Tag Archives: tennis myths

Serving Myths

The following post is an excerpt from Championship Tennis.  Thanks for visiting, Frank GiampaoloChampionship Tennis Cover

Serving Myths

In addition to involving the most varied technique, the serve also invites the most interpretations on how it should be performed. Although certain parts of the motion can be
debated (e.g., pinpoint versus platform stance), there are some popular teaching points
that time has proven to be dated or inaccurate.

Here are a Few Serving Myths: 

  • Toss high and you’ll have more time. Studies using slow-motion cameras have
    determined that a ball tossed 6 feet (183 cm) higher than the top of an outstretched
    racket head passes through the hitting zone of the service swing 20 times faster than a
    ball tossed around the peak of a server’s reach. If the player tosses lower, the ball sits in
    the hitting zone longer.
  • Scratch your back on the back-swing. As the racket head passes between the dominant
    hitting hand and the server’s head, the uncoiling inertia of the body’s kinetic chain
    actually throws the racket away from the back, or the center of the axis. This desired
    centrifugal force doesn’t allow for a muscle contraction, which would pull the racket
    head down to accommodate a back-scratching position.
  • Hit down on a serve. Remember Artis Gilmore from earlier in the chapter? He was
    7-foot-2 and still too short to hit down on a serve. So unless the player is about 8 feet tall
    (according to our serve study at the Vic Braden Tennis College), it is in his best interest
    to hit up and out while serving.
  • Bend your knees for great power. Though it can be important to the rhythm of the
    server’s motion, knee bend supplies the least amount of racket head speed for the serve.
    Instead, the player should focus on fluid, liquid power and hand speed.
  • There’s an ideal service motion. One of the most talked about myths in this book
    is that there is one best way to hit a tennis ball. In fact, customization and personal
    preferences play a critical role in a player’s ability to advance to the highest levels of play.

Contact: Frank Giampaolo
FGSA@earthlink.net
MaximizingTennisPotential.com
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Tennis Myths

Thanks for visiting, Frank GiampaoloChampionship Tennis Cover

 

Unfortunately, tennis is full of “stock teaching methodologies” that should be banished. Well-intentioned catchy phrases that have become dated or worse yet, were never even correct to begin with. Here are a few of the bigger culprits concerning ground-strokes.

Roll over the ball for topspin

Teaching pros are still using this phrase, too. Players try to time the racket roll at contact, resulting in shots that spray all over the court.

Here are the facts: Depending on the type of shot, the ball is on the strings for about 2 to 4 milliseconds. It takes another 150 to 200 milliseconds for an electrical signal to travel from a player’s hand back to the brain. The brain then sends a new motor program back to the muscle group to begin the wrist roll. This takes an additional 150 to 200 milliseconds, by which time the ball is now 8 to 10 feet off the racket face toward the opponent’s side of the court. In other words, it’s impossible to roll over the ball for topspin. The spin comes from the brushing motion of a low-to-high swing path.

Watch the ball hit the strings

As mentioned earlier, the human eye cannot register a two-millisecond event. No one has ever seen a ball hit the strings. It’s simply a blur. Keeping the head down and still through contact is the best recipe for a steady racket path through the strike zone. Watch film of the best base-liners, and it’s easy to see how quiet they keep their head during their ground-strokes.

Skim the net

On television, it appears that professionals barely clear the net on their ground-strokes. This is rarely the case. The deception occurs because the television cameras at pro tour events are often placed high in the stadium. This angle offers a clear view of match play, but it distorts the trajectory of the ball flight.

In actuality, players use a variety of heights, generally dictated by their court positioning. This is often the result of managing the time between hits. When players are on the defensive, they generally hit higher to buy more time for recovery. Conversely, they move forward and hit harder and lower to take time away from a vulnerable opponent. At the club level, a ball that barely clears the net lands midcourt and bounces perfectly into an opponent’s primary strike zone; this is not recommended unless losing is the main objective. The net skimmer only becomes a smart choice when the opponent is transitioning to or established at the net and a passing shot is in order, or when an opponent is well behind the baseline and the player wants to bring her in, specifically if the opponent is weak at the net.

Stay down on ground strokes

A player’s center of gravity plays an important role in generating power and depth on groundstrokes. Three critical elements lift up on world-class strokes: the knees, the backside, and the racket face. Even on slice backhands, all three critical elements rise at completion of the stroke. If not, the resulting shot will lack pace and penetration. Players who prematurely lift their head before contact do indeed need to “keep their head down” through the shot. But it’s a fallacy to apply the principle to the entire body.

Keep your eye on the ball

This is correct . . . half the time. Vision control plays various functions over the course of a point that is critical for consistent ball striking and court coverage. Narrow vision is applied on an incoming ball: watching it leave the opponent’s racket, cross the net, and bounce up and into the strike zone. In this regard, a player should absolutely be keeping an eye on the ball.

Broad vision, on the other hand, is used to spot the dozens of visual clues after the ball leaves the racket toward the opponent’s side of the court. Such clues include an opponent’s court position, body language, strike zones, swing speed, and swing length. Broad vision is a crucial component of anticipatory speed. The best movers know how to assimilate the information from their broad vision and instinctively adjust their positioning accordingly.

Thanks! Frank

Contact: Frank Giampaolo
FGSA@earthlink.net
MaximizingTennisPotential.com
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Tennis Myths

 

The following is an excerpt from book Championship Tennis.  Thanks for visiting, FrankChampionship Tennis by Frank Giampaolo

 

TENNIS MYTH Number 1: If you’re laughing, you’re not working hard enough…

When you laugh, dance, smile or even hug someone you get biochemical surges of positive energy. Neuroscience studies clearly show that when you smile and laugh you stay in the correct (right) side of your brain. This is where muscles flow effortlessly and great decisions are made quickly. When you’re mad, judgmental or over analytical the right side of your brain shuts down and you are toast!

TENNIS MYTH Number 2: To be great, I have to play at my peak everyday…

Peak level and peak efforts are two different elements.  It is too taxing to be physically, mentally, spiritually and emotionally ready to battle everyday of their lives. Training in intervals is called periodization. After a tournament you should “unplug”. That’s right, recharge the batteries. In the practice phase strive for peak effort and let go of peak performance.

Contact: Frank Giampaolo
FGSA@earthlink.net
MaximizingTennisPotential.com
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