For those who have contacted me and asked, someone has made a bogus claim on my IW 2023 extras #1 video claiming a copyright on the Giorgi portion of that clip, which has no merit because I shot that practice (as did many other people). It is clearly not the claimant's video because the claimant's Giorgi video clips were shot in a lower quality and none were even in 4k 60fps. So it should've been obvious that there's no way I used any of his clips. I have challenged the bogus claim and hopefully it will be restored very quickly. Thanks for your patience. [Edited to update - video has been reinstated finally and the erroneous copyright strike removed]
@@47imagine She is living on the sponsorship monies she received some time ago, but a sportsperson who isn't showing up to play nor in fact doing much of anything won't be getting much in the way of new money.
I'd like to hear someone with recent coaching expertise comment on her forehand. I looks rather quick and snappy to me compared to the bigger flowing swings of some of the bigger hitters. I wonder if trying to accelerate from such a quick motion is putting pressure on her wrist. It also looks like she might have had to sacrifice some top-spin on the forehand side in order to gain penetration from the shorter quicker motion. Anyway. I haven't coached since the 80's so as I said I'd be interested to hear from others.
@@shroud1390 Except she hits with very little spin on her forehand. Her racket head compared to other players stays more or less on the same plane as the ball rather than dropping below it and she seems to be trying to generate her power all with rapid acceleration at the end of her swing.
@@shroud1390 Wrist is fine? Share your expertise on why you feel - in your expert opinion - the reason Emma take her right hand off the racket, shakes her wrist/hand, then regrips after a shot - twice within the span of just 6 seconds? (O:29-0:35). I'm not an expert but I do watch about 70 matches a year sitting courtside. I've never seen a player do that before in the middle of a point. Maybe you can enlighten us on why you are confident that "her wrist is fine." I tend to agree with Grant Ferstat.
If they're not practicing w/ other pros at the tournament (which is usually the case), I've seen both. Sometimes local high level players (for example, college players) are available as practice partners if needed. In a few cases, there are players who have dedicated practice partners as part of their team/entourage (WTA in particular, don't ever recall seeing it on ATP). Raducanu herself in the past has used a specific hitting partner like Ray Sarmiento for tournaments. Serena is another who has used a dedicated hititng partner (Jarmere Jenkins, Sascha Bajin before he became a coach).
I've watched many of her practices and I never see any net play. She will need to be a decent net player if she hopes to be in the top 10 best players in the world
her volleys, swinging volleys, and overheads are all excellent, we would just need to see her make a dynamic change to her game to access more net play
@Sam Snow - The person standing around (with the beard) is her physio Will Herbert. Sebastian Sachs (the younger guy) who's hitting with her is also her coach. He previously coached other WTA players as well.
No wonder Emma is not improving she hits with a man that instead of pushing her and hitting stronger he plays weak hitting easy shots straight at Emma, trust me Iga and other top 50 will hit harder and make her run more than this dude, his job is to prepare you for real tough competition hit like a man for Gods sakes, players like Sabalenka, Rybakina, Jabeur, Azarenka will crush Emma with this dude hitting w her 😂❤
Emma lacks upper body strength. She needs to leverage her whole body to generate power. That's why she has to be quick to get into position to strike the ball. If not, her shots ended up being weak and short. She will also get tired quicker when she is forced to move around the court ( her shots get weaker and weaker). Emma said strength conditioning/training is her priority now. Note Emma did not bother going after the drop shots last match. Her lower back might be sore from upper body strength training.
@@blue-xb1cq Funny how not one commentator since May 2021 has thought it important to say that she lacks upper body strength. All tennis players, female and male, wind up for the shot by turning their body away from the ball and then whipping into it, accelerating the body, then the arm, and then the hand, to get maximum power. Show me any player who isn't 'leveraging their whole body' to get maximum power. Your comment is bizarre.
Does it make you feel all tingly to be nasty about a young woman on the internet? If she doesn't win another slam, it will be because of injury. How nice of you to gloat about that.
@@BenjWarrant I’m not being ‘nasty’ to anybody…that’s how I see it. Her win was nothing but a fluke! That’s what a ‘one-hit wonder’ is…and her so-called “injuries” has nothing to do with her level as a professional tennis player. She’s just not a top 10 player. Don’t forget; she won the title without beating a single top 10 player in the entire tournament (including the finals)…if that’s not called getting lucky, I don’t know what is? That was something that had never happened before in open-era history-winning the title without beating a single top 10 player.
@@shapursasan9019 I get tired of saying this, but let's go again. She is the first and only person, male or female, to go through from qualis to win a Slam; she was playing in only her second senior slam and had only played about 5 top level matches before the USO; she didn't drop a set; only one opponent took her to 5 games and there were no tie-breaks; before the final she never lost more than 3 games in an opening set; her stats: 27 aces (average 3 per match); 14 double faults (average
Please bring more the best female practice I have seen so far!!! Wonderful
For those who have contacted me and asked, someone has made a bogus claim on my IW 2023 extras #1 video claiming a copyright on the Giorgi portion of that clip, which has no merit because I shot that practice (as did many other people). It is clearly not the claimant's video because the claimant's Giorgi video clips were shot in a lower quality and none were even in 4k 60fps. So it should've been obvious that there's no way I used any of his clips. I have challenged the bogus claim and hopefully it will be restored very quickly. Thanks for your patience. [Edited to update - video has been reinstated finally and the erroneous copyright strike removed]
love Emma's strokes. so beautiful that racket head speed
So happy she is playing well!
umm playing well means reaching atleast round 2 or 3
I think you mean she's being PAID well. Playing well is a different story.
@@47imagine Well she's not being paid at all at the moment.
@@BenjWarrant HAHAHA ... sure
@@47imagine She is living on the sponsorship monies she received some time ago, but a sportsperson who isn't showing up to play nor in fact doing much of anything won't be getting much in the way of new money.
Hell of a beautiful life, you've gotto say. Just look at that scenery.
This angle makes it much easier to see just how strong she is.
I'd like to hear someone with recent coaching expertise comment on her forehand. I looks rather quick and snappy to me compared to the bigger flowing swings of some of the bigger hitters. I wonder if trying to accelerate from such a quick motion is putting pressure on her wrist. It also looks like she might have had to sacrifice some top-spin on the forehand side in order to gain penetration from the shorter quicker motion. Anyway. I haven't coached since the 80's so as I said I'd be interested to hear from others.
actually it's the other way around...
Game is so different than the 80s. Its all accell and spin. Her wrist is fine.
@@shroud1390 Except she hits with very little spin on her forehand. Her racket head compared to other players stays more or less on the same plane as the ball rather than dropping below it and she seems to be trying to generate her power all with rapid acceleration at the end of her swing.
@@shroud1390 Wrist is fine? Share your expertise on why you feel - in your expert opinion - the reason Emma take her right hand off the racket, shakes her wrist/hand, then regrips after a shot - twice within the span of just 6 seconds? (O:29-0:35). I'm not an expert but I do watch about 70 matches a year sitting courtside. I've never seen a player do that before in the middle of a point. Maybe you can enlighten us on why you are confident that "her wrist is fine." I tend to agree with Grant Ferstat.
@@EZALAS you've never seen it then perhaps a visit to Specsavers
Clay courts next for Raducanu? Hopefully, she still gets “WCs” into main draw!😊
Hitting partners, are they part of coaching entourage? Or just locally sourced as needed?
If they're not practicing w/ other pros at the tournament (which is usually the case), I've seen both. Sometimes local high level players (for example, college players) are available as practice partners if needed. In a few cases, there are players who have dedicated practice partners as part of their team/entourage (WTA in particular, don't ever recall seeing it on ATP). Raducanu herself in the past has used a specific hitting partner like Ray Sarmiento for tournaments. Serena is another who has used a dedicated hititng partner (Jarmere Jenkins, Sascha Bajin before he became a coach).
Nice quads👍
💙
I hope Emma's wrist injury gets better so she can play her elite level of tennis.
I've watched many of her practices and I never see any net play. She will need to be a decent net player if she hopes to be in the top 10 best players in the world
She won the US Open already once. She is already an excellent player.
her volleys, swinging volleys, and overheads are all excellent, we would just need to see her make a dynamic change to her game to access more net play
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️👍💋💋💋💋💋
Pretty obvious to me that her wrist is still bothering her. You can see her try to shake it out a few times.
Is that Prostaff v14?
Steam 100 under Blade v8 paint
interesting that almost all female pros have male coaches..., no male pros have female coaches...
Murray had a female coach.
@@surensenat4024 ...that was a lesbian and talked like a man
Murray was trying desperately to be PC
@@surensenat4024 his mom .. but he doesn't need her comments. He's just being "different" to show world...to give her some camera time.
I get that female players want male hitting partners but their spin is so different so I wonder what the benefit is?
I want to practice with her ...
...yes.
Who's the hiring partner?
Sebastian Sachs, her current coach
@@12kgpTennis the coach is the one standing around; not the hitting partner as ee7 was asking
@Sam Snow - The person standing around (with the beard) is her physio Will Herbert. Sebastian Sachs (the younger guy) who's hitting with her is also her coach. He previously coached other WTA players as well.
As elegant as Graf
pls...not even in the same league as graf
Agree. She hit the ball really hard. Very impressive
@@TB-zt6hs its true Emma has a grand slam. graf has ZERO. like ZERO. not the same.
@@tomk5238 graf has 22 if you have been living in a shell
@@upmabhalla8571 oops read gauff
No wonder Emma is not improving she hits with a man that instead of pushing her and hitting stronger
he plays weak hitting easy shots straight at Emma, trust me Iga and other top 50 will hit harder and make
her run more than this dude, his job is to prepare you for real tough competition hit like a man for Gods sakes,
players like Sabalenka, Rybakina, Jabeur, Azarenka will crush Emma with this dude hitting w her 😂❤
Jesus, mate, one step at a time. Have you never watched other players practising?
She has some serious legs...moves well, just sowm of her shot making needs to catch up...just now
Her wrist is hurting. 😮💨
she seems so forceful on her shots.. no wonder she is getting hurts all the time
Emma lacks upper body strength. She needs to leverage her whole body to generate power. That's why she has to be quick to get into position to strike the ball. If not, her shots ended up being weak and short. She will also get tired quicker when she is forced to move around the court ( her shots get weaker and weaker). Emma said strength conditioning/training is her priority now. Note Emma did not bother going after the drop shots last match. Her lower back might be sore from upper body strength training.
@@blue-xb1cq Funny how not one commentator since May 2021 has thought it important to say that she lacks upper body strength. All tennis players, female and male, wind up for the shot by turning their body away from the ball and then whipping into it, accelerating the body, then the arm, and then the hand, to get maximum power. Show me any player who isn't 'leveraging their whole body' to get maximum power. Your comment is bizarre.
The greatest one-hit wonder in the history of women's professional tennis. That's what she'll be remembered for.
Does it make you feel all tingly to be nasty about a young woman on the internet? If she doesn't win another slam, it will be because of injury. How nice of you to gloat about that.
@@BenjWarrant I’m not being ‘nasty’ to anybody…that’s how I see it. Her win was nothing but a fluke! That’s what a ‘one-hit wonder’ is…and her so-called “injuries” has nothing to do with her level as a professional tennis player. She’s just not a top 10 player. Don’t forget; she won the title without beating a single top 10 player in the entire tournament (including the finals)…if that’s not called getting lucky, I don’t know what is? That was something that had never happened before in open-era history-winning the title without beating a single top 10 player.
@@shapursasan9019 I get tired of saying this, but let's go again. She is the first and only person, male or female, to go through from qualis to win a Slam; she was playing in only her second senior slam and had only played about 5 top level matches before the USO; she didn't drop a set; only one opponent took her to 5 games and there were no tie-breaks; before the final she never lost more than 3 games in an opening set; her stats: 27 aces (average 3 per match); 14 double faults (average
Your not playing aggressive keep hitting weak balls back to your opponent to close the point. Stop horsing around !
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It's *you're,* and you should know that Emma won't be reading the comments to this video so there's no point in addressing her.