I'm writing you from Greece and i really thank you for the quality of your work, you could make a video with an analysis of how you hold the handle the racket according to the different strokes, how tight the stoke should be, at what height the of the handle you hold it, with the feeling more in the fingers or the palm etc ?
Excellent content. Just short period of time looking your videos and do these thrills at home I changed my forehead weapon which I can really hurt my opponents at court. Wish you will do some video of volleys and give some great tips for that in future. As I get older I been playing more doubles so some volley lessons would be very valuable 🤝
The lag is confusing to me. Agassi was my model and to my eye, Agassi has little to no lag. And yet Agassi has a world-class forehand that every rec player in the world could only dream of. Instead of modeling Agassi's relatively simple no-lag forehand, why must we complicate it by trying to introduce a lag which is harder to time and will likely cause more errors? 🤔
Agassi definitely had a racket lag. Nothing like as extreme as today's players. But it's easy to see. Think of it this way, relaxed wrist. With racket lag. Tense and tight wrist. Without racket lag. Agassi was one of the most relaxed hitters I've ever seen. Does that make sense?
@@oneminutetennis Thanks. I will try to keep the wrist relaxed and just let the lag happen. And observe the result. If the resulting lag is moderate and more similar to Agassi, I won't worry about trying to produce a greater lag more similar to the lag of today's players... My guess is that the severe lag we see with many of today's players is a result of having to adapt a severe lag in order to deal with extremely high speed balls.
You changed your forehand to a more delpo lookong motion. Which i like cause the old fed like stroke you were showing before at least from what i saw , has like fed a reliance on wrist flection which i dont think should happen during strokes.
Yes. I ran out of time to re shoot it and I got a terrible bounce on that ball. Great spot. Glad your enjoying the channel. Do you have any other tennis issues that I could help with? If so let me know www.oneminutetennis.com
The slow-motion demo forehand is not good at all. Kinetic chain breaks, body rotation halts too early, and you end up pushing extremely hard with the lower forarm muscles. This is an example of "muscling the ball," not the whip like action you're describing.
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Wow, just tried this drill with a resistance band. Excellent drill to ingrain the feel if the kinectic chiain. will be doing these 100x day.
That's an amazing method, to find the racket lag, can't wait to try it out.
I'm writing you from Greece and i really thank you for the quality of your work, you could make a video with an analysis of how you hold the handle the racket according to the different strokes, how tight the stoke should be, at what height the of the handle you hold it, with the feeling more in the fingers or the palm etc ?
Excellent content. Just short period of time looking your videos and do these thrills at home I changed my forehead weapon which I can really hurt my opponents at court. Wish you will do some video of volleys and give some great tips for that in future. As I get older I been playing more doubles so some volley lessons would be very valuable 🤝
Awesome. Great concept
The lag is confusing to me. Agassi was my model and to my eye, Agassi has little to no lag. And yet Agassi has a world-class forehand that every rec player in the world could only dream of. Instead of modeling Agassi's relatively simple no-lag forehand, why must we complicate it by trying to introduce a lag which is harder to time and will likely cause more errors? 🤔
Agassi's backhand was relatively simple too.
Agassi definitely had a racket lag. Nothing like as extreme as today's players.
But it's easy to see. Think of it this way, relaxed wrist. With racket lag.
Tense and tight wrist. Without racket lag.
Agassi was one of the most relaxed hitters I've ever seen. Does that make sense?
@@oneminutetennis Thanks. I will try to keep the wrist relaxed and just let the lag happen. And observe the result. If the resulting lag is moderate and more similar to Agassi, I won't worry about trying to produce a greater lag more similar to the lag of today's players... My guess is that the severe lag we see with many of today's players is a result of having to adapt a severe lag in order to deal with extremely high speed balls.
You changed your forehand to a more delpo lookong motion. Which i like cause the old fed like stroke you were showing before at least from what i saw , has like fed a reliance on wrist flection which i dont think should happen during strokes.
Interesting idea. How do you attach the restistance band to your racquet. The band is too thick to pass thru the strings. Some kind of elastic?
very good
In the slow motion video of your forehand, Is your arm too close to the body?
Yes. I ran out of time to re shoot it and I got a terrible bounce on that ball.
Great spot.
Glad your enjoying the channel.
Do you have any other tennis issues that I could help with? If so let me know
www.oneminutetennis.com
First... Yes... And brilliant idea
Brilliant. Great video
👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏
Huh?
The slow-motion demo forehand is not good at all. Kinetic chain breaks, body rotation halts too early, and you end up pushing extremely hard with the lower forarm muscles. This is an example of "muscling the ball," not the whip like action you're describing.