yeah this is money. i think my forehand is inconsistent compared to my backhand specifically because my wrist is very tight when i bring the racket back only with my one arm.
I just started learning tennis less than a year ago at age 69. I study with the teacher, almost weekly and watch videos. I really loved this video and I’m going to try to put it into action! I do have problems with relaxing, and I get tight intense. So thanks for all these great tips. I am a newcomer to your channel, found it in my YT feed, and now I am subscribed!
Absolutely fantastic breakdown! I'm getting back into tennis after 15 years, and I must say that your content has really ignited my passion again! Concise and detailed but not at all overwhelming. Keep doing what your doing and thank you
This is a great video. I have seen a lot of artificial windshield wiper forehand where the player artificially create the motion, as opposed "letting mechanic take over" as Simon said in the video.
Thank you very much for the consistent and accurate analysis! I have had a question for a long time, to which there is no definite answer, I would like to hear your opinion. What is the degree of tension of the hand at the moment of contact with the ball on the string surface, how does it change, depending on the conditions in which the stroke is performed?
You should post a similar video about your wrist usage on the backhand. Simon you’re backhand is very loose and lot of people struggle to stay loose on the BH
This is excellent. Can you please do this for the two-handed back hand? Also, I think a loose wrist requires a loose grip but it’s never been clear to me how strong my grip should be on my ground strokes. Do you tighten your grip at the moment of contact and then release it immediately after contact? This small details are rarely addressed by coaches.
The other day, I was was hitting better by letting the tip of the racket fall to the ground as I start making my swing. Basically, get into the Pat the Dog position. Then unhinge my wrist and let the tip of the racket fall to the ground as I start driving my hips and legs. This little move seemed to take the tension out of my wrist and forearm and allowed me to produce more spin and more effortless power.
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial I'll keep working on it. It seems to help me a lot to create a bit of wrist adduction before going into extension. It seems to take the tension out of the wrist and arm and forces me to use the legs, hips and shoulders to move the racket. Creating adduction before extension also seems to naturally allow me to put more spin on the ball, as the wrist will naturally have to abduct through the point of contact. So I'm getting into the the Pat the Dog position. The creating wrist adduction but letting the tip of the racket fall to the ground a little before extending and pointing the buttcap at the ball as I go to hit it. This seemed to work wonders for my forehand last week. It felt like the first time I was able to put proper spin on the ball and hit tension free forehands. Thanks again.
I see a lot of players gripping their racket in their dominant hand between points, getting tense and fatigued over the course of the match. I try to use that time (most of the time on the court, after all) to let my hitting hand hang loose. It adds up after a couple of hours!
Some coach I watched says between 0 and 10, your wrist should be at about #4 in terms of firmness. And thats for most groundstrokes. Of course, in some other situations your wrist should be softer or firmer.
Do you have some specific exercises on how to achieve this? I understand the logic but doing this is another matter. Is there a series of exercises you can do to help make this "automatic"?
great video and explanation. Just curious, what type of court is that? Looks like a tennis court but there is almost no "out" space, looks really tight
Coach Simon, great lesson! Im new into tennis, not producing consistent RHS. I’m trying to loosen my forehand, however when making contact with the ball, my grip flutters, & i lose my control completely.. Does this mean I need to grip tighter when making contact? Does it naturally stiffen my wrist a bit? How do I balance this compromises? Thanks
I would ensure you have a sticky overgrip on the racket, that will reduce the movement and then play around with the grip tightness. Often, the hand slips due to a worn out grip, or a too small grip size for your hand.
Hi Simon, Just to clarify please, are you saying that pronation happens before or after contact? As the racket travels upward and fast with pronation I thought it should start before contact to benefit from that to create top spin.🤔
I've been wanting to get into tennis lately to get out of my comfort zone and try new things. Is 15 too late to start? I don't want to go pro or anything I would just like to have something to do as a hobby and enjoy. Thanks.
No, 15 is not too late to start. It’s a great sport, singles and doubles, that you can play all the way through old age. (80’s or 90’s) You should give it a try.
One thing I’ll disagree with here. The wrist doesn’t stay in cocked back position during the contact. If wrist is loose and the player times it right the wrist will snap and meet the ball. And most coaches preach hit in front of body which I’m completely against. To achieve effortless power the contact is not too much infront, it’s actually matching the front foot. Your front foot aligns with the contact (sometimes that contact is a little ahead than the front foot) so let the ball come in a little bit if your having trouble brushing balls in the net too much.
Have to completely disagree with both things you said. Watch any slow motion clip of pros making contact. The wrist is cocked back at contact unless they’re using an extreme western grip. If I snapped my wrist prior to contact, my racket would be facing the left side of the court. And when you make contact late, you stress the wrist, elbow and shoulder joints. Increasing your risk of serious injuries
Technically I am using the semi western forehand grip, but I am feeling I am not getting a solid enough contact with the ball...do you recommend I adjust the grip?
I tend to snap my wrist, so hard to avoid it for whatever reason. It’s leading to shoulder and elbow injury. Frustrating thing is that I know I’m doing it but can’t help it. Any tips on exercises?
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial to stop snapping the wrist. I pronate fine but for whatever reason I have trouble relaxing the wrist so that the tip of the racket goes forward
@TopTennisTrainingOfficial Thanks, my comment was actually meant for a service clip at another channel, but TH-cam rolled over to the next one before I posted.
A lot of coaches refuse to cover this topic because it was never understood . Thanks for exposing .
yeah this is money. i think my forehand is inconsistent compared to my backhand specifically because my wrist is very tight when i bring the racket back only with my one arm.
Many thanks for the support 🙏
This is the best forhand guide on youtube hands down. Amazing work.
I just started learning tennis less than a year ago at age 69. I study with the teacher, almost weekly and watch videos. I really loved this video and I’m going to try to put it into action! I do have problems with relaxing, and I get tight intense. So thanks for all these great tips. I am a newcomer to your channel, found it in my YT feed, and now I am subscribed!
Good luck with the improvements 👍
Absolutely fantastic breakdown! I'm getting back into tennis after 15 years, and I must say that your content has really ignited my passion again! Concise and detailed but not at all overwhelming. Keep doing what your doing and thank you
Many thanks for the support 🙏
One of the best forehand breakdowns I’ve seen. Thanks!
Many thanks 🙏
I just started playing tennis last week and watched a couple of tutorials along the way. This, by far, is the most helpful one. Thanks!
Good luck with the improvements
This helped me understand the mechanics more than every video and coaching I’ve had combined!
Happy to help 🙏
Thank you.
Best video on forehand mechanics I’ve seen.
Thank you 🙏
This is the best video about forehand and wrist. I know that I am too stiff with my body. Time to change it. Thank you a lot for video
Very helpful video for me, you showed very clearly difference between flat and topspin shot, thanks!
Thanks for watching 🙏
Great lesson Simon! Cheers man!
Many thanks 🙏
This is a great video. I have seen a lot of artificial windshield wiper forehand where the player artificially create the motion, as opposed "letting mechanic take over" as Simon said in the video.
I’ve had good success with windshield wipe as well as brushing the ball and ‘dropping’ the wrist as we say
Thanks for explaining the arm pronation part. Very informative.
This video really explain a lot of information and make all movement more sensible for me. Thx!
Many good videos about this issue. But this is the best one. WELL DONE. CONGRATS😊and thank you
Wonderful explanation Simon; thank you very much!!!🎉
My pleasure 🙏
Very good as always with this top tennis trainer/player. 🎾 ❤
Excellent breakdown! Thank you coach Simon 👍
Thank you for the detail breakdown, really appreciate it!
Thanks for watching 🙏
Very detailed explanation, thanks Simon!
Many thanks 🙏
Very helpful. Good plus to talk about flatter vs topspin shots
High grade technical detail. Well done. Thanks
Thanks for tuning in
very nice! very solid your channel! don't see that often on TH-cam :-)
Many thanks 🙏
Awesome video! I learned so much!❤
Happy to help 🙏
Highly informative video on the use of wrist👍👍
Excellent video
Thank you 🙏
Thank you!! I’ve been looking for a video to break this part! I have been struggling with the wrist movement 😫
My pleasure 🙏
This is gold, Top video
Wow what a fantastic breakdown..always a confusion for me..thnx a lot
Thanks for watching 👍
Excellent - this is so insightful!
Many thanks 🙏
Excellent video.
Many thanks 🙏
Really good video. Thank you!
Many thanks 🙏
Great explanation!
Thanks for watching 🙏
Thank you for this, i was so tensed and frustraited with my performance with my game that my shot was almost hit or miss
Good luck with the improvements 👍
Thanks
very informative and good break-down
My pleasure 🙏
Very useful, great video. Thanks a lot!
My pleasure 🙏
Thank you very much for the consistent and accurate analysis! I have had a question for a long time, to which there is no definite answer, I would like to hear your opinion. What is the degree of tension of the hand at the moment of contact with the ball on the string surface, how does it change, depending on the conditions in which the stroke is performed?
Excellent video is. Thanks
Gold, pure gold
Thank you so much coach. Highly appreciated. 🙏
My pleasure 🙏
I'd like to see the same discussion for the 1HB, relaxed wrist, suponation, and so on.
Stay tuned 👍
You should post a similar video about your wrist usage on the backhand. Simon you’re backhand is very loose and lot of people struggle to stay loose on the BH
Is that for the one or two hander?
This is excellent. Can you please do this for the two-handed back hand? Also, I think a loose wrist requires a loose grip but it’s never been clear to me how strong my grip should be on my ground strokes. Do you tighten your grip at the moment of contact and then release it immediately after contact? This small details are rarely addressed by coaches.
The other day, I was was hitting better by letting the tip of the racket fall to the ground as I start making my swing. Basically, get into the Pat the Dog position. Then unhinge my wrist and let the tip of the racket fall to the ground as I start driving my hips and legs. This little move seemed to take the tension out of my wrist and forearm and allowed me to produce more spin and more effortless power.
Anything that helps you feel more relaxed will help you create more effortless power
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial I'll keep working on it. It seems to help me a lot to create a bit of wrist adduction before going into extension. It seems to take the tension out of the wrist and arm and forces me to use the legs, hips and shoulders to move the racket. Creating adduction before extension also seems to naturally allow me to put more spin on the ball, as the wrist will naturally have to abduct through the point of contact. So I'm getting into the the Pat the Dog position. The creating wrist adduction but letting the tip of the racket fall to the ground a little before extending and pointing the buttcap at the ball as I go to hit it. This seemed to work wonders for my forehand last week. It felt like the first time I was able to put proper spin on the ball and hit tension free forehands. Thanks again.
I see a lot of players gripping their racket in their dominant hand between points, getting tense and fatigued over the course of the match. I try to use that time (most of the time on the court, after all) to let my hitting hand hang loose. It adds up after a couple of hours!
It’s a great way to stay relaxed for sure
Top notch!!! Could you do something like this for the OHBH?
I'd like to see a match between Simon and Karue.
👍
Gracias.
Buenos consejos técnicos !!
Muchas gracias 🙏
Great explanation, thank you.
Some coach I watched says between 0 and 10, your wrist should be at about #4 in terms of firmness. And thats for most groundstrokes. Of course, in some other situations your wrist should be softer or firmer.
Des conseils efficaces
Bravo
Awesome
Many thanks 🙏
So cool coach😊😊😊😊!!!
Thank you for video.
Do you have some specific exercises on how to achieve this? I understand the logic but doing this is another matter. Is there a series of exercises you can do to help make this "automatic"?
good stuff, thank you!
My pleasure 🙏
great video and explanation. Just curious, what type of court is that? Looks like a tennis court but there is almost no "out" space, looks really tight
It’s a wall court, perfect for filming on
Coach Simon, great lesson! Im new into tennis, not producing consistent RHS. I’m trying to loosen my forehand, however when making contact with the ball, my grip flutters, & i lose my control completely.. Does this mean I need to grip tighter when making contact? Does it naturally stiffen my wrist a bit? How do I balance this compromises? Thanks
I would ensure you have a sticky overgrip on the racket, that will reduce the movement and then play around with the grip tightness.
Often, the hand slips due to a worn out grip, or a too small grip size for your hand.
How does one play on this court with the fence so close to the lines 🤔
Amazing video, you definitely get a sub for this . Just found you
Hi Simon,
Just to clarify please, are you saying that pronation happens before or after contact? As the racket travels upward and fast with pronation I thought it should start before contact to benefit from that to create top spin.🤔
Nice
Many thanks 🙏
Should the wrist be extended back throughout contact ?
Where is the link?😊
does the round the neck finish necessary mean stiff upper mechanics? cheers
No, you can be relaxed and finish over the shoulder
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial got more head speed instantly thanks, also real top spin production from wrist snap.
I've been wanting to get into tennis lately to get out of my comfort zone and try new things. Is 15 too late to start? I don't want to go pro or anything I would just like to have something to do as a hobby and enjoy. Thanks.
No, 15 is not too late to start. It’s a great sport, singles and doubles, that you can play all the way through old age. (80’s or 90’s) You should give it a try.
@veaaa11 - 15 is a great age to get into the game. Good luck with the journey, the main thing is to have fun in the process of learning
@@dustyroot4708 Thank you so much
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial Thank you :))
One thing I’ll disagree with here. The wrist doesn’t stay in cocked back position during the contact. If wrist is loose and the player times it right the wrist will snap and meet the ball. And most coaches preach hit in front of body which I’m completely against. To achieve effortless power the contact is not too much infront, it’s actually matching the front foot. Your front foot aligns with the contact (sometimes that contact is a little ahead than the front foot) so let the ball come in a little bit if your having trouble brushing balls in the net too much.
Have to completely disagree with both things you said. Watch any slow motion clip of pros making contact. The wrist is cocked back at contact unless they’re using an extreme western grip. If I snapped my wrist prior to contact, my racket would be facing the left side of the court. And when you make contact late, you stress the wrist, elbow and shoulder joints. Increasing your risk of serious injuries
Technically I am using the semi western forehand grip, but I am feeling I am not getting a solid enough contact with the ball...do you recommend I adjust the grip?
I tend to snap my wrist, so hard to avoid it for whatever reason. It’s leading to shoulder and elbow injury. Frustrating thing is that I know I’m doing it but can’t help it. Any tips on exercises?
Exercises to improve the pronation? The drills I show in this lesson should help you feel the difference and get you started
@@TopTennisTrainingOfficial to stop snapping the wrist. I pronate fine but for whatever reason I have trouble relaxing the wrist so that the tip of the racket goes forward
What is that white string you have in your vs?
When they start paying me, I’ll promote them 🤣 until then, nobody gets promoted for free.
Where's the link for the forehand guide? :(
Here it is - www.top-tennis-training.com/forehand-guide/
Where is the pronation? My understanding is that there is not enough power simply by extending using the tricep.
Pronation occurs after contact, during the windshield wiper motion
@TopTennisTrainingOfficial Thanks, my comment was actually meant for a service clip at another channel, but TH-cam rolled over to the next one before I posted.
What’s up with that tiny court? I hope it’s just for a hitting wall. Specs aren’t up to code. 🧐
It is a wall court
🙏
Always loose wrist is the best !
👍