On the Road to Agi-scissors
All confidence.
1) Do 20 double racket baton twirls. Those are where you put a second racket in your hitting hand, handle butt against handle butt to extend the length of your racket by two. Twirl the new implement thus created sideways toward right fence, back toward left fence-- twirl-twirl. The arm is bent at a right angle.
2) Do 40 of the same bent arm twirl-twirls but with only one racket in your hand.
3) Do 10 more of the twirl-twirls but with nothing in your hand other than a pen or pencil.
4) Try the twirls in all different directions.
Now you've got the end frames for the Agi-scissor, a shot inspired by the Agnieszka Radwanska forehand but not a slavish imitation-- not in any way.
Every Roger Federer forehand begins with one of the twirls only with two hands on the racket. Agi-Rad begins hers the same way. But one hand on the racket like an actual baton twirler is good enough for me.
At the same time the left hand can be pointing radically across at side fence to help wind the bod around as much as you want.
A twirl in one direction starts this new forehand. A twirl in the opposite direction concludes it. Now we have the end frames and need only supply the painting in between.
We lose a bit of simplicity while gaining depth of backswing if we add arm extension at the elbow during second half of the opening twirl.
Now hitting arm is pointed slightly downward and we're ready to sweep the court forward as if with a push broom. If we're late or early enough with our footwork, the oncoming ball will be at desired height almost like a cobweb on the court.
If the ball is high, I'm going to choose another shot.
The forward sweep includes the scissoring of arm back to a right angle and a further lowering of bod related to forward rotation of hips combined with lowering of right knee.
I'm thinking of a neutral stance forehand here, but open and semi-open versions work well too as demonstrated by Agnieszka in the films.
WE SYNTHETIC STROKE MAKERS MAY NOT WIN AS MUCH BUT WE HAVE MORE FUN. (And we win enough-- ask my guys.)
All confidence.
1) Do 20 double racket baton twirls. Those are where you put a second racket in your hitting hand, handle butt against handle butt to extend the length of your racket by two. Twirl the new implement thus created sideways toward right fence, back toward left fence-- twirl-twirl. The arm is bent at a right angle.
2) Do 40 of the same bent arm twirl-twirls but with only one racket in your hand.
3) Do 10 more of the twirl-twirls but with nothing in your hand other than a pen or pencil.
4) Try the twirls in all different directions.
Now you've got the end frames for the Agi-scissor, a shot inspired by the Agnieszka Radwanska forehand but not a slavish imitation-- not in any way.
Every Roger Federer forehand begins with one of the twirls only with two hands on the racket. Agi-Rad begins hers the same way. But one hand on the racket like an actual baton twirler is good enough for me.
At the same time the left hand can be pointing radically across at side fence to help wind the bod around as much as you want.
A twirl in one direction starts this new forehand. A twirl in the opposite direction concludes it. Now we have the end frames and need only supply the painting in between.
We lose a bit of simplicity while gaining depth of backswing if we add arm extension at the elbow during second half of the opening twirl.
Now hitting arm is pointed slightly downward and we're ready to sweep the court forward as if with a push broom. If we're late or early enough with our footwork, the oncoming ball will be at desired height almost like a cobweb on the court.
If the ball is high, I'm going to choose another shot.
The forward sweep includes the scissoring of arm back to a right angle and a further lowering of bod related to forward rotation of hips combined with lowering of right knee.
I'm thinking of a neutral stance forehand here, but open and semi-open versions work well too as demonstrated by Agnieszka in the films.
WE SYNTHETIC STROKE MAKERS MAY NOT WIN AS MUCH BUT WE HAVE MORE FUN. (And we win enough-- ask my guys.)
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