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Interactive Forum: October 2012 - Juan Martin Del Potro Forehand

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  • #31
    Borg and Spin

    Originally posted by 10splayer View Post
    Certainly not discounting equipment in the equation. Having said that, I would bet a lot of money that Fed could go out there and achieve ball speeds and spin rates much greater than Borg ever could with the same equipment.
    Having sat in exactly the same Wimbledon seat, three rows back, (granted, 35 year ago in Borg's case) and watched both men play, I would beg to differ here. Borg hit an incredible amount of topspin with that little Donnay racket. He hit it hard too. I'm sure Federer could hit harder...but with the same spin...with a wooden racket....doubt it. Borg brushed up hard and steep and with far more net clearance than Federer.

    I think Borg and Mac took tennis as far as it could go with wooden rackets...maybe Fed with a wooden racket could have taken things a couple of centimetres further, who knows.

    Fascinating discussion about Dep Po. I see what you mean about the tip of the racket being "underneath" the hand.
    Last edited by stotty; 11-30-2012, 01:39 PM.
    Stotty

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    • #32
      I do NOT understand what to explain

      Originally posted by 10splayer View Post
      Please explain
      I do NOT understand what to explain.
      Every piece of motion can contribute to the linear speed
      AND to the speed of rotation.
      You can measure both at the each point of the trajectory.
      It looks to me that the spin is generated mainly before 0:08 at "MY" clip.
      It is everything what I am claiming.
      I have been wrong before
      PS

      talks about about spin vs velocity for SERVE.
      I am NOT sure whether I am helping
      Last edited by julian1; 11-30-2012, 01:37 PM.

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      • #33
        One swing can only be shallow or deep

        Originally posted by julian1 View Post
        I really do NOT understand your original post plus the follow-up exchange
        There are TWO components
        in

        Both of them contribute to spin
        The flip before 0:08/0:12 is "THE QUICK/DEEPER" component
        The continuation AFTER is a "SHALLOWER" component
        Please let me me know whether this post of mine is clear
        Julian
        PS I have a British spelling of my first name.
        PS MY clip is about backhand but it does NOT matter
        Julian,
        at least in this discussion, one swing can only be shallow or deep. In your Djokovic backhand example, his racket reaches it's lowest point 19 mouse clicks past where the clock reads 00:07. This is a little past where the overlaid graphic tries to indicate the lowpoint of the swing. I would say this swing is fairly "deep" although the graphic makes it look as if it is not really that deep. The path we are trying to consider "deep" or "shallow" in your Djoker clip goes at its bottom at 00:07:19 to 00:08:14 at contact and continues up.

        The point I think 10sPlayer is making very nicely is that with the wiper technique to enhance spin today's player is able to approach the ball with a much shallower sloped approach path and thereby impart more linear momentum in the direction of the other side of the net. However, how different is Borg's stroke?



        D_B has a valid point. With today's equipment, Borg could have gotten away with dropping the racket a little lower with his wrist and added more internal rotation and added even more topspin. As it was, he still framed a lot more balls than most. I only got to hit with him once warming up for the WCT Munich in '75 for a few minutes so I can't really say, but the way I heard it was guys' shoulders would be sore having to hit so many high bouncing balls against him. Just imagine what he would have been with today's equipment.

        Remember, the ball only knows the characteristics of the strings touching it at impact. The more linear arm path is easier to control and time correctly and consistently. The added internal rotation which is described as the "wiper" action (it is not really the wrist, or at least it is very little and almost no flexion, just a little radial deviation) adds just a little spin even as the wrist is trying to keep the strings on the ball as long as possible. Imagine you are swinging a racket with a conveyer-belt-like apparatus in the frame that is whirling a 6 inch wide belt across a 6" wide by 6" high flat surface in the middle of the face of the racket in lieu of the strings. Forget for the moment that that belt might not be as elastic as the strings. Imagine you could run that belt at different speeds. You would certainly get more spin if the belt were going faster, but you would still have to get keep the face of the belt perpendicular to the intended flight of your ball if you wanted to have any success getting the ball where you wanted it to go. The modern day wiper action allows today's players to get more spin even as they maintain the racket face perpendicular to the intended path of the ball for a longer period of time than we could with our strokes that had to finish with the racket pointed at the target.

        Well, if you aren't confused now, you aren't really trying... but I kind of like that image of the conveyer belt out there on the end of my racket!

        don

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        • #34
          I do believe there are two "paths" as i consider the windshield wiper action to be an "independent variable". One "path" would be how steep or shallow the arm treks forward to the ball, and the other path being how steep or shallow the racquet head rotates up and around the hand.....These two elements can be mixed and matched in a multitude of ways.

          In the Del Po video, I do not see a huge disparity in the way the hand treks the ball one from the other.(to account for the spin difference) The hand is moving on a relatively shallow path. The real difference is how much more the racquet tip is rotated up in the high spin shot.....This "second path" steepens the approach angle (spin) without it coming at the expense of ball velocity...
          Last edited by 10splayer; 12-01-2012, 02:35 AM.

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          • #35
            Del Potro's left hand

            Anyone else notice that Delpo shortchanges the stretch with the left hand, especially when he is on the move. But could he possibly hit it any bigger? He hit one at 104 today!!

            don

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            • #36
              Originally posted by tennis_chiro View Post
              Anyone else notice that Delpo shortchanges the stretch with the left hand, especially when he is on the move. But could he possibly hit it any bigger? He hit one at 104 today!!

              don
              Yeah, he can really hit it, in spite of it looking a bit odd. A classic case of talent shining through, and making it work.

              However, I wouldn't put too much stock in the 104 number, as ball speed without a spin rate paints an incomplete picture. I"m sure all those guys can hit it north of 100 MPH if it comes at the expense of spin. It just so happens that DelPo, (because of his incredible high strike zone) can hit MORE balls flat and get away with it. He will always be amongst the leaders in ball speed.

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              • #37
                I feel like his straight arm technique allows him to take advantage of that high strike zone more than he otherwise could with a bent arm technique. His forehand to me is right up there with Fererer and Nadal as the best in tennis.

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                • #38
                  Del Potro vs. Nadal...Indian Wells 2013

                  Originally posted by tennis_chiro View Post
                  D_B has a valid point. With today's equipment, Borg could have gotten away with dropping the racket a little lower with his wrist and added more internal rotation and added even more topspin. As it was, he still framed a lot more balls than most. I only got to hit with him once warming up for the WCT Munich in '75 for a few minutes so I can't really say, but the way I heard it was guys' shoulders would be sore having to hit so many high bouncing balls against him. Just imagine what he would have been with today's equipment.

                  don

                  I wonder what Del Potro's chances are against Nadal tonight. I guess that you can't rule him out seeing as he just deposed the hottest player in the world. But is it too much to hope for?

                  I thought Don's comment was interesting so I quoted him just for the fun of it. I wonder how it was that McEnroe was the one to finally neutralize the Swede's topspin. Is the same thing possible today against all of the topspin Titans?
                  Last edited by don_budge; 03-17-2013, 07:51 AM.
                  don_budge
                  Performance Analysthttps://www.tennisplayer.net/bulleti...ilies/cool.png

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