap it all up.
The key images on this forehand series are instrumental in helping students, just like key images in all other strokes. We all have our own ideas on what the a great shot looks like and feels like, critical we get our students to see that or something similar that can get them there. We owe that to our students and owe that to ourselves.
Talk about forehands, talk about serves, talk about backhands and my beloved volleys. Just make it count and just like great strokes, don't stress on making it perfect, stress on making it purposeful.
Happy Holidays everyone
Kyle LaCroix USPTA
Boca Raton
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Originally posted by tennis_chiro View Post
Regards,
-Bob
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Hi John,
Interesting here that you've broken down the forehand to two key positions. Keep it simple is usually a sound policy.
I'm interested to know why you have chosen the part of the forehand where the wrist is at eye level and crossed over the opposite shoulder as the extension position. It seems to me that this position is part of the release or follow through of the shot. Is there another position earlier in the shot where the hand is at it's most forward position, more in line with the path of the ball? I'm thinking mostly of Fed's straight arm forehand, where you can see the arm pointing almost straight ahead before the arm bends and the hand follows through toward the opposite (left) shoulder. Isn't that the maximum extension position?
thanks,
Peter
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The main reason I have chosen it is that it works! But the extension of the swing includes the upward component--- which is to eye level. Usually that is also the point at which the racket is pointing furthest toward the opponent--because as it comes upward it is still traveling forward. With Rafa you sometimes see the extension happen before the hand crosses to the opposite shoulder--but even he comes to eye level at some point. You see something of the same tendency at times with Fed but less. But Fed and most double bend players make my extension position on most drives. If you truly master the position you will feel why. It creates the perfect combination of outward and upward. The image activates this. Of course there are variations but this is the basis. Technically the racket is slowed down so much by ball impact that after contact is all deceleration. But the racket slows most radically when it starts backwards in the wrap. The most common error I see with club players is breaking off the extension too fast. This position corrects that.
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Ah, thanks for the explanation. That makes sense about the swing continuing to go up.
Can you explain which which direction is "outward"? The shoulders are turning through the shot so "out" from the body could mean toward the side fence at the beginning of the swing, but toward the net at contact.
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