ATP Forehand 1 Hr Private Lesson with Coaching Legend Rick Macci

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 мар 2023
  • Sign Up for Free 7 Day Forehand Challenge: 7dayforehandchallenge.com/
    I have been on an exciting forehand journey and it has taken my LOVE for coaching and playing tennis to a NEW HIGH!!!
    It felt GREAT finding NEW exciting ways to improve my game.
    But let’s make one thing clear I am a coach first and a player second….so as I went on my journey I filmed everything so I could share all that I learned with you.
    You were always on my mind each step of the way!
    My Upgrade Your Forehand Journey started for all the wrong reasons:
    Annoyance
    Anger
    Insecurity
    Revenge
    I put a forehand video up on RUclips and got trashed by a troll!
    At first I thought who the BLANK is this guy anyway? I was not pretending to hit like Federer, I am just hitting my forehand which is pretty darn good!!!
    Then insecurity set in…I started asking myself questions like.
    Has my forehand gone rotten?
    Should I actually change my forehand?
    Am I too old to change my forehand?
    After the anger and insecurity wore off...excitement and adventure took over!!!
    I went on my own personal transformation journey and enlisted the BEST Coaches in the world to help me do it.
    The ULTIMATE GOAL was to work with the BEST of the BEST so I could build the best Forehand Course EVER!
    The first stop on my journey was Rick Macci, to me there is NO ONE better in the world at teaching the forehand.
    Rick gets a lot of credit for developing in what is known as the ATP Forehand used by all the top pros,
    He has coached some of the very best American talent over the last 30 years including:
    Serena Williams (GOAT)
    Venus Williams- Winner of 7 Grand Slam Titles
    Andy Roddick- Former #1 U.S. Open Champion
    Maria Sharapova- 5 Grand Slam Titles
    Jennifer Capriati- 3 Grand Slam Titles
    Needless to say stepping on the court was a true honor and bucket list experience for me as a player and coach.
    And the MOST important thing he taught me about my forehand completely shocked me.
    It had nothing to do with grips, preparation, contact or follow through!
    Watch Rick Pick Apart My Forehand After I thought I was Rocking the Ball
    Enjoy,
    Your Totally Obsessed Tennis Coach
    Pete
    #tennistraining #tennis #forehand
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 40

  • @dzuckman
    @dzuckman Год назад +16

    Macci doesn't just teach you. He teaches you that he's going to teach you, then he teaches you, and then he teaches you that he taught you.

  • @julianpenfold1638
    @julianpenfold1638 Год назад +23

    Respect to anyone who puts themselves through this, extra respect to a coach that gets coached publicly. Humility leads to improvement.

  • @thanhn2001
    @thanhn2001 Год назад +3

    My inability to stay calm is 100% what's wrong with my game. I constantly lose to "worse" players because I always want to destroy the ball or swing too early because I'm not able to wait for the ball to come to me. And when I run to the ball I don't get into a stable stance before swinging. Thank you Rick Macci! Now I just need to go out there and practice staying calm.

  • @architennis
    @architennis Год назад +4

    I'm not a good tennis player (3.5 level) and I'm older than Pete, but I have one thing in common: I'm always trying things to improve my strokes. I love your excitement over the journey! And I agree, much respect to you to put this out there publicly. Thanks for taking us along.

  • @joseh899
    @joseh899 4 месяца назад +1

    For us club players between a 3.0 and 4.0, a wta type forehand I believe is more realistic, where you don't focus on pat the dog technique. The racket may go back further, but nobody can say a wta type technique would not do very well for the average club player who may not have sufficient time to practice the modern atp technique which requires better timing.

    • @bengray5013
      @bengray5013 20 дней назад

      Do what works best for you, unfortunately atp forehand/wta forehand etc gets overly complicated. Early preparation and good footwork is much more important than take back positions and wrist lags

  • @zinzanger7669
    @zinzanger7669 Год назад +3

    pete, i love the fact that you’re open to getting coach. i tried coach maci swing to the knees. this technique allows me to hit harder with so much spin, ball kept staying inbound. awesome! i’m getting something for free and free is good.

  • @alkadeshmukh2404
    @alkadeshmukh2404 Год назад +1

    Excellent video Pete, bow down to both of you.

  • @puntrigarkelly8851
    @puntrigarkelly8851 Год назад +1

    Love every min of this video!! Finding the dream coach is the best of tennis fife journey!

  • @LucasJackMusic
    @LucasJackMusic 19 дней назад

    Excellent.

  • @jimlund4845
    @jimlund4845 Год назад +1

    Excellent Pete!

  • @brasileirosim5961
    @brasileirosim5961 Год назад

    Awesome lesson, I am 61 still trying to improve my game. My forehand was always a problem. Actually my backhand wasn’t also great, but I could at least play a decent slice. Later I gave up the one handed backhand (elbow issues) and learned the two handed, which is crucial for me when playing doubles and a pass shot in singles.
    I began to learn from books written a kong time ago (Bill Tilden, How to play better tennis), later using video tapes (Lendl, McEnroe, later Agazzi), until RUclips began to change the game. I am still in the process of learning/ improving the forehand. It is not only about my own game, as I am giving tennis lessons for beginners since 25 years - I really want to my students learning a decent technique.
    Thanks a lot for the video guys!

  • @Vsh9749
    @Vsh9749 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much !

  • @golpherguy6388
    @golpherguy6388 9 месяцев назад

    This is gold, great video!

  • @bfras33
    @bfras33 Год назад +1

    Very cool, Peter.

  • @patriciomora9663
    @patriciomora9663 11 месяцев назад

    Love this tennis lesson!

  • @adrinhimmelheber2479
    @adrinhimmelheber2479 Год назад

    Worked with Rick as a junior and went to the academy one summer. One of the best

    • @gregoryphillips3969
      @gregoryphillips3969 9 месяцев назад

      Ric Macci, Brad Gilbert, Brad Stine and Darren Cahill Jeff Salzenstein, Those are the 5 best.,

    • @dropshot118
      @dropshot118 4 месяца назад

      you forgot robert Lansdorp and Nick bolleteri@@gregoryphillips3969

  • @ginomarone8831
    @ginomarone8831 Год назад +2

    Yeah so, just make sure the moment you step in the ring with coach Macci, have your recording going and don’t even stop until the end of the session Bc it’s going to be intense… then when you get home, you replay that video and take 30 pages of notes..lol! (Been there don’t that!)

  • @heathroberts316
    @heathroberts316 Год назад +1

    I just new B2 would be there!

  • @alainabdul
    @alainabdul Год назад

    Rick macci change my back-hand and now.. my forehand

  • @AB-xp8im
    @AB-xp8im 7 месяцев назад

    this is a great video for sure, and ive taken copious notes to give much of this a try. Just curious about something. Ive seen videos of Patrick Moratoglou saying, "just throw the racket at the ball", which is helpful to keep things loose, but seems different in relation to this - is one better than the other?....also tips to watch the ball is always good when learning any thing with tennis.

  • @NamesAreRandom
    @NamesAreRandom Год назад

    Great video, lots of useful stuff, much better for us seeing a coach with a competent forehand getting taught. Tried out the pull and no loop, that actually works as advertised - not sure why anyone still teaches the loop?

    • @bengray5013
      @bengray5013 20 дней назад

      Because sometimes a loop suits some players, and it’s important to utilise strengths over weaknesses.

  • @cesarfernandezlopez5063
    @cesarfernandezlopez5063 7 месяцев назад

    Mr Macci is not just a tennis coach....

  • @zaya5704
    @zaya5704 Год назад +1

    I really love to see your humbleness❤

  • @karadale5219
    @karadale5219 Год назад

    Unfortunately the pre-rolling of the racket is still happening. It’s incredibly hard to get rid of. Two things: it’s not intuitive to flip the racket. Your brain thinks racket head needs to go to the ball, not backwards first. Secondly, you don’t trust the power if everything is on the hitting side like that, especially the elbow. Take the elbow back by an extra 4-6 inches( I don’t mean towards the back fence, I mean behind your back), you won’t feel the need to pre-roll the racket.

  • @sidmanazebo
    @sidmanazebo Год назад +1

    Great video but the background music is very annoying and not conducive to staying relaxed which was a major theme of the lesson.

  • @sebastiansantos5561
    @sebastiansantos5561 6 месяцев назад

    if someone is righty is not an atp forehand if the raquet at the back goes at 6 o clock?? I think no!! what about you nd why??

  • @chewkenghong
    @chewkenghong Год назад

    The hardest thing abt swinging hard is mental. If I swing at say speed 5 n balls sailed out, how come it be that I am going to swing and speed 9 and ball will land in? It should sail more n further since I am hitting harder! N that always cos me to slow down cos the idea is slow down and the ball will land in and they do! Just that they become feeding shots for opponents to wack at me! It's exactly like what he said.... analyzing the shot before hitting n then alter the shot to hit slower so that it will stay in

    • @bengray5013
      @bengray5013 20 дней назад

      The faster you swing with optimal technique means more spin, which ultimately,earns more control. So swinging faster with old technique will always be more effective then swinging slower

  • @bazkeeley9618
    @bazkeeley9618 Год назад

    I’m having a de ja vu moment 🤔🤔.

  • @affluencethirdy4894
    @affluencethirdy4894 Год назад

    North Korean grip... LOL.

  • @themald1459
    @themald1459 Год назад

    this guys laids his wrist back right away, and hits with wrist in this position, using his arm only.
    his wrist should start in a neutral position and then as the arm goes back and forward, the wrist makes a natural snapping motion. I dont see it corrected in the end. so im gonna have to disagree with Rick here

  • @jamesking6030
    @jamesking6030 Год назад +1

    The reason why grown strong men use the ATP forhand is because they are stronger thru the shoulders. The reason why women use the WTA forehand where they swing from around from behind is because they are stronger thru the hips and have smaller narrower shoulders and need to create space and timing. Rick not understanding this is pretty shocking and explains why he is hurting many younger players strokes. A young Djokovic along with most modern ATP forhand started with a wta style swing and as he and most players get stronger and more developed shoulders do they then slowly evolve towards and ATP forhand. Be wary of the coach attempting to use this counter productive approach to younger players especially girls.