The split view camera angle is great here. Next level. I don’t think any other channel is doing this and it’s really helpful to get the full picture on what’s happening. Kudos
Wow I have completely overlooked this idea. I always record and watch back my practice sessions and could tell something was wrong with my dominant elbow and this pinpointed exactly that. I was swing across my body and not getting much consistancy. This is something I will work on. I love this sport so much and thanks for sharing!
The real gem for me was your advice to lift the shoulders in the preparation phase. That makes a lot more sense than focusing on lifting the elbow. Thank you!
Your videos help me a lot to inprove my forehand, I allways had doubt which pattern to use in preparation and now all the things became much more simple and efficient !!!! Tks !
I’m just getting back to tennis after 10 years from a coaching session before, and your video explained a lot of the details about the importance of correct form that my previous coach didn’t! Your dual camera shots also help a lot in describing the form in different angles. Thank you for this video! Will start watching the other videos for beginners too.
Former USTA Jr’s player here, brilliant instruction dude. My issue has been timing since being out of the game for 20 years…I know. Crazy right? Love your videos! Timing is everything my friends, listen to this guy!
Thank you! Timing is everything. You can do everything right but if your timing is wrong you are done. We got some more videos on the subject in the channel
Very well done deep dive into a simple but very important aspect of the forehand. I second the other comments that said the split camera angle was bomb.
It's like you knew the video I needed today because yesterday I was struggling with the same thing on court, having that smooth consistent rhythm. Also creating enough space to swing low to high to be able to manipulate the ball better regardless of how the ball comes at you.
Waouh you pointed exactly what felt wrong with my movement when I watched myself on the camera. Using to much my elbow like a pong pong top spin swing. Thank you, you completely made my day!
I never realised how much strain I'm giving my right side because I always turn using mostly those muscles. Using my left shoulders lessens the strain. Thank you so much for this!
Excellent video, thanks very much, made me realize I am over turning and not swinging low to high but linearly swinging around my body like you said and putting either no spin on the ball or side spin.
I've only realised I over rotate like this recently and wouldn't have noticed if I didn't watch this video. I'm trying to keep my elbow from going behind my body but I need some sort of progressive drill to ingrain it in my head. Do you have an idea of what I could do? I've tried hitting slowly with a ball machine but I can't just do it, especially when I try and generate pace. Maybe I shouldn't try and fix it as long as I focus on a more upwards swing path at contact? I'm not sure...
my coach didn’t mentioned any problems of my forehand, I looked at my practice video yesterday I felt shocked my forehand was so ugly and I am still upset at the moment , thank goodness for your video.
Great tip! I have a great Inside-Out shot, but really struggle with Inside-In shot. Either the ball end up out in the left ally or a weak loopy return that may also go out. Compared to Inside-Out shot, what should change for a Inside-In shot (so I can keep it also straight, hard, low and consistently in the court)? Thanks
as i understand it, the timing is different. you take an inside out later and hit flatter, with the contact point is closer to you. this leads to the angle being more closed and you drag your racquet across the ball a bit to impart side spin to kick the ball out wider. an inside in is hit slightly earlier, keeping the angle open and i think that you would want a bit of spin to help it over the highest part of the net and keep it in as you have less margin for error. i think also an inside in has to be a winner or you have to be ready to move as if you run around your backhand to hit an inside in forehand it leaves you with worse court positioning if your opponent returns your shot.
Karue, I have 2 problems that I cannot seem to correct, do you have any tips? 1) The racquet drop at the end of the unit turn. All the pros talk about a racquet drop but no one describes what that should 'feel' like. 2) At the Apex of the swing as the racquet approaches the ball, I feel as there is almost no control of the racquet face since the arm is so extended. The result of that feeling of low control is that everything tightens up to try control the racquet face. At the same time, we are told we are supposed to be 'loose' but it's hard to be 'loose' and in control. Any tips on the 2 question? Maybe a video?
Great video and love the simplicity, like always! Quick question...Was Wesley missing a lot with his FH...not enough spin? Just curious why you decided to make the change and wondering if it was linked to match play. Thanks again!
Patrick, Serenas old coach teaches to just throw you racket at the ball after loaded, other online pros say start with either feet starting swing or hip turn initiating swing. Patrick talks like throw racket at the ball, which to me says hand is leading the swing and body follows, what is your opinion ?
It’s such a hard thing to recognise (for any shot really) when the outcome of your shots looks clean. It’s only when you have an expert eye as with Karue that they’re able to show you those tiny imperfections in the process. Another great video 👏🏽
I have shoulder pain, and very inconsistent forehang especially when I am playing a competitive match, and I think overrotation, and extending my arm too back (hence stretching my chest) to hit "faster" and "harder" was the problem. Have you observed any shoulder pain related to overrotation as well. I will try to progress to a smaller loop on the side. But it is easier said than done. thank you for putting this out with examples.
I like to watch your videos and learn a lot from it. It's easy for me to follow because you speak calmly and explain it well, that's why I learn a lot from it. My problem is that during impact my racket turns in my hand, it twists somehow, I think I don't hit the sweet spot enough, it frustrates me because I only have during matches, during free play it happens a lot less, sometimes It frustrates me so much that I want to stop playing tennis. I've had several coaches but they are all too focused on other things. can you do a video on it sometime. Thanks in advance, greetings Michel from the Netherlands
great video Karue!!! I think a problem I have is my off hand likes to drop, trying to get the habit of catching the racquet or maintaining it for balance but in matches I can't really get used to it, only in drills when I do think about it
Seems like he was over turning a bit but the biggest change came from his elbow. It was way out there then he brought it closer to his body. Thanks for the video! Unit turn is so important in tennis, especially with the modern “style” forehands. It’s all in the hips 😂. Also, different coaches talk about your dominant eye and how that affects the way you hit the ball. I was never taught this but I’ve tried to notice my head positioning relative to my eyes - idk what do you think about the dominant eye stuff?
Great video Karue! In addition (maybe for next video) I have a problem with the mass transfer due to overturning as racket goes too much arround and sideways instead of trough the ball. To remediate that, coach of my kid tells him when you finish FH elbow should point where you aim and you shold be in position to kiss your biceps.
Great analysis and advice. I struggle to avoid it because I feel like I’m not getting enough power and I’m pushing the ball if I don’t get that big turn. I feel when I overturn I’m pulling not pushing and getting more whip and throwing action. I really don’t know how to mentally think about the proper turn and still get effortless power and not pushing
What I am finally seeing is this consistent pattern: For the prep phase, the hands lead the shoulders. For the stroke phase the shoulders lead the hands. For forehand, backhand, and even the volleys. Thank you!
I'll definitely echo other comments that the two directional camera work definitely helps, Karue 🙂. Perspective and dimension of the swingpath gives you a totally different 3-D awareness of what's going on when you have more than one angle. I'm going to try to focus on the concepts here for a bit. I too have a natural 2HBH, so my main goal has been trying to mirror the ease I have of shaping and controlling the ball on that wing even though the strokes are obviously slightly different. I often find a disconnect in over-rotating on my FH off the unit turn which can cause sometimes quality, but inconsistent shots. I guess it makes sense since it's harder to OVER-rotate with two hands vs one. Definitely feel that linear path on my FH even when I'm trying to get more under and through. Can get nice power, but can kill confidence of hitting a ball consistently with good margin.
I think lots of players also exaggerate & 'over rotate' thru their follow-thru - and often that over rotation is forced/ artificial. You don't gain anything after you hit the ball and exaggerating/ over rotating on the follow-thru can get you slightly off-balance and you take a bit more time to recover for the next shot. it used to be that people over-emphasized the 'upward' motion on the follow thru - suggesting the racket should finish over your shoulder or even over your head. Of course - catching the racket with your 'off-hand' can help stem this over rotation - but it ought to natural & not forced. With modern FHs a lot of the 'excess' in the follow-thru is rotational - i.e. - wrapping around the body - but again - I'm suggesting that a more compact set up and follow thru is not only more efficient - it also keeps you on-balance with your head more still and allows you to react to the next shot more quickly. I also think there can/ should be a bit more emphasis on hitting thru the ball - vs. hitting 'across' the ball. Of course there are times when that's necessary or preferred - for example when hitting cross court and when hitting high balls - but lots of times - the exaggerated across the body follow-thru is wasted time & energy and it actually is often a consequence of not maximizing acceleration at the contact point vs. after contact when the balls already gone. Shadow strokes are an easy way to hear and feel whether you're getting max acceleration thru the contact zone. If you do that - you'll naturally have a more compact follow-thru because you'll naturally start decelerating sooner after your racket head passes thru the contact zone - so long as you're not 'forcing' the follow-thru by artificially pulling the racket head thru and around your body after contact - which - unfortunately - is something a lot of people do.
Will try being more parallel with the baseline with the turn. I've been at a 45 degree angle towards the ball and have read (also seen videos) where this is the optimal position to hit on strokes. Any comment about that? thanks
Hi Karue...I need clarification on unit turn...bellybutton faces the camera and shoulders also faces the camera so no torque?...I always heard shoulders turn farther than bellybutton...thx
Would like you to zoom in on the idea of pulling through the forehand stroke as opposed to pushing. I'm an intermediate and felt like I had a decent forehand but since I've understood the difference I get how the pros are able to rip through the balls with such control. That simple difference is next level.
And then the next thing you'll learn to do is stop pulling and start pushing again. It all depends on your level and what you're currently doing wrong. Most amateurs pull way too much, so as blanket advice, telling them to pull more is going to mess them up even more. I'm always amazed in these videos by the amount of plough-through and drive and push and time on the racquet the ball has.
Great idea but in general I don’t use push or pull terminology as much. You end up doing both. From the back of the swing to contact I am trying to pull the racket but after contact I want to push it towards the target instead of pulling it to the side. This series may help you: ua-cam.com/video/mni8AHizRtU/v-deo.html
@@fmtien I haven't posted videos recently, but I've been working on keeping the racket in front of the shoulder line in the past year, taking the ball more in front. But Karue's student was also bit different because his elbow was much higher on take back.
Not sure about the rotating too much. Actually I am pretty sure he wasn’t doing this! His take back his almost a next gen. Yes, over ration is bad, and we could see this more in the WTA some years ago. I agree with you that your guy has now a better forehand, probably because a straightforward take back. Thanks for the video coach!
this is a channel for amateurs and people developing their game. The “but so and so does this” is a ridiculous argument because those are players who’ve spent their lifetime on the tennis court
loool...that's me....Overturning too much and feel like I get the timing wrong many times. Djokovic does it many times in all fairness so it's not all bad...I also feel like when the timing is good, I hit very smoothly and get easy power and spin. But in a match situation, it can be a problem.
OHBs work differently because the position of the arm *within the unit* that does the "unit turn" is very different. During forehand preparation the forearm of your racket arm is "in front." As you complete your unit turn, your chest, belly button, and forearm are all "aiming towards the baseline camera" as Karue demonstrated, your forearm perpendicular to the plane your shoulders create. But with a OHB your forearm is now going across your body during the takeback, so within the body unit your forearm is more in line with the plane of your shoulders, not perpendicular to it. This means that during the same degree of turn, leg loading, and takeback on the BH side, the racket will end up rotating much further behind you than with the equivalent turn on the forehand wing. Over-rotation is much rarer on the backhand wing than on the forehand wing for most players.
8 years old can't accelerate ( due to lack of power) and arm goes back too much ( approx 6:53 minutes in the video). Any correction excercise for that one
The split view camera angle is great here. Next level. I don’t think any other channel is doing this and it’s really helpful to get the full picture on what’s happening. Kudos
Appreciate it! We are not like other channels hehe
Definitly. Great idea. Thx for tuning in me forehand...
Yeah split view camera angle is deinitely very vaulable.
I agree. I appreciated it so much I had to subscribe and click on that bell. lol
@@KaruesellHQ great
Wow I have completely overlooked this idea. I always record and watch back my practice sessions and could tell something was wrong with my dominant elbow and this pinpointed exactly that. I was swing across my body and not getting much consistancy. This is something I will work on. I love this sport so much and thanks for sharing!
The real gem for me was your advice to lift the shoulders in the preparation phase. That makes a lot more sense than focusing on lifting the elbow. Thank you!
Your videos help me a lot to inprove my forehand, I allways had doubt which pattern to use in preparation and now all the things became much more simple and efficient !!!!
Tks !
Did you get to watch marcos vs nadal? Maybe you can make a quick video analyzing that match since you know marcos's playstyle really well.
yes I did. Will add to our list
I’m just getting back to tennis after 10 years from a coaching session before, and your video explained a lot of the details about the importance of correct form that my previous coach didn’t! Your dual camera shots also help a lot in describing the form in different angles. Thank you for this video! Will start watching the other videos for beginners too.
Very simple, BUT EXTREMELY INFORMATIVE CONTENT!! AWESOME!! 👍👍👏👏🎾🎾🎾
we keep it simple here. No crazy terminology and fancy “concepts” that make the game more complicated
I love the dual camera angles! This helps a lot. Thanks Karue!
You're so welcome!
Very helpful. Would love to see something like this for a kick serve progression
Yes, what is the proper racquet path before contact for the kick serve?
Former USTA Jr’s player here, brilliant instruction dude. My issue has been timing since being out of the game for 20 years…I know. Crazy right? Love your videos! Timing is everything my friends, listen to this guy!
Thank you! Timing is everything. You can do everything right but if your timing is wrong you are done. We got some more videos on the subject in the channel
Very well done deep dive into a simple but very important aspect of the forehand. I second the other comments that said the split camera angle was bomb.
It's like you knew the video I needed today because yesterday I was struggling with the same thing on court, having that smooth consistent rhythm. Also creating enough space to swing low to high to be able to manipulate the ball better regardless of how the ball comes at you.
Yes! Space is key
Waouh you pointed exactly what felt wrong with my movement when I watched myself on the camera.
Using to much my elbow like a pong pong top spin swing. Thank you, you completely made my day!
hope it helped for tommorow training and ty for correcting my mistake on forehand
I never realised how much strain I'm giving my right side because I always turn using mostly those muscles. Using my left shoulders lessens the strain. Thank you so much for this!
Excellent video, thanks very much, made me realize I am over turning and not swinging low to high but linearly swinging around my body like you said and putting either no spin on the ball or side spin.
Great video helped me to understand one of my biggest mistakes, improved my timing very much
I've only realised I over rotate like this recently and wouldn't have noticed if I didn't watch this video. I'm trying to keep my elbow from going behind my body but I need some sort of progressive drill to ingrain it in my head. Do you have an idea of what I could do?
I've tried hitting slowly with a ball machine but I can't just do it, especially when I try and generate pace.
Maybe I shouldn't try and fix it as long as I focus on a more upwards swing path at contact? I'm not sure...
Awesome! Helped me out A LOT! Thanks man!!
This video is amazing~~~~~I get how to do the forehand now. Unbelievable
I wish you continued success in the field of tennis and youtube thank you
Absolutely love it. Especially the dual view
It works well Thank you!
What a channel! Superb content, and instruction!
my coach didn’t mentioned any problems of my forehand, I looked at my practice video yesterday I felt shocked my forehand was so ugly and I am still upset at the moment , thank goodness for your video.
Best action of forehand awesome!
Osaka looking good!
Excellent forehand analysis. Definitely see many overturning.
Yes we had a great pre season
Great tip! I have a great Inside-Out shot, but really struggle with Inside-In shot. Either the ball end up out in the left ally or a weak loopy return that may also go out. Compared to Inside-Out shot, what should change for a Inside-In shot (so I can keep it also straight, hard, low and consistently in the court)? Thanks
as i understand it, the timing is different. you take an inside out later and hit flatter, with the contact point is closer to you. this leads to the angle being more closed and you drag your racquet across the ball a bit to impart side spin to kick the ball out wider. an inside in is hit slightly earlier, keeping the angle open and i think that you would want a bit of spin to help it over the highest part of the net and keep it in as you have less margin for error. i think also an inside in has to be a winner or you have to be ready to move as if you run around your backhand to hit an inside in forehand it leaves you with worse court positioning if your opponent returns your shot.
Perfect, spot on teaching. Thanks a lot!!!
That was my mistake in today’s training ! thanks for helping me figure it out!
love this channel as a beginner 😊!
Karue, I have 2 problems that I cannot seem to correct, do you have any tips? 1) The racquet drop at the end of the unit turn. All the pros talk about a racquet drop but no one describes what that should 'feel' like. 2) At the Apex of the swing as the racquet approaches the ball, I feel as there is almost no control of the racquet face since the arm is so extended. The result of that feeling of low control is that everything tightens up to try control the racquet face. At the same time, we are told we are supposed to be 'loose' but it's hard to be 'loose' and in control. Any tips on the 2 question? Maybe a video?
Great video and love the simplicity, like always! Quick question...Was Wesley missing a lot with his FH...not enough spin? Just curious why you decided to make the change and wondering if it was linked to match play. Thanks again!
Thank you, appreciate it. And yes it was very inconsistent. Powerful but very on and off
Great stuff as always Karue. Quickly becoming my favourite UA-cam channel. Keep it up! :)
Karue, I really enjoy your videos they are very helpful; could you please address a video about thinning the ball issue ? Thanks
Patrick, Serenas old coach teaches to just throw you racket at the ball after loaded, other online pros say start with either feet starting swing or hip turn initiating swing. Patrick talks like throw racket at the ball, which to me says hand is leading the swing and body follows, what is your opinion ?
It’s such a hard thing to recognise (for any shot really) when the outcome of your shots looks clean. It’s only when you have an expert eye as with Karue that they’re able to show you those tiny imperfections in the process. Another great video 👏🏽
I have shoulder pain, and very inconsistent forehang especially when I am playing a competitive match, and I think overrotation, and extending my arm too back (hence stretching my chest) to hit "faster" and "harder" was the problem. Have you observed any shoulder pain related to overrotation as well. I will try to progress to a smaller loop on the side. But it is easier said than done. thank you for putting this out with examples.
Just curious…I know you posted this awhile back. Are you playing with an older racquet?
@@10sChica no, 2018 pure drive
I like to watch your videos and learn a lot from it. It's easy for me to follow because you speak calmly and explain it well, that's why I learn a lot from it. My problem is that during impact my racket turns in my hand, it twists somehow, I think I don't hit the sweet spot enough, it frustrates me because I only have during matches, during free play it happens a lot less, sometimes It frustrates me so much that I want to stop playing tennis. I've had several coaches but they are all too focused on other things. can you do a video on it sometime.
Thanks in advance, greetings Michel from the Netherlands
how did you set that two cameras. I want to set up and capture that feed to improve my game.
Thanksgiving to the video.
What racquets are you both using? VCore and ezone?
great video Karue!!! I think a problem I have is my off hand likes to drop, trying to get the habit of catching the racquet or maintaining it for balance but in matches I can't really get used to it, only in drills when I do think about it
literally covering that on the next video! Stay tuned
Seems like he was over turning a bit but the biggest change came from his elbow. It was way out there then he brought it closer to his body. Thanks for the video! Unit turn is so important in tennis, especially with the modern “style” forehands. It’s all in the hips 😂. Also, different coaches talk about your dominant eye and how that affects the way you hit the ball. I was never taught this but I’ve tried to notice my head positioning relative to my eyes - idk what do you think about the dominant eye stuff?
This man is a great teacher
thank you
My 10 year old son is starting to pick up this habit and I’ve been trying to figure out how to possibly fix this. I hope this will help.
Thanks!
Love the split view
Hey Karu can you share or perhaps make a video about which Tennis clothes you prefer and where you get them from?
Will do! Love talking about tennis clothes
High Quality Indeed
Great video Karue! In addition (maybe for next video) I have a problem with the mass transfer due to overturning as racket goes too much arround and sideways instead of trough the ball. To remediate that, coach of my kid tells him when you finish FH elbow should point where you aim and you shold be in position to kiss your biceps.
Hi vedran. I think this video will help you ua-cam.com/video/mni8AHizRtU/v-deo.html
@@KaruesellHQ Thanks man! Great content! It helped instantly for BH.
Excellent Karue!
5:18 - It's the 360 spin of the racket that does it all ;) Nice video.
Great analysis and advice. I struggle to avoid it because I feel like I’m not getting enough power and I’m pushing the ball if I don’t get that big turn. I feel when I overturn I’m pulling not pushing and getting more whip and throwing action. I really don’t know how to mentally think about the proper turn and still get effortless power and not pushing
Great video! Thank you for the advice!
Wesley's forehand looks like it has a lot more control now, great to see the progress!
Super helpful!! make me more clear for u turn thx
Loved the content Karue!! anyone else having Lowe's commercial vibes on 0:15 ? Maybe, I have been watching too much tv lmao. Peace!
hahaha yes you caught the lowes commercial vibe
This immediately fixed my forehand problem
What I am finally seeing is this consistent pattern: For the prep phase, the hands lead the shoulders. For the stroke phase the shoulders lead the hands. For forehand, backhand, and even the volleys. Thank you!
I'll remember this, sounds right to me!
I think I’ve been having this problem as well!
I hope this helps my issue with hitting too close to my body, my swing path isn’t ideal currently
I'll definitely echo other comments that the two directional camera work definitely helps, Karue 🙂. Perspective and dimension of the swingpath gives you a totally different 3-D awareness of what's going on when you have more than one angle.
I'm going to try to focus on the concepts here for a bit. I too have a natural 2HBH, so my main goal has been trying to mirror the ease I have of shaping and controlling the ball on that wing even though the strokes are obviously slightly different. I often find a disconnect in over-rotating on my FH off the unit turn which can cause sometimes quality, but inconsistent shots. I guess it makes sense since it's harder to OVER-rotate with two hands vs one. Definitely feel that linear path on my FH even when I'm trying to get more under and through. Can get nice power, but can kill confidence of hitting a ball consistently with good margin.
I think lots of players also exaggerate & 'over rotate' thru their follow-thru - and often that over rotation is forced/ artificial. You don't gain anything after you hit the ball and exaggerating/ over rotating on the follow-thru can get you slightly off-balance and you take a bit more time to recover for the next shot. it used to be that people over-emphasized the 'upward' motion on the follow thru - suggesting the racket should finish over your shoulder or even over your head. Of course - catching the racket with your 'off-hand' can help stem this over rotation - but it ought to natural & not forced.
With modern FHs a lot of the 'excess' in the follow-thru is rotational - i.e. - wrapping around the body - but again - I'm suggesting that a more compact set up and follow thru is not only more efficient - it also keeps you on-balance with your head more still and allows you to react to the next shot more quickly. I also think there can/ should be a bit more emphasis on hitting thru the ball - vs. hitting 'across' the ball.
Of course there are times when that's necessary or preferred - for example when hitting cross court and when hitting high balls - but lots of times - the exaggerated across the body follow-thru is wasted time & energy and it actually is often a consequence of not maximizing acceleration at the contact point vs. after contact when the balls already gone.
Shadow strokes are an easy way to hear and feel whether you're getting max acceleration thru the contact zone. If you do that - you'll naturally have a more compact follow-thru because you'll naturally start decelerating sooner after your racket head passes thru the contact zone - so long as you're not 'forcing' the follow-thru by artificially pulling the racket head thru and around your body after contact - which - unfortunately - is something a lot of people do.
great tip. I also feel like my albow was lifted too high, ending up hitting late all the time
I just learned today that you are Brazilian. Cool. Manda um oi para os brasileiros que assistem seu canal!
Been playing my entire life and forehand has recently become a mess for some reason. Will give this lesson a shot.
Karue, are you playtesting the Yonex shoes?
Maybe
Will try being more parallel with the baseline with the turn. I've been at a 45 degree angle towards the ball and have read (also seen videos) where this is the optimal position to hit on strokes. Any comment about that? thanks
Great lesson, Wes new FH looks smooth
Right?
What string are you using?
Simple but very common mistake Thank u
Good Stuff Thank You!
Super helpful
I always think keep everything in line with the hips - your torso, shoulders and even your upper arm (racket arm). That's very simple.
Precisely! Simplicity is key
Hi Karue...I need clarification on unit turn...bellybutton faces the camera and shoulders also faces the camera so no torque?...I always heard shoulders turn farther than bellybutton...thx
Solid video
Would like you to zoom in on the idea of pulling through the forehand stroke as opposed to pushing. I'm an intermediate and felt like I had a decent forehand but since I've understood the difference I get how the pros are able to rip through the balls with such control. That simple difference is next level.
And then the next thing you'll learn to do is stop pulling and start pushing again. It all depends on your level and what you're currently doing wrong. Most amateurs pull way too much, so as blanket advice, telling them to pull more is going to mess them up even more. I'm always amazed in these videos by the amount of plough-through and drive and push and time on the racquet the ball has.
Great idea but in general I don’t use push or pull terminology as much. You end up doing both. From the back of the swing to contact I am trying to pull the racket but after contact I want to push it towards the target instead of pulling it to the side. This series may help you: ua-cam.com/video/mni8AHizRtU/v-deo.html
@@InfiniteQuest86 Thank you, I'll bear that in mind👍🏽
@@KaruesellHQ Thanks for your response will definitely check out the series. Your videos have been helping me alot.
thanks again...
Great instruction, took me a long time to realize that there is such thing as too much take back.
Yeah it happens often with amateurs
@Anton Vilinskiy what Karue describes as too big a take back is what you have. It looks like your turn is even larger than Karue’s student.
@@fmtien I haven't posted videos recently, but I've been working on keeping the racket in front of the shoulder line in the past year, taking the ball more in front. But Karue's student was also bit different because his elbow was much higher on take back.
@@Antontoo that’s great! 👍
Not sure about the rotating too much. Actually I am pretty sure he wasn’t doing this! His take back his almost a next gen.
Yes, over ration is bad, and we could see this more in the WTA some years ago. I agree with you that your guy has now a better forehand, probably because a straightforward take back.
Thanks for the video coach!
Thank you very much
KARUE WERE YOU IN THE MACDONALD MATCH IN KIA ARENA 19 January against Karatsev. HOW GOOD IS ASLAN BTW?
Amazing microphone quality! sounds like you are in a recording studio
thank you! First time I get a compliment on audio hahah
Vejo teus videos há eras e só agora descobri que é brasileiro! ;D right on
Hahah sim!
Every video I watch at MYTQ… Why I feel that, I too have same problem!? 🤔😬😂
Split video is awesome.
thank you
Could you make a video on addressing the first problem you spoke about where players don't turn enough. I suffer with that problem quite a bit
For both problems (not turning enough or "over" turning), the solution is to execute the unit turn rotation the same way I described in this video!
@@KaruesellHQ thx!
great video...
Is this for topspin
Love the intro
Thanks! that's our new intro!
Can you go over forehand grips in a video?
Nice video :)
very good
How about janik sinner? Would you give us answer about the way he hit the ball, you mean you're correct and he is wrong?
this is a channel for amateurs and people developing their game. The “but so and so does this” is a ridiculous argument because those are players who’ve spent their lifetime on the tennis court
are those shoes the new eclipsion 3?
maybe
Can you make a video of swing through and back hand? Cannot do double bakcjjand well
ua-cam.com/video/rpZ9ERJR6WE/v-deo.html
loool...that's me....Overturning too much and feel like I get the timing wrong many times. Djokovic does it many times in all fairness so it's not all bad...I also feel like when the timing is good, I hit very smoothly and get easy power and spin. But in a match situation, it can be a problem.
Qual empunhadura?
Can you do the same type of video but for the one handed backhand? Aren’t you supposed to have a more excessive unit turn for this shot?
That is why this video is for forehands and not backhands!
OHBs work differently because the position of the arm *within the unit* that does the "unit turn" is very different. During forehand preparation the forearm of your racket arm is "in front." As you complete your unit turn, your chest, belly button, and forearm are all "aiming towards the baseline camera" as Karue demonstrated, your forearm perpendicular to the plane your shoulders create. But with a OHB your forearm is now going across your body during the takeback, so within the body unit your forearm is more in line with the plane of your shoulders, not perpendicular to it. This means that during the same degree of turn, leg loading, and takeback on the BH side, the racket will end up rotating much further behind you than with the equivalent turn on the forehand wing. Over-rotation is much rarer on the backhand wing than on the forehand wing for most players.
Also ensure there is space between chest and elbows - keep your arms a bit away from your body
8 years old can't accelerate ( due to lack of power) and arm goes back too much ( approx 6:53 minutes in the video). Any correction excercise for that one