Years ago a friend, an electronics executive in Tokyo, described Apple's early attempts at localizing the Macintosh interface for Japan as,
.
Always loved that concise diss, which came to mind when I was struggling to describe Coco Gauff's forehand, you can see in this month's TPN Tour Portrait along with photos of her great backhand, serve, and volley here:
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...te/coco_gauff/
Don't get me wrong. I come not to diss Coco but to praise her. She's a tremendous tennis player. At 18 yo she is already four (4) in the world, and has qualified for this week's tour finals in both singles and doubles. where she ranks second. Tremendous movement, world class backhand, serve is inconsistent but can be strong. Great attitude.
Her relative weakness is her forehand which can be potent, erratic, or just go away entirely. Let's look at some of my photos to see if her technique might give us some hints at why that particular stroke might hold the key to just how far the teen goes.
This is above my pay grade, as a mere fan and humble weekend warrior, but let me toss these out to spur discussion. As in brainstorming, there are no bad ideas. Sort of <g> :
1) Her technique seems a mishmash of several styles, built of pieces that don't seem to go together. She often takes her racket so far back way & above her head, before dropping it to her knees, it needs a ticket stub to get back in the stadium.
.
2) Zero shoulder rotation at times constipates her swing with her off arm blocking her racket arm (see first photo below)
.
3) Amazingly fast, can hit tremendous backhands while a blur, but on the forehand, she has no tiny steps and timing is often bad. In the second photo she way over-ran the ball for no reason but her own footwork.
.
Both photos are mine from San Jose aka Mubadala SIlicon Valley Open, (c)jfawcette
Coco reaches toward her target with both arms, ends up following through toward her face.
filedata/fetch?id=98930&d=1667407896&type=thumb
Her opponent, Paula Badosa, didn't do this to her, Coco did it to herself. Tremendous speed she uses so well on her backhand is almost a detriment on her forehand -- so far.
filedata/fetch?id=98931&d=1667407896&type=thumb
#Tennis
.
"Like having some hamburger with your sushi."
Always loved that concise diss, which came to mind when I was struggling to describe Coco Gauff's forehand, you can see in this month's TPN Tour Portrait along with photos of her great backhand, serve, and volley here:
https://www.tennisplayer.net/members...te/coco_gauff/
Don't get me wrong. I come not to diss Coco but to praise her. She's a tremendous tennis player. At 18 yo she is already four (4) in the world, and has qualified for this week's tour finals in both singles and doubles. where she ranks second. Tremendous movement, world class backhand, serve is inconsistent but can be strong. Great attitude.
Her relative weakness is her forehand which can be potent, erratic, or just go away entirely. Let's look at some of my photos to see if her technique might give us some hints at why that particular stroke might hold the key to just how far the teen goes.
This is above my pay grade, as a mere fan and humble weekend warrior, but let me toss these out to spur discussion. As in brainstorming, there are no bad ideas. Sort of <g> :
1) Her technique seems a mishmash of several styles, built of pieces that don't seem to go together. She often takes her racket so far back way & above her head, before dropping it to her knees, it needs a ticket stub to get back in the stadium.
.
2) Zero shoulder rotation at times constipates her swing with her off arm blocking her racket arm (see first photo below)
.
3) Amazingly fast, can hit tremendous backhands while a blur, but on the forehand, she has no tiny steps and timing is often bad. In the second photo she way over-ran the ball for no reason but her own footwork.
.
Both photos are mine from San Jose aka Mubadala SIlicon Valley Open, (c)jfawcette
Coco reaches toward her target with both arms, ends up following through toward her face.
filedata/fetch?id=98930&d=1667407896&type=thumb
Her opponent, Paula Badosa, didn't do this to her, Coco did it to herself. Tremendous speed she uses so well on her backhand is almost a detriment on her forehand -- so far.
filedata/fetch?id=98931&d=1667407896&type=thumb
#Tennis
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