Jeff Salzenstein
Active
Coach
Video Library (16 videos)
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FPS |
Duration |
Three Keys to the Kick Serve (1 of 16)
Jeff Salzenstein's serve from a central baseline position, filmed from a rear court-level angle. His deep knee bend and strong upward leg drive into the court are clearly visible as his hips stay closed longer before uncoiling into contact.
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5.9s |
Feeling Federer (1 of 8)
Jeff Salzenstein’s shadow forehand from the center of the court, filmed from a side angle. His follow-through finishes high with the racket wrapping across his body as his weight transfers onto his front leg and he settles quickly into a ready position.
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4.1s |
Three Keys to the Kick Serve (2 of 16)
Federer's kick serve from the deuce side, filmed from a rear angle. His continental grip is clear with a relaxed hand, and you can see pronounced wrist pronation as he snaps up and across the ball to create heavy topspin.
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10.4s |
Feeling Federer (2 of 8)
Jeff Salzenstein's serve from a central baseline position, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. His continental grip is clearly visible with a relaxed hand, and the wrist pronates aggressively through contact, creating a distinct snap just after impact.
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3.8s |
Feeling Federer (3 of 8)
Federer's movement pattern animation on a neutral baseline position, filmed from a side angle. His split-step timing and quick crossover recovery steps are clearly visible as he transitions from defense back to a ready stance.
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3.4s |
Three Keys to the Kick Serve (3 of 16)
Jeff Salzenstein’s serve technique animation from a central baseline position, filmed from a side/court-level angle. His footwork clearly shows a controlled platform stance with minimal foot movement, emphasizing weight transfer from the back leg to the front leg before driving up into the serve.
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10.1s |
Three Keys to the Kick Serve (4 of 16)
Federer's kick serve from the deuce side, filmed from a rear angle animation. His shoulders and trunk coil markedly away from the court before uncoiling up and out to the right, emphasizing the upward, left-to-right kinetic chain sequence essential for a heavy kick serve.
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9.1s |
Feeling Federer (4 of 8)
Federer's serve from the center of the baseline, filmed from an animated, multi-angle instructional view. The animation clearly separates the shoulders from the hips, emphasizing how his trunk coils early and then uncoils in sequence with the upward arm swing.
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2.3s |
Three Keys to the Kick Serve (5 of 16)
Pete's kick serve from the deuce side, filmed from a rear angle. After contact he lets his hitting arm wrap across his body while his back leg swings through, bringing him into a balanced, forward-moving recovery position on the baseline.
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6.6s |
Feeling Federer (8 of 8)
Jeff Salzenstein's forehand from the middle of the court, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. The racket face is slightly closed at contact with the ball struck just in front of the lead hip, and you can see the racket head accelerate upward on a steep low-to-high path.
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14.8s |
Hitting a Topspin Serve: The Dirty Diaper Drill (1 of 1)
Jeff Salzenstein's topspin serve drill "Dirty Diaper" from a practice serving position, filmed from CourtLevel. The contact point shows the racket face tilted slightly closed with the strings brushing up the back of the ball as the racket accelerates on a steep upward path.
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275.1s |
The Serve Set Up and Stance (1 of 1)
Jeff Salzenstein's serve from the center hash in the deuce court, filmed from a court-level rear angle. After his stance is set, his weight is clearly pre-shifted to the back leg with the non-hitting hand relaxed in front, ready to guide the toss before he transitions into the serve motion.
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522.1s |
The Trophy Position (1 of 1)
Jeff Salzenstein’s serve trophy position from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side angle. The racket is fully loaded with the tip pointing down and the strings facing the side fence as the hitting arm reaches up to about head height, creating a clear “L” shape between the forearm and racket.
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433.9s |
Feeling Federer (7 of 8)
Federer's forehand InsideIn from a central baseline position, filmed from an animated side angle. His shoulders rotate well past 90 degrees relative to the net in the unit turn, then the trunk uncoils ahead of the arm to initiate the forward swing.
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2.4s |
Feeling Federer (5 of 8)
Federer's overhead from the center of the court, filmed from an animated side angle. His continental grip stays firm while the wrist pronates aggressively through contact, with a distinct snap upward as the racquet accelerates toward the ball.
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2.9s |
Feeling Federer (6 of 8)
Federer's slice from the center of the court, filmed from an animation-style side angle. His hips stay relatively closed with a pronounced knee bend on the front leg, giving a stable base as the back leg lightly unloads through the swing.
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2.4s |