I love to teach this as well! It trains the brain to focus on 4 key elements: When the opponent hits the ball, when the ball bounces on your side of the court, when you hit the ball & when your ball lands on the opponents side. Although I only put audio cues for when the ball lands on the near side of the net, you can also say bounce when the ball bounces on the other side of the net.
@@LiamApiladoin addition to this, I’ve seen some train calling the peak after the opposite side has hit. So you end up with bounce/hit/top - this was to aid in depth perception and speeding up recognition of when to move in vs remove back.
Great video and tips about rhythm. I have been looking for this type of video. Do you have the rhythm video on actual tournament? I want to know whether there is a difference between training session vs actual tournament.
That’s a great question because you’d expect it to be a little different naturally because of nerves, tension and pressure. Although I would say the rhythm of pointplay in practice would resemble that of the tournament and would only differ according to certain tactics or different opponents. I do not have actual tournament match play unfortunately
This is the right way of thinking about it...and then matching your fitness levels to the rhythm of a match. In reality tennis is an extremely slow sport...when you learn the rhythm and flow of time through a match. That's what I'm re-learning atm and adapting my abilities across Badminton and Squash into my tennis as I relaunch my "career" 😂 Nb. Helped by court level viewing. This angle is the future of the sport in so many ways!!
I don t get it.. we all know there is a split bounce and hit but the rythrm will change whit every ball cause every ball is hit whit different speed.., not to mention when they take the ball early.. completly changing the rithrm..
If you watch carefully, the sound is when they land the split step. Yes you want to split before they hit but be in the air as they hit and land after they hit. Easier to see in the slow motion part of the vid.
This is what my coach taught me- split, bounce, hit.
I love to teach this as well! It trains the brain to focus on 4 key elements: When the opponent hits the ball, when the ball bounces on your side of the court, when you hit the ball & when your ball lands on the opponents side.
Although I only put audio cues for when the ball lands on the near side of the net, you can also say bounce when the ball bounces on the other side of the net.
@@LiamApiladoin addition to this, I’ve seen some train calling the peak after the opposite side has hit. So you end up with bounce/hit/top - this was to aid in depth perception and speeding up recognition of when to move in vs remove back.
...a delicious court level. Thank you.
Amazing showcase of this fundamental timing
Great video.! Awesome ball striking.! This is the camera viewing angle that should be used for all tennis tournaments shown on TV.!!!
You are genius! Need a version of Sinner please o
Amazing point btw Casper and Carlos 🤩
Loved this
Good video, it could be useful to watch it before starting a match, to get into a good mental rhythm for the rally. Apart from the physical warm-up
Great video and tips about rhythm. I have been looking for this type of video. Do you have the rhythm video on actual tournament? I want to know whether there is a difference between training session vs actual tournament.
That’s a great question because you’d expect it to be a little different naturally because of nerves, tension and pressure. Although I would say the rhythm of pointplay in practice would resemble that of the tournament and would only differ according to certain tactics or different opponents.
I do not have actual tournament match play unfortunately
This is the right way of thinking about it...and then matching your fitness levels to the rhythm of a match. In reality tennis is an extremely slow sport...when you learn the rhythm and flow of time through a match. That's what I'm re-learning atm and adapting my abilities across Badminton and Squash into my tennis as I relaunch my "career" 😂
Nb. Helped by court level viewing. This angle is the future of the sport in so many ways!!
Alcaraz's hairstyle is the bomb
Loved this!
M
Can you do more of these?❤❤
Ok will do one today
Dude!!!! As a tennis player and (ex) music producer this is awesome!!! I thought you used just a noise gate. Great job nonetheless.
Very useful, thank you
Thank you. Do you have other videos like this?
I can make more like this if thats something people are interested in :)
@@LiamApilado please it would be the best!!!
Very cool
This sound!!!🔥🔥🔥
Нарки под такое коляться
@@dmitrygoogle8613 без мягкого знака грамотей, К0
My coach taught me: back (short for: take the racquet back), bounce, hit
hit from other side = split step?
Exactly
I don t get it.. we all know there is a split bounce and hit but the rythrm will change whit every ball cause every ball is hit whit different speed.., not to mention when they take the ball early.. completly changing the rithrm..
I think it is a good way to notice student when to split, even thought it might change a little rhythm when hitting on rising ball.😊
and not a single closed stance forehand was struck from the baseline. coaches...
1:20 from Ruud
A lots from the backhand
@@g2tennissinner hit several neutral stance forehands in a row, all from open prep. But as you say, no closed stance.
0:26
split step sound is just a bit late. You want to split step before the other person hits the ball
If you watch carefully, the sound is when they land the split step. Yes you want to split before they hit but be in the air as they hit and land after they hit. Easier to see in the slow motion part of the vid.
Hopefully this kid will see your comment and will amount to something 😁