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The ATP Two Handed Backhand: The Forward Swing

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  • kenh
    replied
    This is a great article. Both Brian Gordon and John Yandell have been great for the game. This line in one of the last paragraphs ...then drives it during the torso rotation." , made be think of Jimmy Connors who did this extremely well. So I went back and looked at Connors on the stroke archives here and it appears to me he may have been the first ATP backhand. In his backswing his arms are considerably distant from his body to the hitting side and he has a small flip with his racquet head. Now when i say Connors first, I did not see Bromwich play nor have I seen tapes of him playing.

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  • BrianGordon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobbyswift View Post
    Yes that is what I meant. Again thanks for the response. Your knowledge is a vast resource to all of us.
    ... waiting for the last question bobbyswift - just kidding :-) Thanks for your depth of thought, great questions and kind words!

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    Yes that is what I meant. Again thanks for the response. Your knowledge is a vast resource to all of us.

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  • BrianGordon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobbyswift View Post
    Sorry Brian. One more question. The wrist is in flexion as it approaches contact then looks like it goes into flexion as the left arm internally rotates more. Is this movement vital to the acceleration. Also wondering what you think of players hitting left handed forehands to improve two hander. It seems like what you have identified as the hands coupling is way more important. I have not seen any benefit from lefty forehand practice.
    I believe you refer to the right wrist. The flexion of that wrist allows the flip to occur. The extension (think you mean???) near (and through) contact facilitates the left arm twisting rotation and appears to fine tune (attenuate or potentiate) the turning effect of the push-pull.

    Actually I use the left handed forehand a lot (hundreds/week) to train elbow straightening and acceleration through the torso rotation, and to work on the efficacy of that arm's shoulder internal rotation to produce spin. Its part of a progression I use to build and train the stroke from the contact point backward.

    I will explain the latter in an upcoming article about techniques I use to teach and develop this type of stroke.
    Last edited by BrianGordon; 02-08-2015, 06:44 AM.

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    Sorry Brian. One more question. The wrist is in flexion as it approaches contact then looks like it goes into flexion as the left arm internally rotates more. Is this movement vital to the acceleration. Also wondering what you think of players hitting left handed forehands to improve two hander. It seems like what you have identified as the hands coupling is way more important. I have not seen any benefit from lefty forehand practice.

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    Thanks again.

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  • BrianGordon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobbyswift View Post
    If you look at Jim Courier wide front in the archives my question is how you would fix his left arm approaching contact and what you would say to him about his right arm. Thanks for your reply.
    Whoa... have not seen that backhand for awhile. It is clearly right arm dominated through contact and therefore that technique package may have been best for that approach - certainly the configuration I describe doesn't work if one wants/needs the right arm to dominate through contact.

    Amazing how short the forward swing is with the left arm (and right really) doing the opposite of the model I describe - quite unique really and probably pretty strength dependent.

    So... if a junior player came to me with that I would break it apart totally by extending the backswing, building in the left shoulder targeted slot, redefining the relative roles of the arms, etc. etc.

    On the other hand it does demonstrate there are a lot of ways to get the job done - I guess the question will always be: what is best for each individual.
    Last edited by BrianGordon; 02-06-2015, 12:14 PM.

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    If you look at Jim Courier wide front in the archives my question is how you would fix his left arm approaching contact and what you would say to him about his right arm. Thanks for your reply.

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  • BrianGordon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobbyswift View Post
    One last question. The pull with the right hand appears to be in the direction of 45 degrees to the right of player. How are you explaining the direction of the pull?
    Not sure what you mean here - are we talking about the initial pull direction at the start of the forward swing or its direction as it bends approaching contact?

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  • BrianGordon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobbyswift View Post
    One more question for Brian. I find it very difficult to help student with bending right arm on right handed two hander. Also wondering if protraction is the key to the shape I see of the two arms at contact. I feel this might be a key ingredient. Am I off base or on to something helpful.
    Sorry bobbyswift - got tied up and haven't had time to respond. Protraction is a probably a factor - I think the key to the shape is a choice that brings about the dynamic consequences I discussed such as push-pull and right arm shoulder IR contribution to racquet head velocity. Its been my experience that most players will naturally bend the right if the left is straight - the issue I have is that the bent arm tends to be pinned against the torso rather than progressing forward.

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    One last question. The pull with the right hand appears to be in the direction of 45 degrees to the right of player. How are you explaining the direction of the pull?

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    One more question for Brian. I find it very difficult to help student with bending right arm on right handed two hander. Also wondering if protraction is the key to the shape I see of the two arms at contact. I feel this might be a key ingredient. Am I off base or on to something helpful.

    Leave a comment:


  • johnyandell
    replied
    Stotty,
    I think that's great. I think it shows the LTA subscription is having an impact.


    10S Player

    And a valuable 2 cents and something I am actually addressing in an upcoming article.

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  • 10splayer
    replied
    To me, the take home point is that vertical RHS/spin and in some ways trajectory, are principally a result of joint rotations and not path...Sure, path is part of the equation, but not to the same extent as when i was growing up.

    When i was learning the game (pushing 50) "wiping" the ball was HIGHLY discouraged.. pushing the racquet thru hitting zone, finish on edge etc...However, when the arm doesn't rotate in the forward swing the only variable in the creation of topspin IS the path. I.E steepen for topspin and shallow for flat/velocity... The downside to this model is the DIRECT inverse relationship between the two. One comes at the expense of the other.

    What the guys are doing now, (and the real advantage to arm rotation) is that the hand path can remain relatively shallow (and retain ball speed) while wiping on the ball to create significant spin..In other words, there isn't such an adverse relationship between the two elements..(spin/ball speed)


    Just my 02 cents
    Last edited by 10splayer; 01-13-2015, 01:37 PM.

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  • bobbyswift
    replied
    Thank you for the great work and quick reply to my question.

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