are his left and right arms going up in the same time (is he doing the toss and bringing the right arm up, at the same time) ? or he makes toss, waits little bit and brings the racket to trophy position after the toss?
Not the best idea idea to start with the trophyt backswing. Sometimes they get ingrained with that but it doesn’t build enough momentum. The serve once you pick up bad timing habits, hitch, toss is very hard to fix.
So Federer and Sampras don't have enough momentum? Both of them pause in the trophy phase which means they have exactly the same amount of momentum as if you started in the trophy phase...
@@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegetenNo they don’t, effective timing lies in the subtleties. Sampras wrist never stops, it topples over to the backdrop ever so gently, preceded by him re-gripping the handle bottom on the way up, essentially removing any possibility of the slightest forearm tension buildup or introduction of the slightest reduction of continuous acceleration of the racquet head once it begins to travel on its winding path. My 10 year old is clocking near 90 miles at times exactly based on avoiding tension in his kinetic chain leading up to the strike.
That kid has some game. Hope to see him in the pros someday.
Looks great!
Awesome 👍
that 11 year old has better calves than me
are his left and right arms going up in the same time (is he doing the toss and bringing the right arm up, at the same time) ? or he makes toss, waits little bit and brings the racket to trophy position after the toss?
The tossing arm goed up first, but he doesn't wait after tossing to raise the right arm, he does it right after releasing the ball.
Not the best idea idea to start with the trophyt backswing. Sometimes they get ingrained with that but it doesn’t build enough momentum. The serve once you pick up bad timing habits, hitch, toss is very hard to fix.
So Federer and Sampras don't have enough momentum? Both of them pause in the trophy phase which means they have exactly the same amount of momentum as if you started in the trophy phase...
@@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegetenNo they don’t, effective timing lies in the subtleties. Sampras wrist never stops, it topples over to the backdrop ever so gently, preceded by him re-gripping the handle bottom on the way up, essentially removing any possibility of the slightest forearm tension buildup or introduction of the slightest reduction of continuous acceleration of the racquet head once it begins to travel on its winding path. My 10 year old is clocking near 90 miles at times exactly based on avoiding tension in his kinetic chain leading up to the strike.
what to to then :o