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Interactive Forum November 2020: Brandon Nakashima Serve

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  • don_budge
    replied
    Originally posted by zinosman View Post
    Levantamento da bola muito alto.
    Os maiores sacadores da história do tênis possuíam um levantamento da bola mais baixo, como por exemplo Tilden, Pancho González, Laver, Neale Fraser, Colin Dlibey, Tanner, Sampras, Goran Ivanesevic, Karlovic, Kirgios......

    Lifting the ball too high. The biggest drawers in the history of tennis had a lower ball lift, such as Tilden, Pancho González, Laver, Neale Fraser, Colin Dlibey, Tanner, Sampras, Goran Ivanesevic, Karlovic, Kirgios ......Google translate

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  • johnyandell
    replied
    Can you translate to English?

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  • zinosman
    replied
    Levantamento da bola muito alto.
    Os maiores sacadores da história do tênis possuíam um levantamento da bola mais baixo, como por exemplo Tilden, Pancho González, Laver, Neale Fraser, Colin Dlibey, Tanner, Sampras, Goran Ivanesevic, Karlovic, Kirgios......

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  • kamyar100
    replied
    He has the “up and over” that J. Salzy describes. He has gone further to name the arm position immediately after contact the “dirty diaper” (on the condition that arm finishes on the same side of the body as the dominant arm. Jeff has a monster kick using just his arms and whst looks like 60% effort. It’s remarkable.

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  • johnyandell
    replied
    My thought is I wouldn't argue with Bruce, but as you say many players bend further...Isner for one... To me it's less about trying to control that angle--which might be impossible--and more about getting the racket to the full drop position...

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  • kennyb
    replied
    In Bruce Elliott's work ,the states that he maximum elbow flexion should stay close to 90 degrees but I see various slow motion videos (Wawrinka and others) where world class players collapse that upper arm / lower arm angle through the racquet drop.. thoughts?

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  • jthb1021
    replied
    The drop looks a hair early to me too, but it’s really close. My heros always seem to sync up the turn and the deepest part of the knee bend simultaneously then the legs and racquet drop work together. His turn is so quick at the beginning he misses that synchronization point which may be why he’s ever so slightly early at the drop. My 2 cents

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  • johnyandell
    replied
    Looks early to me...On wieght shift it looks pretty even at full knee bend. Not sure what the otpimal pro range of elbow angle is? Or if it matters?

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  • doctorhl
    replied
    It looks like he barely avoids early entry. He sure seems to have more than normal weight shift to the front foot at the hesitation point. From your observations, is he within the optimal pro range for amount of weight shift at that point in time? Is his degree of racket arm elbow angle at the hesitation point falling within the optimal pro range of angle?

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  • Interactive Forum November 2020: Brandon Nakashima Serve

    Brandon Nakashima Serve

    So…great racket path, narrow stance, some body turn. Would Brian Gordon call that backswing "early entry" in relation to the leg drive? (Click Here.)

    What else do you see??

    Last edited by johnyandell; 10-31-2020, 05:43 PM.

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