Improve Your Slice Serve Right Away With These 5 Tips

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2024
  • Improve Your Slice Serve Right Away With These 5 Tips. Slice serve technique/swing path explained as well.
    1 = Get the proper grip: The continental grip is the essential grip for the Slice Serve because it not only places the racquet head on edge to “cut” the ball, it also allows for a complete powerful motion to develop. You will not be able to slice the ball without this grip.
    2 = Develop the feel of slicing the ball: This unique drill will help you feel how to “cut” or slice the ball. It also has the benefit of developing the proper finish for a slice serve.
    3 = Place the ball properly: Ball placement is very misunderstood. In this section, I will teach you how to play the slice and disguise it, rather than revealing it to your opponent.
    4 = Attack the ball on edge: I will teach you how to approach contact and why this is so important on the slice serve. You want to make contact between the ear and the shoulder.
    5 = Cut across the ball on a 45 degree angle: In this section, I will teach you the angle at contact that is critical to creating the spin and action on the ball.
    6 = Bonus: Feel the finish: While the finish itself does not affect the ball, the intent to finish properly helps create the action on the ball, and greatly enhances the performance of the slice serve.
    Timecodes:
    0:00 - Intro
    00:27 - The Grip (Continental Grip)
    1:14 - Develop The Feel Of The Slice On The Tennis Ball
    2:03 - Place The Tennis Ball Properly
    4:31 - Attack The Tennis Ball On Edge
    5:20 - Cut Across The Tennis Ball On A 45 Degree Angle
    6:09 - Bonus: FEEL The Finish On The Slice Serve
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Комментарии • 66

  • @PerformancePlusTennis
    @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад +2

    For more on the serve, check out our serve playlist here: ruclips.net/video/X3pQssYvcVY/видео.html&ab_channel=PerformancePlusTennis

  • @jorgesimon5636
    @jorgesimon5636 2 года назад +4

    from argentina ,very good teacher!!!!

  • @MsPrettyg00d
    @MsPrettyg00d Год назад +2

    Great tips👍

  • @johnbenevoli2066
    @johnbenevoli2066 2 месяца назад

    Great tips, once again thanks John!

  • @jinmeixu6173
    @jinmeixu6173 2 года назад +2

    Great coaching. The transcript section under the video is very helpful. I copy it and put it in a document so that I can review the instructions when I practice the serve.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад

      Thank you so much, Jinmei! I am pleased to know my coaching is helping you! Kindly, John

  • @preframing2499
    @preframing2499 2 года назад +4

    Fantastic explanation, as usual! Thank you so much!

  • @user-xo4my1vv6f
    @user-xo4my1vv6f Год назад +1

    Great!!! Thank you so much John.

  • @eduardodorumian829
    @eduardodorumian829 3 года назад +2

    excelente leccion!! muchas gracias!!!!

  • @jeffreylara3835
    @jeffreylara3835 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for this lesson!

  • @deephilbrick9344
    @deephilbrick9344 3 года назад +1

    Thank you...will try it !

  • @thedawei20
    @thedawei20 3 года назад +1

    Good techniques

  • @thedawei20
    @thedawei20 3 года назад +1

    Really enjoy your coaching

  • @crsantin
    @crsantin 3 года назад +1

    Good lesson. I’m going to hit the court and work on this.

  • @marceloschroederpereiraesi9551
    @marceloschroederpereiraesi9551 2 года назад +1

    Verd Good class
    Ir You play
    You must stay here!!
    Thanks

  • @FairwayJack
    @FairwayJack 3 года назад +1

    good stuff

  • @mrjohnsonfong
    @mrjohnsonfong 3 года назад +1

    Thx u

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад

      You are welcome! Stay tuned for more coming new lessons every week! Best, John

  • @talesara74
    @talesara74 Год назад +2

    Hi john, This slice is without ptonation. In one other video from you I saw one with pronation. I feel that slice with pronation can generate the speed whuch without pronation can not. What is your view please.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  Год назад +1

      Hi Pramod, Great question! There has to be some pronation into contact on the slice, as the string bed must face the target at contact as the strings slide through the ball. The end result of pronation into contact is momentum that continues pronation after contact, although to a lesser degree than a flat serve. Best regards, John

  • @luke31ish
    @luke31ish Год назад +1

    Is the first serve more flat and faster and the 2nd serve sliced? I'm struggling psychologically with the 2nd serve, so I don't do double fault.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  Год назад +1

      Hi Luke, Thanks for your question. The first serve can be anything you want it to be: Flat, slice, topspin, etc. In general however, the first serve will be more offensive with greater risk of missing. The second serve should feature more slice or topspin, and be very reliable. Best, John

  • @tenniswilliam
    @tenniswilliam 3 года назад +2

    I have seen other videos recommending the eastern grip on the first bevel - why would that not work well too. I would think you lose power with less wrist action using a continental?

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад +1

      Hi William, Thanks for your comment, question and contribution to the video. A strong Continental grip (Eastern Backhand Grip) can also work, but requires more shoulder mobility. The wrist action on the serve is a widely misunderstood concept. Using the strongest grip does not create more wrist action or power. The power doesn not come from the wrist. Check out my playlist on the serve to learn more. Thanks, John

  • @Better_Call_Raul
    @Better_Call_Raul Год назад +1

    Thanks for the great lesson. I am still working on the righty slice from the Deuce court. I am using the Continental grip and My toss is above me, as described in the video. I do pretty well with a flat serve out wide from the Deuce. My visual image is, "Hit the right side of the ball." I find that this simple cue helps me to hit flat out wide to the deuce. But I am struggling to get sidespin and have the ball really bounce wide. I do understand that pronation is delayed on a slice serve wide as compared to a flat serve wide.
    I was wondering if there is any good visual cue for getting more sidespin on a serve wide to the deuce corner?
    Flat serve to Deuce corner: "Hit the right side of the ball and follow thru towards the net"
    Slice to Deuce corner: "Hit the ride side of the ball but follow thru more towards the right net post" 🤔

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  Год назад

      Hi Raul, Thanks for your comments and questions. I believe you are dealing with the challenge of learning the to get more slice (and action) on the ball while trying to keep the ball in the service box. Try exaggerating the slice and place the ball out of the court...even outside the doubles alley. Go for extreme slice without concern with where the ball lands. Then work to gradually bring the ball back into the service box without losing the spin. You may need to make subtle adjustments (stance, alignment, ball toss placement) to maintain the spin and gain the accuracy. Please try this and keep me updated on your progress. Thanks, John

    • @Better_Call_Raul
      @Better_Call_Raul Год назад

      @@PerformancePlusTennis Thanks. These tips are helping. As described in the video, I am tossing to the right (as a temporary drill) and also exaggerating and placing the ball wide of the alley...
      I am using the Continental grip and at the very beginning of the service motion (when both hands are on the racquet), with my forearm is in a roughly neutral position (neither supinated nor pronated), the Continental grip will cause the strings to be be *slightly open* . This is good and to be expected.
      I am also experimenting with strongly supinating the forearm at the very start of the service motion. This will cause the strings to be far more open at the start of the service motion ((when both hands are on the racquet),
      Is there some benefit to supinating the forearm and opening the strings at the very start of the service motion? Likewise, is it okay to pronate the forearm at the very start and make the strings more closed? Is this just personal style?
      I seem to be getting more/less sidespin when experimenting with both open and closed styles. Or it could just be random variation. Not sure. 🤔

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  Год назад +1

      @@Better_Call_Raul Hi Raul, Thanks for the update. I like the strings / racquet face to be slightly open in the set-up. You can experiment with supination (like Milos Raonic for example)...it really depends on what feels natural and produces the correct result. The benefit is that it sets the position to eliminate the open face/ waiter's tray position later in the swing. I do not encourage deliberate supination in the racquet drop, because it tends to weaken the shoulder rotation / pronation when you over-supinate. I definitely do not like the strings closed at the start, as this position often results in an open face later in the swing. Finally, if you want me to take a look at your serve, send me an email through this link and we can take it from there: performanceplustennis.com/contact-us/. Best, John

  • @markbrown3259
    @markbrown3259 3 года назад +1

    John, where your pronation occurred during the slice serve?

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад

      Hi Mark, The pronation begins just before contact and finishes naturally after contact. The intent on the slice is to strike the side of the ball, sending the racquet head on a 45 degree angle. Kindly, John

  • @mowghlee
    @mowghlee 2 года назад +1

    Please help understand
    Why slice serve and slow serve is not popular

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад +1

      Powerful serves and topspin serves are what everyone associates with Pros, even though many pros hit slice serves. The topspin / kick is considered a higher performance shot. Slow serves are associated with weaker players...

    • @mowghlee
      @mowghlee 2 года назад +1

      @@PerformancePlusTennis
      Thanks for prompt reply , but slow serve like underarm serve can be used tactically , but we do not see them

  • @rds4629
    @rds4629 2 года назад +1

    How is the slice serve different going to the ad court? Are you still going 45 degrees to the ball to the net post? or do you go closer to 90 parralel to the baseline? This is for a ball aiming down the T.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад

      Hi and thanks for your great question. This is really all about "feel". For me, my stance is more closed in the ad court, and everything else (torso, tossing angle, ball, placement, swing path) is related to the stance. I hope this makes sense. I will prepare a video on this topic to further clarify. Let me know if you have further questions. Thanks, John

  • @Better_Call_Raul
    @Better_Call_Raul Год назад +1

    "Finish with palm facing the right hip". How does this slice finish differ from the flat serve finish? I have heard some coaches say to finish the slice serve with palm facing more upwards towards the sky rather than facing straight to the right hip. Is that okay too?

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  Год назад +1

      Hi Raul, Thanks for your great question. Of course the reality is the ball has no idea where we finish our stroke, but the intention to finish in a particular way before contact does indeed affect the ball. In this case, the intention to finish with the palm up before contact creates the feel of skimming the ball, thus creating more slice or side spin in this case. I hope this makes sense and is helpful to you! Best, John

  • @watcher687
    @watcher687 3 года назад +2

    Hi John,
    Does Federer really have the same ball toss and same contact point for all different types of serves? Does it mean that he only changes his racket swing path to achieve different serves?
    Would you agree that on the kick serve his toss changes a bit?

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад +1

      Hi Yucel, Great questions! The toss is the same, but the contact is in a different place. Fed has the ability to arc his toss from left to right from the same tossing motion, so you can't tell where he is aiming or which spin he creates until he is just about to contact the ball. On the kick serve, he just lets the ball float slightly left and drop lower to swing up into the ball more. He disguises his serve as well as anyone ever has. Pete Sampras did the same. Thanks, John

    • @watcher687
      @watcher687 3 года назад +1

      Thanks John. That leads me to another question though. What you’re saying sort of implies that Roger hits the ball sometimes while the ball is on the way up, sometimes at the peak of toss, sometimes on the way down ( in order to change the position of contact on an imaginary horizontal line in space). But we know that he always hits the ball when it’s falling from its apex. Am I over complicating things? 😃

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад +1

      @@watcher687 HI Yucel, Fed always makes contact below the apex. The contact on the flat slice and slice serve are in the same spot. The kick or topspin are slightly left and lower...Thanks, John

    • @watcher687
      @watcher687 3 года назад +1

      Sure, John, that makes sense. He always hits the ball while it’s descending but for kick serve a touch later than flat and slice. That way the contact point is lower and more to the left in the kick serve. Great explanation as usual. Thanks again.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  3 года назад

      @@watcher687 Thank you, Yucel! Kindly, John

  • @bournejason66
    @bournejason66 2 года назад +1

    Hi John, it seems to me as a righty, we can only slice out wide from the deuce court. On the ad court, we can only slice down the T (which is not easy) , but can’t slice out wide or it becomes a flat serve. Am I correct? If that’s correct, then for 2nd serve at ad court, we have to use kick serve.

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад +1

      Actually, you can slice out wide in the ad, and down the T in the deuce court, and in fact, these can be very effective, as they move into the body, often jamming the opponent. It takes practice, and very few players work on these targets and spins combinations, but they are very effective. Another video topic coming on this.

    • @bournejason66
      @bournejason66 2 года назад +1

      @@PerformancePlusTennis thanks. I’ll be looking forward to it. Btw, will you go to Indian Wells this week?

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад

      @@bournejason66 Unfortunately I will not make it to Indian Wells this week…just too much going on. But I do plan to be there in March!

    • @bournejason66
      @bournejason66 2 года назад

      @@PerformancePlusTennis I am still a little skeptical on righty can slice out wide from ad court. I thought that’s one key advantage of lefties. Do explain it when you make the video. I’m intrigued 😄

    • @PerformancePlusTennis
      @PerformancePlusTennis  2 года назад +1

      Hi Bourne, TO be clear, you can hit a slice to outside corner of the ad court box, and ball will turn into your opponent, jamming them and making the return more difficult. The slice won't pull them off the court, but rather complicate the return. I hope this is clear and makes sense. Thanks, John

  • @leewe2015
    @leewe2015 3 года назад +1

    as for the finish move, many say otherwise

  • @cavalera6426
    @cavalera6426 3 года назад

    La

  • @dzabirmaglajlic9244
    @dzabirmaglajlic9244 3 года назад

    Am Ur zeigen Rotation richtung ,das fehlt ,

  • @olivierabel8928
    @olivierabel8928 Год назад +1

    Q

  • @myviews469
    @myviews469 2 года назад

    OK first you dont want to hit it at 3 and when you demonstrate you actually hitting 1.