I've seen hundreds of toss videos, and this is the first one that taught me exactly HOW to move my toss arm to achieve proper toss depth into the court. Everyone else just says to toss the ball further into the court without explaining the path your arm needs to take to accomplish that result.
lol I HAVE been keeping up with the yearly updates! What a great time to catch the newest one, today I play a match and really needed those amazing tips
I am struggling with the transition between extending your elbow and leading with the edge of the racket and the moment of contact. When you would just do the long axis rotation (internal shoulder rotation and pronation, of the forearm) and your arm is pointing up, your racket would be pointing to the side instead of up, right? If your arm is almost straight up at contact, then in order for your racket not to be pointing to the side, you would have to apply ulnar deviation of the wrist, right? So my question basically comes down to: Is ulnar deviation of the wrist happening when going from the on edge motion to the contact point?
This is the main problem in most instructional videos; note that while arm is fully extended, the racquet is actually pointing towards the inside of the swing path. I.e., you are correct that the ulnar rotation occurs after contact, not at contact. Look at the instructor’s contact with the fence/wall compared to the student.
Such a huge help. Thanks! Still patiently waiting for the one handed backhand video
a day with a new racquetflex video equals a happy day❤
I've seen hundreds of toss videos, and this is the first one that taught me exactly HOW to move my toss arm to achieve proper toss depth into the court. Everyone else just says to toss the ball further into the court without explaining the path your arm needs to take to accomplish that result.
Think this might be my issue. Normally just try to toss at 45 degrees with no j toss involved. Been inconsistent so I’ll try this
Best tennis channel on TH-cam, by far
I've been waiting so long for the video to be uploaded!! 😊👍
lol I HAVE been keeping up with the yearly updates!
What a great time to catch the newest one, today I play a match and really needed those amazing tips
its always fun to check in on their racket journey. I see now babolat has entered the picture
Welcome back guys... This is one of the best YT channel Im always watching for a new upload...
Love your videos guys, please upload more! 🔥
We want another part!!!
The towel drill really simplifies things
Dude I love the tennis factory! The owner hooks it up with great prices on rackets , balls, shoes etc! Yoo did not know you guys were that close
Excellent
When is the hard court sliding drills coming 🤩?
great stuff guys. where is the rest of the lesson?
I am struggling with the transition between extending your elbow and leading with the edge of the racket and the moment of contact. When you would just do the long axis rotation (internal shoulder rotation and pronation, of the forearm) and your arm is pointing up, your racket would be pointing to the side instead of up, right? If your arm is almost straight up at contact, then in order for your racket not to be pointing to the side, you would have to apply ulnar deviation of the wrist, right? So my question basically comes down to: Is ulnar deviation of the wrist happening when going from the on edge motion to the contact point?
This is the main problem in most instructional videos; note that while arm is fully extended, the racquet is actually pointing towards the inside of the swing path. I.e., you are correct that the ulnar rotation occurs after contact, not at contact. Look at the instructor’s contact with the fence/wall compared to the student.
Yez please show other tossing video
Did you get a haircut? Or are you the other you?
BS…. some racket angle is indispensable, too much extended arm = the weak wrist