Originally posted by johncraig
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But after that I'm going to be less charitable and accuse people of poor reading skills, English teacher that I am.
In paragraph five: "He (Doug King) talked about a wrist that looked like McEnroe's to start and Justine Henin's to finish...You can go from convex to concave with your wrist but if you turn over your arm at the same time the final concave is going to turn into convex too, just convex in a different direction!"
So there it is, the answer to all questions on this topic, an answer which people then choose to ignore.
You bend the stick one way and then you bend it the other. You do this at the wrist.
You start with racket curled or humped then turn it inside out while rolling the whole arm forward, with the result that frame zings sharply upward while better placing strings on outside of the ball.
The movement does not include radial or ulnar deviation.
It's "wrist flex" and "wrist extension" in the accepted but horrid sport scientist techno-speak that ensures that nobody ever understands anything.
Can someone express the specific wrist movement more simply? Maybe. I'll listen.
But as far as standard, pompous, puritanical copout # 1 in all tennis instruction, "This is less about fundamentals and more about individual style," a pox on all you mavens of basics! You think I, a crew coach, don't care about basics just because I find something interesting enough to emulate?
Well, let me tell you, if I can emulate it, anyone can. So it's a basic, not distant characteristic or "caricaturistic" as the international internet thug Nabrug used to say, so obnoxious he had to be banned from Tennis Player.
Sorry. I ought to cool down. I simply think people need to understand something enough to try it before dismissing it for any reason.
Try it and report back. Then tell me whether it's so restricted to one or two players in the world that no "ordinary person" should try it on their home court.
As far as I am concerned, it either works or it doesn't. And of course the basics have to be in place. But then, I contend, it will work for that person no matter who he or she is.
And one can, for safety, have a more conventional flat backhand that doesn't use shoulders tilt or this special wrist movement at all.
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