How To Improve Your Serve Racket Drop In 10 Minutes
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- Опубликовано: 18 мар 2024
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Thanks for watching. Let me know what you think.
Great job. One of the best things l have found is to trust gravity allowing the arm to totally drop and then focus on being able to take advantage of the natural whip motion that's created when the racquet comes forward on edge with a continental grip to meet the ball.
Thanks so much Tom for all the coaching you've provided me. In the 10-12 weeks we've worked together, just about every aspect of my game has shown improvement. The serve has been a mental challenge getting both my mind and body to perform the rack drop and coordinating the striking of the ball with any level of accuracy. With your help, I've seen a lot of improvement, and for that, I can't thank you enough. There's so much more to do, but I'm on my way with your help and guidance.
if you are the person on the video ... good job! the progress on the serve is amazing and will save you potential injuries and issues in the future (related to bad technique).
Thank you so much @@mrperezmailperez3818
Great advice. I have a thread at Tennis Forum in Toronto asking, "Is Iga Swiatek's new serve as bad as Martina Navratilova says?"-- John Escher
👏👏👏
Off out to buy an axe 😂
What I love about your channel and methods, real people improving, before and after 👍
Yes that is my favorite part as well. The proof is in the pudding
I love seeing the before and after of real amateurs. He definitely made a big improvement on power. I've worked with Tom's video analysis service since August of last year and not once did I ask for my money back! I've made huge improvements in my strokes as a 4.0.
This is really helpful. Thanks.
Great vid. Tracking the toss is definitely preventing me from sufficient drop
Really good advice. Ball tube works wonders
very helpful!
Superbly explained and wonderfully useful. Subscribed.
Thanks!
Hi Tom. I like what you are doing. Keep up the "no nonsense" thing. I have seen this drill. My problem is that I have seen many others believing the guys that were supposed to be experts. I spare the comments, but those Internet "experts" wasted me years of trying to replicate BS instead of trying to analyze the biomechanics myself. I like your honesty and attitude. Cheers. Chavdar
That’s very classic idea coach 👍
I should try this!
Well done! Just to confirm. On the "before " at 0:20.
You would consider that a shallow drop issue. It is NOT a "waiter's tray" issue where the student goes "palm up" into Waiters Tray on the drop. He is dropping properly. But it is a shallow drop issue. Not a waiter's tray "palm up" issue on the drop. Correct? 🤔
Great observation. Look at the wrist opening up. It's a waiter's tray which must be corrected first.
Correct. But this is normal for this level. Fluidity of the motion can be improved first and with confidence he can keep the racket on edge for longer. But it might never be corrected. And that’s fine
Ive just come across your channel, honestly your videos are awesome. Really good explanations, really helps me with my own game. Also I can explain better to my student. Thanks for the videos!
Thank you! Are you a coach or parent-coach?
@@TomAllsopp just a coach sir, trying to develop my coaching technique 🙏🏻
Tom, thank you for this any advice on racquet drop when playing a match. I have a big drop on practice but in a match I tend to tighten up and lose the fluidity.
You’re probably not making enough balls in practice
Tom, should we be playing with heavier racquets to aid fluidity in all of our strokes.
I don’t like heavy rackets but in theory it could help.
@@TomAllsopp Tom, do you think lighter powerful racquets are the reason why a high percentage of todays recreational players are pushers, particularly when under stress, with no real stroke or strike of the ball, simply surviving with the racquet's and string's power and no real power or control or feel of their own.
Would you say the racket drop is an “active” motion or should it happen “passively” from the trophy position as a result of the leg drive ?
It has nothing to do with leg drive. It would be passive when you’re comfortable doing it. It’s essentially lag. I like to think of it as trailing the elbow.
You have to think about allowing the racquet drop to happen with loose wrist and shoulder. The leg drive when timed properly augments the racket drop. The racket drop before the leg drive is called a racket drop leak
that’s my question - do you allow the kinetic chain from the legs to then passively (?) allow the racket to drop or should the racket drop be “actively” done at same time as driving with legs. Maybe the point is amateurs need to be consciously thinking about trailing the elbow until it happens naturally as part of the kinetic sequence ?
you’re holding the axe backwards