Amazing! instruction ☑️ personality ☑️ communication ☑️ passion ☑️ gift for teaching ☑️ in no particular order................ I'm always impressed and delighted! Thanks Coach Meike 🙏 excellent lesson!
I always used it! I learned by looking at Agassi back in the '80. We trained playing tennis in a volleyball field, to be forced to play it every time. It was an amazing training - the volleyball field is shorter, and the net is so hign! :) I always used a very extreme (western) grip and the important thing is that you must TRUST the topspin effect. It's amazing :) the ball hit the ground and jumps away...
I spent lots of days on Clay back in the 70’s and 80’s . We all watched the touring pros and picked up the top spin lob. It’s a great closing shot after you bring your opponent in with a drop shot or sharp angle slice the stays low so they have to pop the ball up . Often this helps set you up to hit a top spin lob. On clay footing is slippery so it’s challenging to move forward slide to a stop the run back towards the baseline. Unless your opponent has a great jumping overhead you will draw lots of errors. The great clay court champion Guillermo Vilas was one of our role models and a master of of the top spin lob and the overhead smash to counter its effectiveness.
Use your regular forehand grip or backhand grip that is not a continental. Eastern, Semi western. Theoretically, you could probably hit a topspin lob with continental but it would be REALLY difficult.
Could you talk a little about loading the legs versus keeping your head still? In this video, for example, you made a comment about loading the legs to get extra topspin, and it makes sense that vertical movement by the body would add to spin. But I've seen elsewhere that the forehand motion should be like skipping a stone - with plenty of power coming from the ground but not so much vertical movement by the body. That makes sense too. It's hard enough to hit a tennis ball without your head moving vertically at the same time. So which is it? Do the legs make the body (and head) rise during contact? Or do the legs push the body horizontally but not vertically? A mix of the two?
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You have taught me so much about tennis. Thank you for doing what you do.
You’re very welcome
Amazing! instruction ☑️ personality ☑️ communication ☑️ passion ☑️ gift for teaching ☑️ in no particular order................ I'm always impressed and delighted! Thanks Coach Meike 🙏 excellent lesson!
Nice skill building video, thanks for showing self-feed!
I always used it! I learned by looking at Agassi back in the '80. We trained playing tennis in a volleyball field, to be forced to play it every time. It was an amazing training - the volleyball field is shorter, and the net is so hign! :) I always used a very extreme (western) grip and the important thing is that you must TRUST the topspin effect. It's amazing :) the ball hit the ground and jumps away...
I spent lots of days on Clay back in the 70’s and 80’s . We all watched the touring pros and picked up the top spin lob. It’s a great closing shot after you bring your opponent in with a drop shot or sharp angle slice the stays low so they have to pop the ball up . Often this helps set you up to hit a top spin lob. On clay footing is slippery so it’s challenging to move forward slide to a stop the run back towards the baseline. Unless your opponent has a great jumping overhead you will draw lots of errors. The great clay court champion Guillermo Vilas was one of our role models and a master of of the top spin lob and the overhead smash to counter its effectiveness.
So for Topspin Lob do we use Continental grip or Eastern grip???
Looks like an Eastern to me - but would also love to hear the answer from Meike.
@@alexsausl Yaa lets see what she will answer 🙂
Use your regular forehand grip or backhand grip that is not a continental. Eastern, Semi western. Theoretically, you could probably hit a topspin lob with continental but it would be REALLY difficult.
Looks like your continental grip should be eastern grip! 2:40
Could you talk a little about loading the legs versus keeping your head still? In this video, for example, you made a comment about loading the legs to get extra topspin, and it makes sense that vertical movement by the body would add to spin. But I've seen elsewhere that the forehand motion should be like skipping a stone - with plenty of power coming from the ground but not so much vertical movement by the body. That makes sense too. It's hard enough to hit a tennis ball without your head moving vertically at the same time. So which is it? Do the legs make the body (and head) rise during contact? Or do the legs push the body horizontally but not vertically? A mix of the two?
Do you open the racket face to hit the topspin lob?
Racketface should be neutral or even slightly closed. It's the friction on the ball you're creating with that steep upswing that creates the lift.
@@MeikeBabelTennis thank you coach🙏👍🎾
Shameless over-closing 😆😆🤣🤣🤣
Yaa people do shamelessly stand too close to the net 🤣🤣🤣
I've been telling this particular player for years now and I finally got it on film :-)