First, I will admit that I am not a good Tennis player(about 3.5). I don't want to type the annoying IMHO in front of every sentence, but that is implied
I am wondering whether it ever pays to deliberately take the ball early and on the rise.
OK, you rob the opponent of a fraction of second in reaction time. But disadvantages seem to be too many.
You have to judge the bounce of the ball before playing the shot rather than seeing how the ball actually bounces before swinging. That introdces a lot of error. Even the best in this business, Agassi, seems to use abbreviated , thru-the-line strokes to reduce his errors. That has to be affecting the potential pace and topspin he can put on the shot. Doesn't that offset the advantage of reducing the opponent's reaction time?
For lesser mortals than Agassi, won't the errors be too many?
Does any current pro actually take the ball early on purpose? I am not talking about returning kick serves or returning very deep balls for which they are caught out of position. Say a groundstroke is landing slightly short with typical pro pace and topspin while the receiver is near the baseline. Is there any evidence that, in this situation, pros prefer to rush forward to take it on the rise as opposed to waiting for it to reach the peak of its bounce and teeing off with a powerful forehand?
I am wondering whether it ever pays to deliberately take the ball early and on the rise.
OK, you rob the opponent of a fraction of second in reaction time. But disadvantages seem to be too many.
You have to judge the bounce of the ball before playing the shot rather than seeing how the ball actually bounces before swinging. That introdces a lot of error. Even the best in this business, Agassi, seems to use abbreviated , thru-the-line strokes to reduce his errors. That has to be affecting the potential pace and topspin he can put on the shot. Doesn't that offset the advantage of reducing the opponent's reaction time?
For lesser mortals than Agassi, won't the errors be too many?
Does any current pro actually take the ball early on purpose? I am not talking about returning kick serves or returning very deep balls for which they are caught out of position. Say a groundstroke is landing slightly short with typical pro pace and topspin while the receiver is near the baseline. Is there any evidence that, in this situation, pros prefer to rush forward to take it on the rise as opposed to waiting for it to reach the peak of its bounce and teeing off with a powerful forehand?
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