Would love to discuss my article on the Fognini Forehand!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Fognini Forehand
Collapse
X
-
Thanks for this. I'm curious at to whether or not you'd recommend teaching this at the outset (generally) of a beginning player's education. (I'll leave their age out of this for the sake of the discussion, okay?) In the 70s, Mr. Frank Brennan, Sr. (father of the Stanford coach, and BJK's coach) suggested we mimic Nastase's forehand. Mr. B called it a "pronated forehand," and whether the nomenclature was correct or not the idea was that the wrist came back ahead of the racquet head, which then whipped around at the "end" of the backswing. If you watch the point at 1:14 of this youtube clip you can see it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf4wrrpzdYc). Of course Fognini's grip is quite different than Nastase's, which explains differences in the racquet head's angle, but to my eye the effect is similar. There are other forehands on the men's tour that are similar – so much so that Brad Stine's got a (rather dismissive) phrase for it, something like "hinky forehand" – most notably Khachanov's and Tiafore's (even more extreme). There's no doubt this forehand as potency, but the motion *does* introduce additional variables in production. Fognini is a rare talent (physically, anyway). At what stage would you see teaching this?
- Likes 1
-
Originally posted by stroke View PostJeff, thanks so much for the kind words on your article on the Fognini forehand, of which I have long really liked. To me, it is right there with the best forehands ever, Fed, Nadal, Del Po, Alcaraz.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by tennisskip1515 View PostMr. B called it a "pronated forehand," and whether the nomenclature was correct or not the idea was that the wrist came back ahead of the racquet head, which then whipped around at the "end" of the backswing. If you watch the point at 1:14 of this youtube clip you can see it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf4wrrpzdYc). Of course Fognini's grip is quite different than Nastase's, which explains differences in the racquet head's angle, but to my eye the effect is similar.
I teach the body rotations early on. I like Jack Broudy a lot and use his training aids:
Jeff
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by tennisskip1515 View PostThanks for this. I'm curious at to whether or not you'd recommend teaching this at the outset (generally) of a beginning player's education. (I'll leave their age out of this for the sake of the discussion, okay?) In the 70s, Mr. Frank Brennan, Sr. (father of the Stanford coach, and BJK's coach) suggested we mimic Nastase's forehand. Mr. B called it a "pronated forehand," and whether the nomenclature was correct or not the idea was that the wrist came back ahead of the racquet head, which then whipped around at the "end" of the backswing. If you watch the point at 1:14 of this youtube clip you can see it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf4wrrpzdYc). Of course Fognini's grip is quite different than Nastase's, which explains differences in the racquet head's angle, but to my eye the effect is similar. There are other forehands on the men's tour that are similar – so much so that Brad Stine's got a (rather dismissive) phrase for it, something like "hinky forehand" – most notably Khachanov's and Tiafore's (even more extreme). There's no doubt this forehand as potency, but the motion *does* introduce additional variables in production. Fognini is a rare talent (physically, anyway). At what stage would you see teaching this?
Thanks for sharing!Stotty
- Likes 3
Comment
-
21K likes, 137 comments - tennislegend on July 9, 2025: "Same footwork from 2005 to 2025! Happy retirement to the genius @fabiofogna . @danilopizzorno ➡️ Former world No 9 ➡️ 9 ATP titles in singles (19 finals) ➡️ Some legendary matches: First player to beat Rafa Nadal in a Grand Slam after being down 2 sets to 0 at the US Open 2015. #tennis #tennislegend #tenis #fabiofognini".
Here is footage of Fabio practicing at 18 years old. Certainly classic Fabio.Last edited by stroke; 07-11-2025, 04:22 AM.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by stroke View Posthttps://www.instagram.com/reel/DL5XL...ZycHY5eWpkNw==
Here is footage of Fabio practicing at 18 years old. Certainly classic Fabio.
Comment
-
Originally posted by jeffreycounts View Post
Wow. Looks like a kid but hitting the same massive ball.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by tennisskip1515 View PostThanks for this. I'm curious at to whether or not you'd recommend teaching this at the outset (generally) of a beginning player's education. (I'll leave their age out of this for the sake of the discussion, okay?) In the 70s, Mr. Frank Brennan, Sr. (father of the Stanford coach, and BJK's coach) suggested we mimic Nastase's forehand. Mr. B called it a "pronated forehand," and whether the nomenclature was correct or not the idea was that the wrist came back ahead of the racquet head, which then whipped around at the "end" of the backswing. If you watch the point at 1:14 of this youtube clip you can see it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf4wrrpzdYc). Of course Fognini's grip is quite different than Nastase's, which explains differences in the racquet head's angle, but to my eye the effect is similar. There are other forehands on the men's tour that are similar – so much so that Brad Stine's got a (rather dismissive) phrase for it, something like "hinky forehand" – most notably Khachanov's and Tiafore's (even more extreme). There's no doubt this forehand as potency, but the motion *does* introduce additional variables in production. Fognini is a rare talent (physically, anyway). At what stage would you see teaching this?
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Jeff,
Do you see any similarities to Jannik Sinner's forehand?
Sinner keeps his take back low like Fogs, and short like Fogs. Both like the take the ball early and hold the baseline. Sinner rotates the racket head more than Fognini, often turning the racket face further back, pointing the contact face flat at the back wall,
But is that a matter of degree or something different?
Comment
-
Originally posted by jimlosaltos View PostJeff,
Do you see any similarities to Jannik Sinner's forehand?
Sinner keeps his take back low like Fogs, and short like Fogs. Both like the take the ball early and hold the baseline. Sinner rotates the racket head more than Fognini, often turning the racket face further back, pointing the contact face flat at the back wall,
But is that a matter of degree or something different?
Last edited by stroke; 07-15-2025, 11:53 AM.
- Likes 1
Comment
Who's Online
Collapse
There are currently 10218 users online. 6 members and 10212 guests.
Most users ever online was 183,544 at 03:22 AM on 03-17-2025.
- chewie ,
- glacierguy ,
- ,
- sarah ,
Comment