Dude, your videos are really good. Like watching their tactics you put up here. But you are in favor of Federers game only. Show us why Djokovic has dominated tennis in the past years and why he has a positive score agaist Fed and Nadal. Cheers.
Hi guys, I bought the singles playbook. It's brilliant. I've only used about half of the tactics in match situations so far, but they are complete game changers. I've been playing for about 15 years at club level, and I honestly thought I understood tennis tactics, until I started using your book. I had the right idea, but the singles tactics book shows an extra dimension to each shot pattern that I had not understood, and that has made all the difference. So now I am finding myself in the red zone a LOT. Against guys at my level I get there in almost every rally that goes more than three times over the net, unless my opponent hits an unexpected winner (high risk) or does something unexpected like comes to the net. So my next question/request: Do you have any content that deals with winning points from the red zone? I am finding that once I get to the red zone I often lose the position again and the rally breaks down into chaos.
One way to "get out of" being stuck in the backhand corner, being pummelled by inside out groundstrokes, is to switch hands, and hit a left-handed forehand....some day, this technique will be common. Remember, Rafa is right-handed, so is Rod Laver. There is no reason, a righty can't learn to hit a lefty forehand if he starts young and practices it. John McEnroe writes right handed as well.....
He hasn't avoided it much in the last 5 years because his forehand became less and less dangerous while djokovic only got better. Pity for him that even this year at wimbledon when his forehand was a working weapon again it was neutralised just barely by a flair up of his career long Achilles heel: choking. He had control over basically the whole final but went rabbit-in-headlights exclusively on tiebreaks (mirror of his 09 win)... despite being the all time no.1 for % of career tiebreaks won. Also, bizarre headcase decisions while serving out matches has been a theme of his since he tried drop shots in both his match points in his 2018 indian wells final loss. This wimbledon had to be his worst loss. Even in 08 the closest he got was playing one break point in the 5th. Having 40-15 with a serve like his must feel like hawkeye just called a shot out by a planck length. It felt like his last big push. At 38 it likely was.
Fed was up 87 and 40 -15. he missed a short forehand cross court and then got nailed with the passing shot. then played poorly that game and never recovered eventhough it lasted another 8 or 9 games. i wish they played forever. its a shame that was the first 12 all tiebreak in wimbledon history. true shame.
All these top players play a high percentage tennis and try to put everything in without unforced errors. They put the game in Auto pilot mode and the players who does minimum errors will win. 😊😊
Am I reading this right??? Djokovic has one of the best back hand in tour if not the best. It's his forehand that let's him down occasionally. It is downright crazy to suggest federer has a better backhand than him.
@@bilguunnyamaa7767 not true per se, Djokovic's backhand tends to misfire in patches and that's when he stops winning as much. His backhand is relatively the better shot (better than Feds) but I'd still pick Djokovic's forehand as his groundstroke weapon (among his two shots).
he will also sometimes utilize a deep slice down the line to switch the rally to a forehand cross court rally
hence the swiss watch.... alternating slice and topspin backhands
I like. Please put video of your examples. Thanks
Dude, your videos are really good. Like watching their tactics you put up here. But you are in favor of Federers game only. Show us why Djokovic has dominated tennis in the past years and why he has a positive score agaist Fed and Nadal. Cheers.
Thanks! Ya good suggestion, will do :-)
@@fuzzyyellowballs Don't do, You will lose popularity You have among Hero's fans :-)
@Stefan Dudic It's human to favorize your Heroes, I also favorize My Hero Mickey Mouse in opposite to Pet Leg Pete The Villain.
Djokovic doesn’t mind that low ball to his backhand. That’s why he owns hero.
Hi guys, I bought the singles playbook. It's brilliant. I've only used about half of the tactics in match situations so far, but they are complete game changers. I've been playing for about 15 years at club level, and I honestly thought I understood tennis tactics, until I started using your book. I had the right idea, but the singles tactics book shows an extra dimension to each shot pattern that I had not understood, and that has made all the difference. So now I am finding myself in the red zone a LOT. Against guys at my level I get there in almost every rally that goes more than three times over the net, unless my opponent hits an unexpected winner (high risk) or does something unexpected like comes to the net. So my next question/request: Do you have any content that deals with winning points from the red zone? I am finding that once I get to the red zone I often lose the position again and the rally breaks down into chaos.
good video as my tennis coach has a better backhand than me , so now i know what i should do on a hardcourt
The simple fact is djokovic's all time great defence neutralizes federer's offence but federer can't do vice versa consistently.
One way to "get out of" being stuck in the backhand corner, being pummelled by inside out groundstrokes, is to switch hands, and hit a left-handed forehand....some day, this technique will be common. Remember, Rafa is right-handed, so is Rod Laver. There is no reason, a righty can't learn to hit a lefty forehand if he starts young and practices it. John McEnroe writes right handed as well.....
This way, Roger avoided "The Red Zone" against Djokovic 27 times...
I get the speedbumb joke. Are you a dad?
Not that I'm aware of!
He hasn't avoided it much in the last 5 years because his forehand became less and less dangerous while djokovic only got better. Pity for him that even this year at wimbledon when his forehand was a working weapon again it was neutralised just barely by a flair up of his career long Achilles heel: choking. He had control over basically the whole final but went rabbit-in-headlights exclusively on tiebreaks (mirror of his 09 win)... despite being the all time no.1 for % of career tiebreaks won. Also, bizarre headcase decisions while serving out matches has been a theme of his since he tried drop shots in both his match points in his 2018 indian wells final loss. This wimbledon had to be his worst loss. Even in 08 the closest he got was playing one break point in the 5th. Having 40-15 with a serve like his must feel like hawkeye just called a shot out by a planck length. It felt like his last big push. At 38 it likely was.
Fed was up 87 and 40 -15. he missed a short forehand cross court and then got nailed with the passing shot. then played poorly that game and never recovered eventhough it lasted another 8 or 9 games. i wish they played forever. its a shame that was the first 12 all tiebreak in wimbledon history. true shame.
It turns out that it was his last big push
@@douglash975 the fact it was the first 5th set tiebreak final, and Fed's only problem was tiebreaks is... Frustrating
Despite that, Novak is the boss, the goat. He has won everything !!! Frauderer is a fraud
Everybody knows that Djoker targets Feds backhand, funnily enough, between the two, its fed who targets his backhand more than vice versa!!!
All these top players play a high percentage tennis and try to put everything in without unforced errors. They put the game in Auto pilot mode and the players who does minimum errors will win. 😊😊
"Djokovic has a better backhand than Federer" 🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️
August 25th
age is catching up to Federer man
Am I reading this right??? Djokovic has one of the best back hand in tour if not the best. It's his forehand that let's him down occasionally. It is downright crazy to suggest federer has a better backhand than him.
@@bilguunnyamaa7767 not true per se, Djokovic's backhand tends to misfire in patches and that's when he stops winning as much. His backhand is relatively the better shot (better than Feds) but I'd still pick Djokovic's forehand as his groundstroke weapon (among his two shots).