👍Anna you r an excellent teacher. I wish I could hv the chance to hv the sort of tuition frm u when I was young. But then we dont hv the internet then. Anyways congratulation for a job well done
This is actually completely different from how others I've seen teach and from how top players actually play in games. Here's an example: ua-cam.com/video/y-mTYlmnJUc/v-deo.html. That seems to me to be much more effective (quicker, farther reaching, fewer steps, and less energy consuming) way to do it. Plus, in studying actual games, it seems to me that top players play like that video (split step immediately) rather than the extra (and seemingly unnecessary) prep jump that you teach. But you are a top player yourself so I really don't understand why you teach this method rather than the other one which most players actually seem to be using?
The link you are referring shows "directional split step" it is used if you anticipate your opponent hits to your front backhand. When you get more experienced and can predict what your opponents next shot then directional split step is very useful and makes you quick. The tutorial from Anna is good for beginners and ideal way to start since one is new or can't predict the shots. Hopefully this helps!
👍Anna you r an excellent teacher. I wish I could hv the chance to hv the sort of tuition frm u when I was young. But then we dont hv the internet then. Anyways congratulation for a job well done
Great. ..your really a great teacher
Are you using the forehand V grip or backhand grip?
Thank you #Better Badminton# Anna Rice
This is actually completely different from how others I've seen teach and from how top players actually play in games. Here's an example: ua-cam.com/video/y-mTYlmnJUc/v-deo.html. That seems to me to be much more effective (quicker, farther reaching, fewer steps, and less energy consuming) way to do it. Plus, in studying actual games, it seems to me that top players play like that video (split step immediately) rather than the extra (and seemingly unnecessary) prep jump that you teach. But you are a top player yourself so I really don't understand why you teach this method rather than the other one which most players actually seem to be using?
The link you are referring shows "directional split step" it is used if you anticipate your opponent hits to your front backhand. When you get more experienced and can predict what your opponents next shot then directional split step is very useful and makes you quick.
The tutorial from Anna is good for beginners and ideal way to start since one is new or can't predict the shots.
Hopefully this helps!
@@joysonmenezes2158 Thank you, that clarifies!