"My belief is that the speed of the modern serve and the improvement of the return game has made traditional serve and volley, as a game style, unviable. The serve is actually coming in too fast and the return coming back too fast to allow enough time to get in for a good classic volley play."
If you think about this above statement just a bit carefully it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. The speed of the serve makes serve and volley unviable? The improvement of the return game? What has actually improved? Actually both of these points are only related to the speed of the court. The courts of today suck up the speed of the serve...you don't see the ball skidding through the court anymore like it used to on slick grass. Or faster hardcourts of the past. The same is true of the return game. The ball is sucked up on a velcro type surface and it stands up and is delivered into the returners strike zone. Harder to slide the ball away from the opponent as well as more difficult to get the ball to slide into the body. Speed up the courts and you will see a return of the game that led to the slow down of the surfaces as they are now.
"However, I can also imagine a future where a new game style emerges - serve and topspin volley. You already see top players like Roger Federer use this on occasion. In this style, the server would halt near midcourt - what we traditionally call “no man's land" - and look to hit winning and transitional topspin volleys from that court position. It would turn the old view of the midcourt - as a place you don't want to be - on its head."
This is a bit far fetched. I haven't seen an inkling or a clue as to this type of play being played on a regular basis. "The old view of the midcourt" being turned on its head. Let me clue you in on something...there is nothing new under the sun. The old view has been engineered into what is viewed as irrelevant. What has happened due solely to engineering to strings, court surfaces and racquets is just some monkeying around. Now that is one great line...it is only some monkeying around. Amazing how it helps people to feel superior to the past.
If you think about this above statement just a bit carefully it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. The speed of the serve makes serve and volley unviable? The improvement of the return game? What has actually improved? Actually both of these points are only related to the speed of the court. The courts of today suck up the speed of the serve...you don't see the ball skidding through the court anymore like it used to on slick grass. Or faster hardcourts of the past. The same is true of the return game. The ball is sucked up on a velcro type surface and it stands up and is delivered into the returners strike zone. Harder to slide the ball away from the opponent as well as more difficult to get the ball to slide into the body. Speed up the courts and you will see a return of the game that led to the slow down of the surfaces as they are now.
"However, I can also imagine a future where a new game style emerges - serve and topspin volley. You already see top players like Roger Federer use this on occasion. In this style, the server would halt near midcourt - what we traditionally call “no man's land" - and look to hit winning and transitional topspin volleys from that court position. It would turn the old view of the midcourt - as a place you don't want to be - on its head."
This is a bit far fetched. I haven't seen an inkling or a clue as to this type of play being played on a regular basis. "The old view of the midcourt" being turned on its head. Let me clue you in on something...there is nothing new under the sun. The old view has been engineered into what is viewed as irrelevant. What has happened due solely to engineering to strings, court surfaces and racquets is just some monkeying around. Now that is one great line...it is only some monkeying around. Amazing how it helps people to feel superior to the past.
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