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@sebastiandomagala923311 сағат бұрын
Wait a second... I can rember you telling to not pass instantly, but to play to the opponent's feet. And now "the best opportunity to pass is when they approach". Now what?
@2MinuteTennis11 сағат бұрын
Seems contradictory… doesn’t it? But it’s not. I’ll use an analogy. Let’s say you go to your doctor and they say “Sebastian, you should avoid drinking alcohol. It’s not good for your body.” You say, “but doc, I’m going out with the friends this weekend and I REALLY want to have fun and enjoy myself. What can I drink?” The doctor will look at you and say,”well, I’d rather you not, but, if you’re going to drink, stick to red wine.” I’d rather you just hit right to them and use the two shot passing shot strategy. But, I also know people love hitting passing shots. So, the cross court pass is really only effective when your opponent is approaching bc they’re far enough back that you can dip the shot past them. The player in the video went for that shot, so I explained why, if you’re gonna hit a pass (if you’re gonna drink) why the cross court pass needs to be hit then and only then (why you need to stick to red wine). Ultimately, forget about passing on the approach. It’s not the highest % play. But, if you love cross court passing shot, and really want to hit one bc it’s so much fun, then your best chance to go for one is off of their approach. Hope that helps. You got this!
@sebastiandomagala923310 сағат бұрын
@@2MinuteTennis Doesn't need to help me. I know what to do if somebody is trying to volley against me. When the approach shot is actually good enough to win the point already, I am looking for my opponent's feet or low orbit. Sometimes I try to pull off the "all or nothing" shot, which more often than not works. But when I was able to force him to the net or his attack is weak, then it's all in. The analogy to red wine was nice.
@gdwlaw554915 сағат бұрын
How many families in the condo behind….oh, it’s a house 😮
@2MinuteTennis11 сағат бұрын
Thanks for watching my video!
@InStraightSets23 сағат бұрын
Pros need to keep teaching this shot.
@chennis134Күн бұрын
I've lost so many S&V points since I was always sprinting towards the net without a split step. Thanks
@2MinuteTennisКүн бұрын
This will help you a lot. Thanks!
@Esprits4sКүн бұрын
test
@Esprits4sКүн бұрын
So true! It seems obvious, but somehow it isn't. I've been working on this myself lately as I was struggling against higher-level players with deep high-paced returns. I was standing in place after my serve instead of recovering. I think the reason the bad habit developed is that the lower-level players I more frequently played with rarely punished me with deep returns. Regardless, I still catch myself doing this unless I focus on correcting. Muscle memory has not set in yet, but I've definitely noticed the difference when I recover back behind the baseline.
@yuurishibuya4797Күн бұрын
Love your explanation. They are the best ones out in the world. And they are reaching everyone.
@pakchu2Күн бұрын
I’m glad you pointed this out. I actually think this is one of the main reasons rec players are 50/50 when it comes to holding serve
@sebastiansantos5561Күн бұрын
Which forehand grip does Dimitrov use?¿
@alexguitarwatson3215Күн бұрын
Pity that you have not shown how YOU hit a real serve with the technique you explained in great detail. This would add credibility that your technique is viable…
@camlendrim7609Күн бұрын
I certainly have tried for as long time but shoulder arthritis limits both internal and external shoulder rotation so I don’t have much pop.
@alexguitarwatson3215Күн бұрын
I just wonder if anyone has practice those elaborate serve instructions on the court? If so how did it go?
@2MinuteTennisКүн бұрын
Get the Proton Ball Machine with FREE shipping: www.hydrogensports.com/shipping-code?aff=2 Grab The Singles Playbook: fuzzyyellowballs.samcart.com/referral/CtLFSimy/IWxHYpZnDv9qw1Yu Get a TopspinPro: topspinpro.com/ref/2minutetennis/ Get the SwingVision App: swing.vision/r/2minutetennis If you need an attorney, follow WinBigLaw on KZbin youtube.com/@winbiglaw?si=OwxMlNgiOPf-rrAY and IG instagram.com/winbiglaw_?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
@protsuebsanguan3239Күн бұрын
Excellent
@bajovujovic2004Күн бұрын
So right about the leg drag. 👍🏻
@SS-ht2fv2 күн бұрын
One of the most useful video about tennis strategy on the entire Internet. Thank you 🙏🏻
@davspa62 күн бұрын
In the beginning, when the two Air Force guys are at the net, and the USC people are one up and one back, should the USC net player have moved back instead of staying where he was, to make it a more defensive position?
@maikelalefceolin55952 күн бұрын
I prefer Holger's Forehand lol
@laurakiersz30672 күн бұрын
Fantastic video thank you!
@shengenlin89582 күн бұрын
i see a little of andy roddick in his trophy position.
@krolldavid2 күн бұрын
Djokovic makes it look so easy! 😅
@mikebikekite12 күн бұрын
If I miss a smash like that then I'd always say the sun was in my eyes. It doesn't matter where the sun was.
@wkozwkoz62552 күн бұрын
it wasn't an easy overhead at all.. very high lob.. and the sun ...
@enkei102 күн бұрын
I've greatly enjoyed and appreciate the tennis videos for the past few years! But I'll see you in the pickleball courts. Let's go cowboys!!
@andrewlilico22182 күн бұрын
I'd love to be able to hit a forehand. Four years playing almost every day and alas I'm no closer than the day I started. I'll try some of the tips here to see if they help. Thanks a lot.
@kk-qc5bx2 күн бұрын
First off, the partner at the net could have easily poached the return from the get-go. He seems passive throughout, but partner relationships are complicated. You make excellent points in your video though.
@bournejason662 күн бұрын
Nah… the server was playing serve &volley. And the return was right into server’s forehand volley. It was a correct play
@kk-qc5bx2 күн бұрын
@@bournejason66 No shit the server was serving and volleying. Been playing tennis for 50 years and a coach for many of those years. Agree to disagree. Carry on.
@davidwatkins801622 сағат бұрын
1) Returner should have bounced the lob because of sun? 2) Servers partner stunted toward center and was moving back at time of of return to cover line.
@kk-qc5bx19 сағат бұрын
@@davidwatkins8016 Aggressive play no matter what the conditions are the way to win.
@ql36702 күн бұрын
The famous pusher, MEP, actually uses this tactic (moving his opponents forward and backward) a lot. So, is he the pusher, or are his opponents pushers? 😅
@2MinuteTennis2 күн бұрын
Get the Proton Ball Machine with FREE shipping: www.hydrogensports.com/shipping-code?aff=2 Grab The Singles Playbook: fuzzyyellowballs.samcart.com/referral/CtLFSimy/IWxHYpZnDv9qw1Yu Get a TopspinPro: topspinpro.com/ref/2minutetennis/ Get the SwingVision App: swing.vision/r/2minutetennis If you need an attorney, follow WinBigLaw on KZbin youtube.com/@winbiglaw?si=OwxMlNgiOPf-rrAY and IG instagram.com/winbiglaw_?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
@marktace12 күн бұрын
I know you are focusing on racquet face down and picked the images you did to show that, but you are not showing them at the same point in their swings. Djokovic’s shoulders have already begun to open while Trey’s shoulders are still square. You should also show where Djokovic’s racquet is when he finishes his backswing for an apples to apples comparison. Djokovic turns his shoulders much more and dips the racquet pretty aggressively. If Trey does something closer to that the closed racquet face “should” happen automatically. He shouldn’t wrap around like Venus Williams but he should get the shoulders turned and the racquet around and dipped more than he does.
@2MinuteTennis2 күн бұрын
I agree with everything you just wrote
@ajollypanda41752 күн бұрын
There is so,something nole at the very least appears to be doing with his left wrist. It doesn’t stay bent, and in fact it seems like he scoops it a bit….maybe this is to angle the strings upwards after or right after contact to get more height in the ball, but i feel like thats an important part of his backhand. What do you think?
@BeforeandAfterTennis3 күн бұрын
This is awesome! I made a similar video a while back but also recommended that @winners-only get his racket more on the inside. Good stuff kzbin.info/www/bejne/jn-mZnWXgr6Uj6c
@Winners-Only3 күн бұрын
lets get to work!
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
You got this, Trey!
@pedroV20033 күн бұрын
Nothing about this swing looks 'old school' to me. I guess I am older than I thought. I don't play anymore and I was only ever a casual player but all the looping IMO just gives the casual player more opportunities to screw something up. To me old school means simplicity of motion. Closed stance, straight back and slightly upwards on the ball. I am clearly out of touch but if these two are hitting 'old school' I would like an example of the modern forehand because these all look like modern swings to me. Please note I am not being critical, I simply do not understand how this is old school.
@giuseppetripodi22993 күн бұрын
Great Tips
@patriciomora96633 күн бұрын
That is the Roddick serve motion!
@Rabit4373 күн бұрын
Could I be because of treys backhand grip in particular? Maybe it’s too open?
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Nah. Grips look good. He needs to manually turn the racket closed.
@brunocarneiro1073 күн бұрын
Excellent video! I feel that focusing on body and hand position before impact and when finishing, it really helps. The "path" of the racket head becomes more natural when I focus on the start and the finish of the stroke, instead of focusing on the entire path.
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
That’s awesome to hear. Thanks!!!
@delusion78813 күн бұрын
I struggled to get my backhand to do anything but flat too. I'll try this when I played
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Tilting strings down and swinging low to high (hands higher than head) is the key to hitting topspin. Just be sure to aim high over the net.
@ccw393 күн бұрын
Love these side by side videos! More so than the ones where you demonstrate the technique yourself, these side-by-side ones really help me to understand mechanics even better and how to improve my own strokes!
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
So glad to hear that! Thanks for watching!
@VintageSecure3 күн бұрын
Would we be able to Reverse this and apply samething to our forehands?
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Yes. This same thing works on the forehand for consistent topspin as well. Thanks!
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Get the Proton Ball Machine with FREE shipping: www.hydrogensports.com/shipping-code?aff=2 Grab The Singles Playbook: fuzzyyellowballs.samcart.com/referral/CtLFSimy/IWxHYpZnDv9qw1Yu Get a TopspinPro: topspinpro.com/ref/2minutetennis/ Get the SwingVision App: swing.vision/r/2minutetennis If you need an attorney, follow WinBigLaw on KZbin youtube.com/@winbiglaw?si=OwxMlNgiOPf-rrAY and IG instagram.com/winbiglaw_?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
@DuongNguyen-gg3uc3 күн бұрын
You are totally wrong. However, it is an okay technique for non-professional tennis hackers. If this style is presented to Sampras, Federer, McEnroe, Rafter, Krajicek or the Bryan twin, your head will be the face of the racket and swollen (they will knock the racket out of your hand when they drive the ball left then right then you will end up eating the ball). Serena can get away with it because she is not a true serve and volleyer, and she used two hand backhand volley to lift the ball up when it is low. Your analogy on changing grips from the baseline is not very good or bright due to the reaction time between the baseline and the net. Professional players just became dumber when viewing this video. Consider on researching and collaborating with professionals on the volleying technique before providing your judgement. This is where bad habits start.
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Hahahahhahahab
@vincentryanx57843 күн бұрын
🎾🎾🎾🎾🎾
@user-pe1ur2yt1k3 күн бұрын
Thank you Ryan your lessons helped me to change my game completely so happy
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
Happy to hear that !
@user-pe1ur2yt1k3 күн бұрын
Thank you Ryan ❤
@baratf32783 күн бұрын
Tsisipas backhand
@TheXxmmgg3 күн бұрын
I tried this in tennis today. I was at the net (deuce side). The opposite add player got me down the line. It was this EXACT situation
@2MinuteTennis3 күн бұрын
So what did you do from that point forward in that situation?