Owen is a case study I'm doing on the two-handed backhand. My theory is players might be able to play comfortably off all the stances if they are taught early enough and in a timely way. The open stance, which is often taught too late and sometimes not taught at all, doesn't have to be the preserve of elite players. Regular juniors can learn it too.
In my experience, if the open stance backhand is taught too late in a junior's development, they will never be truly comfortable with it. It has to be taught when they are young.
I feel learning the open stance is the lynchpin to having a truly versatile two-handed backhand. Learning it will improve a player's balance through their entire game, not just their backhand, and they will be able to hit great backhands in every situation under the sun.
I started working on Owen's sliced backhand very early in his development. We worked on it for significant periods (not just five minutes here and there) with the aim that, if his sliced backhand were viewed in isolation, no one would suspect he was a two-handed player.
I started all the above elements quite early in Owen's development and over a long period of time. I think he's doing pretty well. You judge for yourselves.
So....what are your thoughts?
Are players more comfortable hitting backhands off neutral and closed stances simply because these stances are predominantly taught for too long in a player's development? Do you have a different view?
And what about the sliced backhand of a two-handed player? Do they have to look so stiff and awkward? Most seem to. Or if a two-handed player is taught a sliced backhand earlier in their development, will it develop to be more fluent, more natural?
Owen is 14. He plays twice a week; a 45 minute lesson on Wednesdays and a squad on Fridays. He also plays socially with his friends on Saturdays. He is by no means an elite junior but he has got talent. He has played just seven tournaments so far as a junior. He does have a regular place in a local adult double league.
Sorry if the film quality isn't great. It was tipping with rain and cold but Owen was keen to be filmed all the same. He's a smashing kid...one of the best.
Two-hander
Sliced Backhand
lovati4, here are the Youtube versions for you:
In my experience, if the open stance backhand is taught too late in a junior's development, they will never be truly comfortable with it. It has to be taught when they are young.
I feel learning the open stance is the lynchpin to having a truly versatile two-handed backhand. Learning it will improve a player's balance through their entire game, not just their backhand, and they will be able to hit great backhands in every situation under the sun.
I started working on Owen's sliced backhand very early in his development. We worked on it for significant periods (not just five minutes here and there) with the aim that, if his sliced backhand were viewed in isolation, no one would suspect he was a two-handed player.
I started all the above elements quite early in Owen's development and over a long period of time. I think he's doing pretty well. You judge for yourselves.
So....what are your thoughts?
Are players more comfortable hitting backhands off neutral and closed stances simply because these stances are predominantly taught for too long in a player's development? Do you have a different view?
And what about the sliced backhand of a two-handed player? Do they have to look so stiff and awkward? Most seem to. Or if a two-handed player is taught a sliced backhand earlier in their development, will it develop to be more fluent, more natural?
Owen is 14. He plays twice a week; a 45 minute lesson on Wednesdays and a squad on Fridays. He also plays socially with his friends on Saturdays. He is by no means an elite junior but he has got talent. He has played just seven tournaments so far as a junior. He does have a regular place in a local adult double league.
Sorry if the film quality isn't great. It was tipping with rain and cold but Owen was keen to be filmed all the same. He's a smashing kid...one of the best.
Two-hander
Sliced Backhand
lovati4, here are the Youtube versions for you:
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