I have been thinking about this for a while. (johnyandell has a few articles showing old school strokes where the old 1hbh drive was more like a flat slice. In the past, the slice and topspin backhands were much more similar. However, recently the two shots have diverged more and more. To me most of the players today learned the 1hbh topspin first and then incorporated a slice. Thiem and Shapo would be prime examples. But there are others that to me look like they had to learn how to slice after they learned topspin.
Fed would be the counter example. He for all intents and purposes would have just sliced his whole life but realized that he needed topspin to play at the highest levels. Still I would contend that his topspin backhand looks like it takes the base of the slice and then modifies it. He even bends his elbow more than others.
My daughter has been hitting one handed for a while and her topspin continues to improve. But her slice is still the shot she will fall back on during a match and under pressure. It is fine by me as she usually tells me that she just hits whatever bothers her opponent more. With girls that hit a 2hbh that would be a slice that stays low.
We have been doing drills where she only hits topspin. Either hand fed or basket fed drills.
The question I have is whether anyone has tried a drill where a player alternates between both shots. My thinking is that rather than drilling two different shots, the player would be asked to alternate for some time. Then they will learn to mix both shots. It is a bit artificial but it would only be for maybe 5 minutes.
I think that by alternating in practice you kind of create a motor skill that allows the player to transition from one shot to the other. Right now she hits almost all topspin in practice but then will sometimes revert to all slice.
My idea is that it is important to teach the player how to learn to mix both shots. In the psych literature, they call it massed vs. distributed practice. Basically, if you just practice three different things for 10 mins each or mix three different things for 10 mins, you get better performance when things are mixed over a longer period of time. In this case, it would be mixing slice and topspin.
I realize this might depend on how advanced a player is. We might want to concentrate on one thing at an early stage or when trying to make a change.
My daughter has a well established tospspin and slice backhand. The question is whether I should ask her to artificially mix them either by alternating or by just blurting out which one she is going to hit.
Any thoughts?
Fed would be the counter example. He for all intents and purposes would have just sliced his whole life but realized that he needed topspin to play at the highest levels. Still I would contend that his topspin backhand looks like it takes the base of the slice and then modifies it. He even bends his elbow more than others.
My daughter has been hitting one handed for a while and her topspin continues to improve. But her slice is still the shot she will fall back on during a match and under pressure. It is fine by me as she usually tells me that she just hits whatever bothers her opponent more. With girls that hit a 2hbh that would be a slice that stays low.
We have been doing drills where she only hits topspin. Either hand fed or basket fed drills.
The question I have is whether anyone has tried a drill where a player alternates between both shots. My thinking is that rather than drilling two different shots, the player would be asked to alternate for some time. Then they will learn to mix both shots. It is a bit artificial but it would only be for maybe 5 minutes.
I think that by alternating in practice you kind of create a motor skill that allows the player to transition from one shot to the other. Right now she hits almost all topspin in practice but then will sometimes revert to all slice.
My idea is that it is important to teach the player how to learn to mix both shots. In the psych literature, they call it massed vs. distributed practice. Basically, if you just practice three different things for 10 mins each or mix three different things for 10 mins, you get better performance when things are mixed over a longer period of time. In this case, it would be mixing slice and topspin.
I realize this might depend on how advanced a player is. We might want to concentrate on one thing at an early stage or when trying to make a change.
My daughter has a well established tospspin and slice backhand. The question is whether I should ask her to artificially mix them either by alternating or by just blurting out which one she is going to hit.
Any thoughts?
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