TennisPlayer,
The modern forehand swing, like any throwing motion is a coordinated combination of lower and upper body activities. It most definitely is not an isolated arm movement that isn't preceded by uncoiling leg-hip-shoulder movements. However, neither is it just a leg-lift driven hip-and-shoulder-uncoil driving a limp, passive arm. It's a complementary blend of both. My understanding of the arm action of the "modern" topspin forehand groundstroke, after the shoulder turn starts forward, is a pull of the racket forward then across, as the shoulder continues to uncoil forward. This arm action occurs together with forearm pronation and a bending of elbow so racket ends up either above or lower outside the non-dominate shoulder.
My conjecture is that players who learned with wooden rackets or were taught to extend their stroke through the ball toward the target had a comparable arm action that was a push of the racket, after the start of the shoulder turn forward. Among the tennis teaching community, the influence of Oscar Wegner and his disciples is apparently not as widespread as I had assumed, at least not in the U. S. Of three certified teaching pros I polled on the modern forehand question, one said the arm action was a pull, one said push and the other said it was more a "Å“reactive drive" of the arm. Now this is after I tried to get them to distinguish between the forward shoulder rotation pushing the upper arm forward and what the arm action was after the start of shoulder turn forward.
An elder and formerly national ranked player in our area says he asked Fred Perry that very question, pull or push? The answer Perry gave was pull. Besides Perry, Wegner in his first book describes the forehand as finding or meeting the ball then pulling your hand to over left shoulder. I also found two biomechanical references to using the muscles of front of trunk and chest and biceps to accelerate racket. Nobody else seems to clearly spell this out in any instruction literature I have seen. And I have read many an article or book chapter on the so-called modern forehand. Am I wrong or off-base in thinking that we should have a consensus and clear recommendation in the tennis community on such a basic issue? In summary my question is pull, push, or not relevant? I would appreciate your thoughts and opinion please. Thanks
Leonard Credeur
The modern forehand swing, like any throwing motion is a coordinated combination of lower and upper body activities. It most definitely is not an isolated arm movement that isn't preceded by uncoiling leg-hip-shoulder movements. However, neither is it just a leg-lift driven hip-and-shoulder-uncoil driving a limp, passive arm. It's a complementary blend of both. My understanding of the arm action of the "modern" topspin forehand groundstroke, after the shoulder turn starts forward, is a pull of the racket forward then across, as the shoulder continues to uncoil forward. This arm action occurs together with forearm pronation and a bending of elbow so racket ends up either above or lower outside the non-dominate shoulder.
My conjecture is that players who learned with wooden rackets or were taught to extend their stroke through the ball toward the target had a comparable arm action that was a push of the racket, after the start of the shoulder turn forward. Among the tennis teaching community, the influence of Oscar Wegner and his disciples is apparently not as widespread as I had assumed, at least not in the U. S. Of three certified teaching pros I polled on the modern forehand question, one said the arm action was a pull, one said push and the other said it was more a "Å“reactive drive" of the arm. Now this is after I tried to get them to distinguish between the forward shoulder rotation pushing the upper arm forward and what the arm action was after the start of shoulder turn forward.
An elder and formerly national ranked player in our area says he asked Fred Perry that very question, pull or push? The answer Perry gave was pull. Besides Perry, Wegner in his first book describes the forehand as finding or meeting the ball then pulling your hand to over left shoulder. I also found two biomechanical references to using the muscles of front of trunk and chest and biceps to accelerate racket. Nobody else seems to clearly spell this out in any instruction literature I have seen. And I have read many an article or book chapter on the so-called modern forehand. Am I wrong or off-base in thinking that we should have a consensus and clear recommendation in the tennis community on such a basic issue? In summary my question is pull, push, or not relevant? I would appreciate your thoughts and opinion please. Thanks
Leonard Credeur
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