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The Physics of Power: How Angular Momentum Shapes the Tennis Forehand
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Originally posted by dimbleby69 View Post
Hi Jim,
thanks for the link to this. I might have overlooked it otherwise. I'm confused by this phrase: "wrist extended, which points the strings to the side fence". Given where it appears in the sentence, before mentioning the left hand staying on for the coil, it seems to suggest that they have their wrists extended long before the flip. I thought that the wrist only extends when the inertia of the racket creates the flip in the forward swing? That seems very clear on the gif of Alcaraz hitting a forehand on grass in the article.
Have I misunderstood something? Hugh Clarke, can you clarify??
regards
Rob
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Originally posted by airforce1 View Post
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Originally posted by doctorhl View PostIn the wooden racket days, no one could conceive that anyone would have so much angular motion that players would some day spin off their front or rear foot and even leave the ground. Perhaps we might all someday witness a 360 degree followthrough!
OIP-3681874137.jpgLast edited by airforce1; 06-13-2025, 09:50 AM.
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Originally posted by dimbleby69 View Post
Yes, extension happens as part of the lag, as far as I understand it. The 'flip' triggers the stretch-shorten cycle and rotates the shoulder externally. What Brian Gordon calls the dynamic slot. Hugh Clarke's quote implies that the wrist is already extended before the lag, with the strings parallel to the side fence at the end of the front shoulder stretch.
By definition, "The stretch-shortening cycle (SSC) is a muscle action where a muscle is rapidly stretched (eccentric contraction) followed by *an immediate shortening* (concentric contraction).
With a good tennis swing, the racket will continue to Lag (not immediately contract as required for SSC) as it travels up the slot before beginning a controlled release (more or less depending on Fade or Draw) towards neutral position. Brian spoke at length about how the wrist action was not dynamic shortening as many suggest.
Either way, Imo the swivel into the Slot Entry is much more efficient and effective than flipping into the slot with the associated problems that it attempted to mitigate from it's ancestor, the Big C.
Edit: It looks like now they have divided SSC into Fast vs Slow SSC, but I think most of us were seeing this from a standpoint of what they call Fast SSC.
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Originally posted by dimbleby69 View Post
Yes, extension happens as part of the lag, as far as I understand it. The 'flip' triggers the stretch-shorten cycle and rotates the shoulder externally. What Brian Gordon calls the dynamic slot. Hugh Clarke's quote implies that the wrist is already extended before the lag, with the strings parallel to the side fence at the end of the front shoulder stretch.Last edited by stroke; 06-13-2025, 10:14 AM.
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