Another $500 worth of serve lessons. The funny thing is that this is so far above most people’s heads that they probably won’t even realize the incredible generosity that JS demonstrates by sharing these secrets. No other online coach either knows or is willing to share this treasure of knowledge. Thank you for this masterclass, Jeff...we will be forever grateful.
Jeff, this one lesson, even though as you say this is very high level, is the single best one serve lesson ever. You talk about first the contact point. You are so right, if one does not have the correct posture at contact, nothing else matters. The chest out sideways bend, I have never heard anyone else talk about this. But you are right, if one does this advanced technique, one will be upright at contact, like Fed and you. And the head position at contact instruction you mention, so good. All tied in, a just super lesson, 11 minutes of gold teaching.
1. Shoulder turn and coil 2. Stay sideways 3. Keep your head up, watch the ball not the court 4. Elbow and chest towards the ball to prevent over-rotation 5. Sidebend at contact into the ball 6. 3 hops on the follow through
This is a very important video to keep in mind thank you Jeff perhaps the best of your series the infamous tennis misunderstood ROTATION happens also in the forehand !!!!!
the most important thing is to go up, that is why I prefer to practice my kick serve first leaving the slice and flat once i have trained myself to go up
Jeff I have only just noticed you are left handed. By the way I serve right handed and play all my other shots left handed. I am working on smashing right handed as well as left handed as not a powerful smash obviously. I am predominantly left handed but obviously I through right handed. My serve can let me down in doubles as arm not warmed up and at crucial points I can lose all confidence in my second serve hence why I am putting a lot of your ideas into my serve. Keep up the excellent insights and instructions/drills
One of your best videos. Contact point is so important. You lose a lot of power by opening your chest too soon at contact. Feliciano Lopez does this and I don't know how he gets power. He must be extremely flexible because in time your shoulder will suffer for a normal person.
Hi Jeff, thank you for that video. It has transformed my serve, that advise about collapsing upper body is what I was doing before. Now, when I keep my body straight and not over rotate I serve faster and no longer hit the net. Thank you
Absolute nuggets of gold Jeff. Love the explanation of driving the chest & elbow up. Exactly what you see on Raonic serve, Isner serve, Djokovic etc. Great thorasic spine mobility obv. This knowledge & instruction, including you demo the serve with such simplicity and efficiency is so good for any player/coach with a sharp eye. I always tell my juniors, "get your arm into an L shape" (after their first turn 😉). Works a treat. Now I just need them to stop using forehand grips 😅 another fight for another day
Thanks Jeff!!...these are higher level concepts but so vital to the serve...chest up has been a real difference maker for me but the side bend stretch explanation is next level...thanks again!!
Great video Jeff,you probably mentioned it in some other video the role of the non dominant arm getting down across the belly helping significantly to keep side ways . Thanks for all your videos always so pertinent.
Excellent tips, Jeff! I would be curious what Jeff thinks about this - one tip I found useful as well to improve consistency in contact and hit up towards the ball is delaying the lowering of the tossing arm, i.e keeping it up longer. And when the arm is lowered the feeling I seek is my body moving into the tossing arm so that the arm naturally folds at about chest level and to the underside of my serving arm pit. If my tossing arm is lowered to below to my chest level I find it negatively impacts consistency of my contact as the body tends to drive down and the chest is not facing up at the point of contact.
Brilliant video thanks. When l was young l took lessons from someone who was the Jr. Davis Cup coach and never got information that was even close to what you're offering here.
Absolutely loved it from the SERVE SURGEON. It's awesome content Jeff. Hope at least a couple of Top ATP Pros like Zverev and FAA get you onboard and soon we shall see them winning slams since Serve still remains the Key Shot in Men's Pro Tennis. Thanks!!
@@TennisEvolution I agree - I really like this video. Great insight and tips that are improving my serve. This is the first time I have heard this type of feedback and insight into the serve mechanics and tips. Happy Holidays!
My daughter is an un and coming junior Player and what you shared covers most of problem areas I see when she serves- can you send me the link to the corrective exercises for getting her chest Up
Great lessons. It appears to me that stopping one's shoulders' rotation square to the direction of the serve also provides momentum into the serve in that direction.
Good video! I have almost never heard anybody talk about the sideblend (shoulder over shoulder). If I don't stay chest up, I will pay the price and slam the racquet on my shin.....that hurts!!!
Amazing, so much important details in this lesson, what is your string tension? It looks like 18kg, the ball just flies super effortlessly off your racket
Tennis Evolution - Online Tennis Lessons Get a free membership inside Tennis Evolution that you can access online or inside our Tennis Evolution App with no credit card details required. All you have to do is click on this link to register for the free course bit.ly/3bYMyqQ
@@TennisEvolution staying sideways and keeping the head up greatly improved my percentage. Every time I open up towards the court early or look into the court before contact I was faulting (typically into the net). The other pieces of advice require little more athleticism than I'm used to so I'll keep working on those.
I focused on the fundamental serve technique. Yes, my method and comprehensive courses can help you develop all kinds of serves. Let us know how we can help!
Is the serve's lesser torso-uncoiling (compared to that of a forehand), due to the involvement of rotator cuff & elbow in generating racquet speed? Fine lesson!
Hi Jeff. Very interesting video as usual. I was quite intrigued with the "side bend" concept on serving but would like to know what the primary benefit is i.e. more power or consistency on landing a serve in?
Very. Nice work Jeff 👍it's all a matter of posture, the right posture to avoid mistakes on the serve that you may think were correct, when proved they are wrong, believe me Jeff this is no compliment, seems to me is a fact, how ugly you can do things even playing tennis for over 20 years, really it is a shame for not doing the right movement, thanks again Jeff
Hi! I have one question and i would appreciate if you have time To answer. My forehand has always been my weapon but now it has become so bad i cant even hit it. I dont know i have done wrong so and i have done everything to fix it but nothing seems To work. So i would like To ask what you think i should do?
what about when wanting to serve up the tee I believe is the term or up the middle on deuce side as a lefty, will you turn more as I see all your serves going to the fence side of box
If you are right handed: your right shoulder should be higher than your left shoulder at contact. Left handed: left shoulder higher than right shoulder at contact. Shoulder over shoulder.
Jeff...why not make the contact conversation simple?...the thought that makes it more simple for me is simply keep your arm extended and watch the ball...ie watch racquet hit the ball
You can learn to "serve taller" using some simple physics in connection to geometry. It is especially useful for the shorter player. The Serve Taller method is neither the platform stance nor the step-up stance. Would you like to venture a guess? A hint: start with the platform and then step back with the front foot: now power forward off the back foot as you lift off to new heights.
@@TennisEvolution Something for you to consider: Do you prefer the term Serve Taller or Taller to the Serve? BTW: even for a taller person like myself, when I need to get a 2nd serve in; this technique is that much more useful in clearing the net and dropping the ball in.
I wish I over-rotated. I under-rotate dramatically and never get my right should through the server and miss out on a lot of shoulder pronation. It feels impossible to fix. I can get good power and can serve into the mid 120's but my arm pays the price.
Turn more and step off the back foot last (in other words, the front foot first). In physics lingo: torsion and Newton's 3rd Law. Sampras and Dent turned more for increased torsion. They would have served with more power (yes even Dent who could hit 140+) had they stepped off the back foot last as in launching a football. When in the platform stance: if you step back with the front foot and put your weight on the back foot you can turn the hips more effectively as you launch forward off the ground.
@@TennisEvolution Yes, a bit like this only taking a longer stride sideways or back depending on how much you are turned away from the baseline. I demonstrated this motion for Tony Huber (who coached Roddick years ago in Houston) at the Cary Leeds Center (Bronx, NY) last year where he was their High Performance coach (recently left). However, the difference with Roddick was his step back was into a pin-point stance. I also showed them a step across the body service motion similar to a baseball pitcher's wind-up where the front foot swings across the baseline right-to-left for a left-hand server like yourself with the weight shifting to the back foot. The body now has torsion and along with pushing off the back foot (Newton's 3rd Law) allows for unleashing a powerful service motion (starting from the ground up). Huber and his group saw me hit some service bombs just like they did at the Billie Jean King Center in 2018: www.nytimes.com/2018/05/11/sports/tennis/don-mueller-rackets.html And I'm old. So you and your youthful students could do an even better job if they are willing to try something new based on physics.
Staying sideways might be good for certain players and techniques, but I have to disagree that the best servers do that. The guys with the most power open up towards the net at impact. Look at one of Roddick's serves in slow motion. He is facing the net when he hits the ball. No 45 degrees or sideways anything.
What exactly is so wrong with shoulders facing the target? I see some players regularly serving 140mph who are actually facing the net (for examply - ua-cam.com/video/xUCMf_ieARY/v-deo.html ) and not side bending for the flat serve.
Great video! It would be great if UA-cam provided an option to flip the video from left to right, to make it easier for our right-handers..
Another $500 worth of serve lessons. The funny thing is that this is so far above most people’s heads that they probably won’t even realize the incredible generosity that JS demonstrates by sharing these secrets. No other online coach either knows or is willing to share this treasure of knowledge. Thank you for this masterclass, Jeff...we will be forever grateful.
You're welcome! Thanks for the kind words, I appreciate it.
And you are right, the depth of understanding to know it’s worth $500 is required :)
Jeff, this one lesson, even though as you say this is very high level, is the single best one serve lesson ever. You talk about first the contact point. You are so right, if one does not have the correct posture at contact, nothing else matters. The chest out sideways bend, I have never heard anyone else talk about this. But you are right, if one does this advanced technique, one will be upright at contact, like Fed and you. And the head position at contact instruction you mention, so good. All tied in, a just super lesson, 11 minutes of gold teaching.
1. Shoulder turn and coil
2. Stay sideways
3. Keep your head up, watch the ball not the court
4. Elbow and chest towards the ball to prevent over-rotation
5. Sidebend at contact into the ball
6. 3 hops on the follow through
Thanks for watching!
Excellent. Thats what I need!!!
Thanks much for taking time t odocument
First video I have ever seen that actually explained how to serve correctly. Thanks.
You're welcome Joe!
Hey Jeff: I see you have 1,900+ thumbs up. Excellent.
Thanks Greg!
Jeff with another super tip on serve! You cannot help but improve if you follow this guy.
Thank you James! Appreciate your valuable feedback.
This is a very important video to keep in mind thank you Jeff perhaps the best of your series the infamous tennis misunderstood ROTATION happens also in the forehand !!!!!
You're welcome, that's awesome to hear!
the most important thing is to go up, that is why I prefer to practice my kick serve first leaving the slice and flat once i have trained myself to go up
@@rubengomez6798 Great!
Jeff I have only just noticed you are left handed. By the way I serve right handed and play all my other shots left handed. I am working on smashing right handed as well as left handed as not a powerful smash obviously. I am predominantly left handed but obviously I through right handed. My serve can let me down in doubles as arm not warmed up and at crucial points I can lose all confidence in my second serve hence why I am putting a lot of your ideas into my serve. Keep up the excellent insights and instructions/drills
Excellent tuition Jeff, much appreciated. Gordon
Thank you Gordon!
Hi Jeff some amazing tips here! Thanks for sharing!
You’re welcome, Thank you for the support!
One of your best videos. Contact point is so important. You lose a lot of power by opening your chest too soon at contact. Feliciano Lopez does this and I don't know how he gets power. He must be extremely flexible because in time your shoulder will suffer for a normal person.
Absolutely enjoy the video. Very helpully. Thanks Jeff. Hope to see more your video
Hi Jeff, thank you for that video. It has transformed my serve, that advise about collapsing upper body is what I was doing before. Now, when I keep my body straight and not over rotate I serve faster and no longer hit the net. Thank you
This side bend concept is amazing, thank you the serve wizard !!! 🎾🐐
You're welcome!
Great stuff. Love your clear instructions. Excellent.
Thank you Miguel! I appreciate it.
Very useful and addressed my problem! Now feel more confident and know what right to do when i do full swing!
Awesome, thank you for sharing!
Great content! This is going to help a lot.
Thanks! Happy to help.
I am sharing this channel with my friends so they can improve too.
Thank you Manoj! I appreciate it.
Really high level stuff but we appreciate it Jeff , quality content . Thank you
You're welcome! Thanks for your comment.
Excellent, as always
Thank you Alexander!
Fantastic lesson!
Thank you!
This is an excellent lesson!
really a valueable contribution when it comes to serving. great tips to get the concepts down.
Thank you for the details. Always learning with every serve video.
You're welcome! That's awesome to know.
Great video. Thanks Jeff👍💪
You're welcome Ronnie!
Absolute nuggets of gold Jeff. Love the explanation of driving the chest & elbow up. Exactly what you see on Raonic serve, Isner serve, Djokovic etc. Great thorasic spine mobility obv. This knowledge & instruction, including you demo the serve with such simplicity and efficiency is so good for any player/coach with a sharp eye. I always tell my juniors, "get your arm into an L shape" (after their first turn 😉). Works a treat. Now I just need them to stop using forehand grips 😅 another fight for another day
Thank you, appreciate your nice comment!
Nicely done Jeff
Wow brilliant tip! Thanks a million.
You're welcome Laurence!
Definitely, the best serve technique videos
Congrats
Great tip Jeff
Joe
Thanks Jeff!!...these are higher level concepts but so vital to the serve...chest up has been a real difference maker for me but the side bend stretch explanation is next level...thanks again!!
You're welcome! Thank you for watching.
Great tip Mr Surgeon!
Thank you Nhung!
Great video.
Very useful lesson!!Thanks!
Thank you Dinu. Glad you liked it!
I tried the platform stance and it helped me. Thank you
That's awesome! You're welcome Manoj ;)
Great lesson
Thanks Roger!
Great one. I always forget about this. I tend to over rotate because I’m not coiling enough. Gotta ingrain it.
Let us know how we can help!
Very helpful! Thank you!
You're welcome!
Thanks Jeff great video 👍👏
You're welcome Alexander!
Great video Jeff,you probably mentioned it in some other video the role of the non dominant arm getting down across the belly helping significantly to keep side ways .
Thanks for all your videos always so pertinent.
You're welcome! Thank you for watching, appreciate the comment.
Thanks a lot Jeff, I have exactly this problem, I will start to practice your suggestions.
Excellent piece of information, thanks Jeff!
You're welcome!
This is too good!! Thanks!
You're welcome Arjun!
Excellent tips, Jeff! I would be curious what Jeff thinks about this - one tip I found useful as well to improve consistency in contact and hit up towards the ball is delaying the lowering of the tossing arm, i.e keeping it up longer. And when the arm is lowered the feeling I seek is my body moving into the tossing arm so that the arm naturally folds at about chest level and to the underside of my serving arm pit. If my tossing arm is lowered to below to my chest level I find it negatively impacts consistency of my contact as the body tends to drive down and the chest is not facing up at the point of contact.
Thanks Jeff, these details are super important to be aware of for those of us who understand how important it is to shadow swing correctly
You're welcome!
Brilliant video thanks. When l was young l took lessons from someone who was the Jr. Davis Cup coach and never got information that was even close to what you're offering here.
You're welcome Gregory! I appreciate your comment.
Hey Jeff!
Thank you so much for your time and analysis of serve. It's really helpful. Keep it up!
You're welcome! Thanks for your comment.
Great sharing and great tips!
Thanks for watching!
Absolutely loved it from the SERVE SURGEON. It's awesome content Jeff. Hope at least a couple of Top ATP Pros like Zverev and FAA get you onboard and soon we shall see them winning slams since Serve still remains the Key Shot in Men's Pro Tennis. Thanks!!
You're welcome Rishabh! Thank you for watching.
really needed this thank you!
You're welcome!
@@TennisEvolution I agree - I really like this video. Great insight and tips that are improving my serve. This is the first time I have heard this type of feedback and insight into the serve mechanics and tips.
Happy Holidays!
@@mrperezmailperez3818 Thanks! Happy Holidays as well ;).
My daughter is an un and coming junior
Player and what you shared covers most of problem areas I see when she serves- can you send me the link to the corrective exercises for getting her chest Up
Great lessons. It appears to me that stopping one's shoulders' rotation square to the direction of the serve also provides momentum into the serve in that direction.
Thank you! Nice observation.
Good video! I have almost never heard anybody talk about the sideblend (shoulder over shoulder). If I don't stay chest up, I will pay the price and slam the racquet on my shin.....that hurts!!!
Thanks Gregory! Be careful though!
Great tips, just what I was needing to improve my serve...ok, one of the many things I need to improve my serve Jajaja, thanks Jeff
You're welcome! Happy to help ;)
good stuff
Amazing, so much important details in this lesson, what is your string tension? It looks like 18kg, the ball just flies super effortlessly off your racket
Tennis Evolution - Online Tennis Lessons
Get a free membership inside Tennis Evolution that you can access online or inside our Tennis Evolution App with no credit card details required. All you have to do is click on this link to register for the free course bit.ly/3bYMyqQ
Amazing
excellent video but I would like to see the same technique for the service on the t...thanks
Jeff’s serve is really effortless
Thanks Hua!
seems like serve tips never end. these sound good.
Stay tuned for the new ones coming up!
Thanks
You're welcome!
@@TennisEvolution 😊
Yup, this one all day. Gonna hit the court at lunch break and focus on this
Awesome! how did it go?
@@TennisEvolution staying sideways and keeping the head up greatly improved my percentage. Every time I open up towards the court early or look into the court before contact I was faulting (typically into the net). The other pieces of advice require little more athleticism than I'm used to so I'll keep working on those.
hi Jeff, should one rotate the shoulder more at contact for a slice serve compared with a flat serve?
+1
Love the videos. But the ankle socks are killing me, man 😆
Thank you William! ha ha.
what kind of serve do you use in the video? Does your method work for all kinds of serve? kick, slice?
I focused on the fundamental serve technique. Yes, my method and comprehensive courses can help you develop all kinds of serves. Let us know how we can help!
Is the serve's lesser torso-uncoiling (compared to that of a forehand), due to the involvement of rotator cuff & elbow in generating racquet speed? Fine lesson!
Hi Jeff. Very interesting video as usual. I was quite intrigued with the "side bend" concept on serving but would like to know what the primary benefit is i.e. more power or consistency on landing a serve in?
Very. Nice work Jeff 👍it's all a matter of posture, the right posture to avoid mistakes on the serve that you may think were correct, when proved they are wrong, believe me Jeff this is no compliment, seems to me is a fact, how ugly you can do things even playing tennis for over 20 years, really it is a shame for not doing the right movement, thanks again Jeff
Hi! I have one question and i would appreciate if you have time To answer. My forehand has always been my weapon but now it has become so bad i cant even hit it. I dont know i have done wrong so and i have done everything to fix it but nothing seems To work. So i would like To ask what you think i should do?
what about when wanting to serve up the tee I believe is the term or up the middle on deuce side as a lefty, will you turn more as I see all your serves going to the fence side of box
where on the ball do we aim for as lefties? bottom hemisphere for spin serve?
I wish you sell tennis racquet covers or hats with your logo or headband - I would definitively buy a few :)
Happy Holidays!
Thanks! Happy Holidays as well ;)
What strings do you recommend for the pure drive plus?
If you are right handed: your right shoulder should be higher than your left shoulder at contact. Left handed: left shoulder higher than right shoulder at contact. Shoulder over shoulder.
Thanks for your comment.
can you talk more about the legs at contact?
Well, I've bought in.
Awesome!
What's with this quality settings
Sidebending here we go. Serve is definitely the hardest stroke in tennis to be consistent at.
Yes Paul, it requires consistent practice .
Jeff...why not make the contact conversation simple?...the thought that makes it more simple for me is simply keep your arm extended and watch the ball...ie watch racquet hit the ball
You can learn to "serve taller" using some simple physics in connection to geometry. It is especially useful for the shorter player. The Serve Taller method is neither the platform stance nor the step-up stance. Would you like to venture a guess? A hint: start with the platform and then step back with the front foot: now power forward off the back foot as you lift off to new heights.
Interesting Don. You should consider to share your valuable knowledge in videos. It would be an awesome contribution to the tennis world.
@@TennisEvolution Something for you to consider: Do you prefer the term Serve Taller or Taller to the Serve? BTW: even for a taller person like myself, when I need to get a 2nd serve in; this technique is that much more useful in clearing the net and dropping the ball in.
I wish I over-rotated. I under-rotate dramatically and never get my right should through the server and miss out on a lot of shoulder pronation. It feels impossible to fix. I can get good power and can serve into the mid 120's but my arm pays the price.
Turn more and step off the back foot last (in other words, the front foot first). In physics lingo: torsion and Newton's 3rd Law. Sampras and Dent turned more for increased torsion. They would have served with more power (yes even Dent who could hit 140+) had they stepped off the back foot last as in launching a football. When in the platform stance: if you step back with the front foot and put your weight on the back foot you can turn the hips more effectively as you launch forward off the ground.
Don R. Mueller, Ph.D. Like Roddick moved his front front ?
@@TennisEvolution Yes, a bit like this only taking a longer stride sideways or back depending on how much you are turned away from the baseline. I demonstrated this motion for Tony Huber (who coached Roddick years ago in Houston) at the Cary Leeds Center (Bronx, NY) last year where he was their High Performance coach (recently left). However, the difference with Roddick was his step back was into a pin-point stance. I also showed them a step across the body service motion similar to a baseball pitcher's wind-up where the front foot swings across the baseline right-to-left for a left-hand server like yourself with the weight shifting to the back foot. The body now has torsion and along with pushing off the back foot (Newton's 3rd Law) allows for unleashing a powerful service motion (starting from the ground up). Huber and his group saw me hit some service bombs just like they did at the Billie Jean King Center in 2018: www.nytimes.com/2018/05/11/sports/tennis/don-mueller-rackets.html And I'm old. So you and your youthful students could do an even better job if they are willing to try something new based on physics.
Don R. Mueller, Ph.D. Maybe you can make a video a teach us all so we can improve
Keeping the arm up and extended keeps the head from dropping
What if you are falling sideways early already and too much, your tip on collapsing sideways would make it worse?
Staying sideways might be good for certain players and techniques, but I have to disagree that the best servers do that. The guys with the most power open up towards the net at impact. Look at one of Roddick's serves in slow motion. He is facing the net when he hits the ball. No 45 degrees or sideways anything.
What exactly is so wrong with shoulders facing the target? I see some players regularly serving 140mph who are actually facing the net (for examply - ua-cam.com/video/xUCMf_ieARY/v-deo.html ) and not side bending for the flat serve.
If subscribe do I have to pay?
tried to mimic him then reilised he was left handed :/
You can flip it using this link www.mirrorthevideo.com//watch?v=rm0kIb5Pzu8
Not one ball in!
We all have these days on the court ha ha. I'll focus on the learning process rather than judging the outcome directly.
💃🎾🥰👍👍👍🇷🇺🥰🎾