Brian, quoting from Plaegenhoeff’s book, describing the serve motion, “trunk angular motion is aiding the arm motion The slightly bent body position at impact is characteristic of all good servers.”
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The Serve: Twist Versus Forward Rotation
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Originally posted by gzhpcu View PostBrian, is this relevant? From Stanley Plaegenhoefs "Fundamentals of Tennis".
Is the “juttung buttocks” a sign for what you meant?
Originally posted by seano View PostBrian - To help me further understand why "jackknifing" of the trunk (flexion) is not ideal, could you please give me a practical explanation using Roger Federer as an example? Roger's serve is widely considered one of the best on tour and Tennisplayer has video of him still raising up even after contact, yet he does "jackknife" to some degree. What can Roger do differently so he doesn't "jackknife" yet makes his serve even better? Thanks once again for your input.
Some time ago I posted a clip of a young man with a powerful serve but who, in my opinion, jackknifed. In the clip he is bending right over, which in turn seems to badly affect his landing. He does serve well, though, and it's amazing how well he's overcome this deficit. I did work on his serve to rectify this but subsequently moved away and got a job in the neighbouring county.
Here is the clip: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6u5i05
Stotty
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Stotty - Your student in the video hardly "loads" his back leg at all. When he brings his back leg up to the pinpoint stance, he brings his back foot past the front and has all the weight on his toes. His back hip is hardly turned. Notice the difference between the angles of the front and back feet to the ground. The front foot has better weight distribution, while to back foot is only on the top of the shoe. To me, that's why he has too much twist rotation and "jackknifes".Last edited by seano; 09-24-2018, 09:51 AM.
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Protruding Buttocks
In the serve chapter of FUNDAMENTALS OF TENNIS by Stanley Plagenhoef and illustrated by Nelson Giles, every server whether famous or not has buttocks that protrude.
Is this caricature (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/clip...6328355?mt=8)? Judging from Plagenhoef's text, I don't think so. Is it intention, i.e., on purpose? Yes.
Next question: When should the buttocks get that way? And how fast or how slow?
I'm thinking right now I might like to raise the right foot with the right hip as arm bends. Hips to go backward to cantilever against shoulders leaning forward as if to form a hammer head. The rest of lean could then come from the feet.
No jolt: I get that, although one of my favorite tennis writers of all time, John M. Barnaby, advocated that as prime ingredient of a huge cannonball on page 72 of his book RACKET WORK: THE KEY TO TENNIS: "When the fanny moves back it accelerates the top of the torso forward and down."
But I am more than willing to accept that forward push on the ball could with more efficacious spin come from somewhere else.
Note: In one of Plagenhoef's pen-drawn sequences, Owen Davis lifts his foot first before his hip bumps upward and backward. Will have to try that too as soon as I come back from therapy.
Favorite word: "decrepit."Last edited by bottle; 09-25-2018, 03:45 PM.
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So... I guess we should be specific about the various roles of trunk flexion. Is it passive or is it active - and if active what is the goal.
In the case of the diagram a "slight" forward flexion is a passive natural consequence of the previous torso rotations - indeed this is normal position regardless of the momentum base.
As I said before, in serve variations where forward rotation is lacking by design, some minimal active flexion may be required - the purpose of this is positional. The variations often requiring this are twist based and forward type but around a diagonalized axis like Fed - not that his is bad, the package works for him.
Jackknifing to me implies extensive active flexion for the purpose of directly impacting racquet head speed (based on when it occurs). Trunk flexion of this sort would however have a very minimal impact on that speed compared to the must faster rotations of the arm joints that have been shown by me and others to impact racquet speed nearing impact. It would also have downward pulling influence on the arm and racquet which is why players that try this often hit in the bottom of the net.
To me it is clear that active trunk flexion to produce racquet speed is a flaw born of failure to produce and transfer adequate forward angular momentum. The more interesting thought from the world of biomechanics is that in contrast to active flexion, that an extensor torque (reversal of flexion) would apply an acceleration of the arm forward - the old whip analogy. A presentation I did at American College of Sport Medicine conference in 2004 showed it doesn't happen that way.
Great to see that there are other mechanics junkies - keep thinking.
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Originally posted by arturohernandez View PostVery interesting video! I agree with all your points.
The serve has become my lifelong mission and I have managed to improve mine a lot thanks to all of your articles as well as many videos on tennisplayer.net and many hours on the court.
The Sampras serve remains cemented in my mind and it took a while to realize that my body is nothing like his in height, flexibility and strength.
I noticed that the two junior girls in your video didn't seem to be emphasizing twisting as much as other coaches do. I see so many coaches trying to teach their students serves and failing.
The one drill that has helped my son and daughter with their serves is the what I call the serve-throw drill. I pulled it off the internet and now cannot find it.
The idea is a person alternates between serving and throwing the ball over the net from the service line.
My son still swears by it at 19 and for a while when he was younger he would do shadow throws during matches and then he would get up to the line and serve.
When you try and throw a tennis ball in the air over the net, it becomes clear that the ball has to go way up in the air.
Over time this becomes incorporated into the serve itself with a nice cartwheel that seems counterintuitive to most players because they sense the serve as traveling in a straight line from the racket above their heads into the service box.
I really like your applied approach. I have tried to describe serves to people and now I find that I am not sure what I even do.
With my daughter I just throw her into a drill immediately and things seem to fix themselves rather quickly.
If we talk about it, she grows frustrated and then tells me how what I say is nothing like what I am doing or showing her.
Kids are very bright as clearly you were at age 8 when what you were told made no sense.
Thanks so much for your video and I look forward to the next one.
Have you ever tried( for right handers): 1.toss ball with left hand and throw a ball with right hand and try to hit the tossed ball. 2. then, toss ball with left hand and throw(and release) racket from right hand at the tossed ball.
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Brian - I have several questions about the latest serve video (Rotations in Upward Swing).
1) Is it a correct assumption that the synchronization of the lower and upper body is that the leg drive initiates the racquet drop?
2) The racquet to the outside in the external shoulder rotation portion (racquet lined up with the elbow exiting the backswing and entering the upward swing), is that a technique issue or a flexibility issue?
3) 2 parts - a) When raising the elbow in the upward swing, is that the beginning of the somersault motion and lateral tilt of the trunk?
b) When raising the elbow, does the shoulder abduction angle remains constant thru out (100 - 110 degrees?)?
4) The wrist flexion you mentioned after internal shoulder rotation, is that to bring the wrist to a "neutral position"? I know you are only talking about the upward swing that takes place before contact.You're not suggesting to flex the wrist further than that, correct?
5) What are your thoughts on the serve tip - "to achieve greater external rotation of the hitting shoulder, in "full racquet drop" try to keep the elbow higher then the hand".
Thanks again for your input.Last edited by seano; 10-12-2018, 10:28 AM.
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Originally posted by seano View PostBrian - I have several questions about the latest serve video (Rotations in Upward Swing).
5) What are your thoughts on the serve tip - "to achieve greater external rotation of the hitting shoulder, in "full racquet drop" try to keep the elbow higher than the hand".
Thanks again for your input.
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My understanding with the elbow position in the upward swing, is to keep a constant angle between the elbow, shoulder and side of the trunk (shoulder abduction angle). I've heard the angle should remain constant at 100 - 110 degrees. Was asking Brian to see if that is true. When you start to tilt your body (lateral flexion) you are bring the contact point higher up and not to the side.
A common mistake with the tip to "scratch your back" is it raises the elbow too high, leaving 2 problems. 1) less room to accelerate up 2) increase risk of injury (impingement of the shoulder).Last edited by seano; 10-12-2018, 10:42 AM.
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