OK, Hendrik, you have a great sense of humor. I thought I was going to get a boring (but useful) video lesson from a very good athlete, but your humor is very cool and takes it to another level. Subbed.
Great video; thank you, Hendrik. I am a visual learner, so having two examples for each tactic is helpful. If you can cover return tactics for the next video, it'd be awesome.
Hey Hendrik, super video! Mich würde interessieren, wie du am besten aus einer neutralen Grundlinien Situation raus kommst und dir einen Vorteil verschaffst. Beste Grüße aus Österreich 😊
@@user-yp7qk5id1e Servus das ist eine Super Frage, das lass ich in eines der nächsten Videos einfließen. Generell hilft es aus neutralen Situationen die schwäche des Gegners anzuspielen oder mit Länge zu arbeiten. LG Hendrik
Serve and volley is forbidden or something these days. It starts already at tennis lessons with beginners. Not a single serve and volley instruction from the trainer.
If ultimate pace is not the major determinant of success, why does Jim Courier, the world’s foremost authority on everything, harp on and on about a 2mph rise or drop in ground stroke speed? Serve and volley is “old school”? Try beating Medvedev, who returns from being seated in the back linesperson’s chair. Serve and volley is dead because of horrible coaching and terrible technique, like your forehand volley. The coaches today learned from coaches who can’t volley, and their coaches learned from coaches who can’t volley. The game decided that pace is king and no serve and volley by making the courts so slow. The players don’t have a committee to advise on the range of court speeds. Courier goes nuts when the courts in Paris are a bit faster, like it’s an insult to the game. A certain percentage of tournaments should be on slow, medium and fast courts. Your patterns and any patterns are based on both players’ abilities, not mathematics. Few players besides Federer can pick any shot out of thin air. Strategy with tons of errors in execution is worthless; the only pattern that matters is miss less balls than your opponent; only a tiny percentage of players at all levels have a close rate on their patterns that is on the plus side. And sitting a group of academy kids in a room and giving them the same patterns is like telling poker players when to bluff. Creating content is not the same as helping people.
OK, Hendrik, you have a great sense of humor. I thought I was going to get a boring (but useful) video lesson from a very good athlete, but your humor is very cool and takes it to another level. Subbed.
🤝💪 Thank you
Thanks for this video.
You're welcome🎾💪
your first mistake was thinking i was good enough to control where my serve is going lol
You will get there 💪
Dont forget the intro music which requires some healthy advanced cultural twerking.
Love this series. 🎉
More coming 🎾💪
Great video; thank you, Hendrik. I am a visual learner, so having two examples for each tactic is helpful. If you can cover return tactics for the next video, it'd be awesome.
Awesome video
Great suggestion! It’s on the list 🤝🎾
ur tactic videos are the best ty
@@nicho4087 appreciate it man and you’re welcome 🎾💪
Wow dude you are like a beast! Great content thank you from Greece, witch strings use you and the tension of it ?
Hey thank you 💪 I play rpm blast 23/22 kg
Very good vidéo, keep going !
@@guillaumel.1167 thank you 💪 yes more coming !!
great video
@@sharkhunter4354 thanks 💪
Keep up this format and you’ll get ridiculous followers. Really good dude
Hey thank you there Will be more of this type of content 🎾
Hey Hendrik - gutes Video. Wo ist dieser Platz ? Traumhafte Anlage.
VG aus Singapur
Hi Danke🎾💪 Waldhotel Stuttgart, vlt der schönste Court in Deutschland. LG Hendrik
@@hendrik_jebens 👌
Hey Hendrik, super video!
Mich würde interessieren, wie du am besten aus einer neutralen Grundlinien Situation raus kommst und dir einen Vorteil verschaffst.
Beste Grüße aus Österreich 😊
@@user-yp7qk5id1e Servus das ist eine Super Frage, das lass ich in eines der nächsten Videos einfließen. Generell hilft es aus neutralen Situationen die schwäche des Gegners anzuspielen oder mit Länge zu arbeiten. LG Hendrik
subscribed
Welcome and thank you 💪
Serve and volley is forbidden or something these days. It starts already at tennis lessons with beginners. Not a single serve and volley instruction from the trainer.
I think we’ll see it make a small comeback in the next years. Alcaraz is using it a lot for example
@hendrik_jebens meanwhile I watch old videos of Becker, Sampras, Edberg, Leconte, Stich, Rafter, Kraijcek, Siemerink, Mcenroe, Cash etc..😀
If ultimate pace is not the major determinant of success, why does Jim Courier, the world’s foremost authority on everything, harp on and on about a 2mph rise or drop in ground stroke speed? Serve and volley is “old school”? Try beating Medvedev, who returns from being seated in the back linesperson’s chair. Serve and volley is dead because of horrible coaching and terrible technique, like your forehand volley. The coaches today learned from coaches who can’t volley, and their coaches learned from coaches who can’t volley. The game decided that pace is king and no serve and volley by making the courts so slow. The players don’t have a committee to advise on the range of court speeds. Courier goes nuts when the courts in Paris are a bit faster, like it’s an insult to the game. A certain percentage of tournaments should be on slow, medium and fast courts. Your patterns and any patterns are based on both players’ abilities, not mathematics. Few players besides Federer can pick any shot out of thin air. Strategy with tons of errors in execution is worthless; the only pattern that matters is miss less balls than your opponent; only a tiny percentage of players at all levels have a close rate on their patterns that is on the plus side. And sitting a group of academy kids in a room and giving them the same patterns is like telling poker players when to bluff. Creating content is not the same as helping people.
Great video
Glad you enjoyed it💪