Players prior to the modern era made even difficult volleys look easy whereas players today can, at times, make easy volleys look downright difficult. The proof, as always, is in the footage. -- Stotty
It's been a while since I have posted a longer, more meaningful post on forum. There doesn't seem to much appetite for such discussion of late since the more technically minded posters aren't posting so much these days. But here goes...
I like this clip below. It's from the 1980s and features Cash and Edberg. I like this era most because rackets and strings offer a bit more power and versatility than wood without being too overwhelming or detrimental to all round tennis. The clip is tightly edited (could be better quality but watch it on a small screen for best viewing) so you get to see one exquisite volley after the other. You won't see much better volleying than this. Both players make it look easy and their volleys are firm and assured. It's a completely different class to today's volleying. Chalk and cheese.
It's important to look back at videos like these because they serve good purpose in bringing the modern game back down to earth. No one has greater admiration for the core parts of the modern game than me but it does tend to get a lot more credit than it has earned.
I have been coaching a long time and watched fads and trends come and go like there is no tomorrow. One minute coaches advocate tipping the racket head down to commence a forehand (Borg, Sampras, Lendl), the next minute everyone should keep the racket tip up (Roger and Rafa). Now it's the hybrid (Kygrios, Sock). All of this might be very good advice for a given player but, in essence, all three styles work, and all that really matters are the fundamentals. My predecessor always said: ''If you take care of the fundamentals then the bells and whistles will take care of themselves.'' Good advice? I'll let you decide. One thing is for sure, it's volleys, not forehands, that are out of fashion.
My advice to coaches is to teach volleys abundantly right from the start. Put volleying way up the pecking order. Give them kudos. Volleys mustn't be tagged on to the last 5 minutes of a lesson...something I see all the time these days. Put volleys at the beginning of a lesson, and work on all the nuances, of which there are many. Volleys are often more about absorbing and deflecting pace than punching, but if you want to get truly educated on the ins and outs of volleying then these two articles will really clue you up.
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...rehand_volley/
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...ckhand_volley/
Older coaches always preach that if junior players haven't developed good volleys and transitioning skills by the time they are 14 or 15, then it is unlikely they will ever feel at home at the net. This is almost certainly true and something I have witnessed first hand many times over. Leave volleys even later than than juniors and you get players who are positively phobic about the net. You simply cannot play catch-up once you have missed the boat with your student.
I have great admiration for Novak and the way he goes about the business of being a world-class tennis player. He is the best player the world, probably the best of his generation, and possibly the greatest player of all time. But just imagine how invincible he would be if he could volley, smash and transition to the net like a Cash or McEnroe, or even half as well. He's only got half a game and yet he is so incredibly good...Novak is the equivalent of a one-legged man winning the 100m at the Olympics, a bizarre analogy perhaps, but laced with some truth if you have the benefit of 40 years experience of watching tennis as I have. Nick Bollettieri once said Novak is the most complete player ever to play tennis. I take the opposite view. Novak is the most one dimensional and least complete player of all the greats. Though I must concede he is utterly brilliant at what he does do well. His balance, preparation, footwork, and technical ability off the ground are the finest you will ever see. He is the ultimate model for preparation when it comes to ground strokes.
Roger is the best volleyer in the modern game but then he is slightly older than the others and has bridged two generations. It's this transitioning that has made his game the most functional, complete, and interesting of all.
If you made it this far then thanks for listening. I know attention spans aren't great these days.
It's been a while since I have posted a longer, more meaningful post on forum. There doesn't seem to much appetite for such discussion of late since the more technically minded posters aren't posting so much these days. But here goes...
I like this clip below. It's from the 1980s and features Cash and Edberg. I like this era most because rackets and strings offer a bit more power and versatility than wood without being too overwhelming or detrimental to all round tennis. The clip is tightly edited (could be better quality but watch it on a small screen for best viewing) so you get to see one exquisite volley after the other. You won't see much better volleying than this. Both players make it look easy and their volleys are firm and assured. It's a completely different class to today's volleying. Chalk and cheese.
It's important to look back at videos like these because they serve good purpose in bringing the modern game back down to earth. No one has greater admiration for the core parts of the modern game than me but it does tend to get a lot more credit than it has earned.
I have been coaching a long time and watched fads and trends come and go like there is no tomorrow. One minute coaches advocate tipping the racket head down to commence a forehand (Borg, Sampras, Lendl), the next minute everyone should keep the racket tip up (Roger and Rafa). Now it's the hybrid (Kygrios, Sock). All of this might be very good advice for a given player but, in essence, all three styles work, and all that really matters are the fundamentals. My predecessor always said: ''If you take care of the fundamentals then the bells and whistles will take care of themselves.'' Good advice? I'll let you decide. One thing is for sure, it's volleys, not forehands, that are out of fashion.
My advice to coaches is to teach volleys abundantly right from the start. Put volleying way up the pecking order. Give them kudos. Volleys mustn't be tagged on to the last 5 minutes of a lesson...something I see all the time these days. Put volleys at the beginning of a lesson, and work on all the nuances, of which there are many. Volleys are often more about absorbing and deflecting pace than punching, but if you want to get truly educated on the ins and outs of volleying then these two articles will really clue you up.
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...rehand_volley/
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...ckhand_volley/
Older coaches always preach that if junior players haven't developed good volleys and transitioning skills by the time they are 14 or 15, then it is unlikely they will ever feel at home at the net. This is almost certainly true and something I have witnessed first hand many times over. Leave volleys even later than than juniors and you get players who are positively phobic about the net. You simply cannot play catch-up once you have missed the boat with your student.
I have great admiration for Novak and the way he goes about the business of being a world-class tennis player. He is the best player the world, probably the best of his generation, and possibly the greatest player of all time. But just imagine how invincible he would be if he could volley, smash and transition to the net like a Cash or McEnroe, or even half as well. He's only got half a game and yet he is so incredibly good...Novak is the equivalent of a one-legged man winning the 100m at the Olympics, a bizarre analogy perhaps, but laced with some truth if you have the benefit of 40 years experience of watching tennis as I have. Nick Bollettieri once said Novak is the most complete player ever to play tennis. I take the opposite view. Novak is the most one dimensional and least complete player of all the greats. Though I must concede he is utterly brilliant at what he does do well. His balance, preparation, footwork, and technical ability off the ground are the finest you will ever see. He is the ultimate model for preparation when it comes to ground strokes.
Roger is the best volleyer in the modern game but then he is slightly older than the others and has bridged two generations. It's this transitioning that has made his game the most functional, complete, and interesting of all.
If you made it this far then thanks for listening. I know attention spans aren't great these days.
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