This was great to watch because not only was I looking at my backhand for when I play to improve upon, but the way you're looking at issues with your game and looking at how to improve with it is also helping me to approach the problems with my game. Big thank you from New Mexico 🔥
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to hear that you found it useful! I’ll do another on my serve next month 🤜🤛
@twinwankel9 ай бұрын
Good video. I love using the ball machine to make technical changes because nothing beats a consistent ball and repetition helps build muscle memory. It's like having a coach hand feed you balls.
@javace798 ай бұрын
I switched from a one-handed backhand a couple years ago still struggle with wrist position and not closing the face at contact. Will give this a try. Thank you! Javier from SanFrancisco Bay Area
@jonathanchen10269 ай бұрын
2:52 in the clip before, from the aerial view, it looked like you had a continental grip with your top/left hand instead of Eastern. It looked closer to Continental causing your racket face to open up more.
@Javi_C9 ай бұрын
Thanks for showing us Ashley!
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
You’re very welcome!
@Sifu_Phatdragon7 күн бұрын
Chris from Ca, and this channel was the motivation to get me back into tennis after a couple years off.
@mindofmogli8 ай бұрын
Hey dude! Eli here, from CA. Thanks alot for all videos🙏 Very informative, and well done. Reigniting my love for tennis!
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Hey Eli, great to have you here!
@JonoLam8 ай бұрын
Awesome video, im teaching a friend at the moment for free. He has had 0 tennis experience and is quite uncoordinated as he has never played sports.Would love to see you do a series on coaching a complete beginner from ground up. We are still working on his forehand by regressing all the way to static moves and slowly incorporating different parts of the swing by fixing variables until we can progress to me feeding him a ball. Your way of fixing your own backhand reminds me immensely of the regression i've had to take to teach my friend the forehand.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
That’s great to hear!! If you haven’t seen this video yet, it will be really useful for you… kzbin.info/www/bejne/qWrChol6lrGgebMsi=67Lq0ShmjuF5_EYp
@JonoLam8 ай бұрын
@@TheTennisMentor Awesome I'll give it a watch, my mate has some trouble judging distance when I toss him slow balls, the 2nd exercise might help. He leaps into the shot too much when I toss it. So I had to fix a lot of variables before progressing.
@bdrb56138 ай бұрын
Great video Ashley, watching you all the way from Bahrain :) would love to see you make a vid about string advice for different kind of players and maybe your top 5 strings rn.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! I’ve made a couple of videos on strings with my friend Paul who is the head stringer the Championships, Wimbledon
@bmanbusee38129 ай бұрын
Great video man. This may be the tip I needed for my backhand. Just inconsistent and balls would spray everywhere. Never realizing my wrist position wasn’t in the optimal position on take back. DMV in the house! Btw, your forehand video on hand cuffs tip helped my forehand immensely! Keep em coming
@boshoffsmit14809 ай бұрын
Boshoff from South Africa. Awesome content. Helps me a lot in coaching my daughter and teaching her the correct technique early on.
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@tennisfit4027 ай бұрын
Love your instructional videos Ashley. This is really top notch training. I'm a 46 year old guy based in Greece and train regularly with semi pros and top juniors. Lately I've been trying to tweak several parts of my game and now gearing up for clay court season it's all about consistency and physicality on the court so it's vital to have a very solid technique on practically every shot as I also don't do heat very well so want to be able to compensate with good and consistent shot making.
@JovanniG6789 ай бұрын
Jovanni from US-Georgia, struggling 3.5 player and I am struggling on the backhand side, thank you for this video!!!
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Nice to meet you, I hope it helps!
@kevinreed67743 ай бұрын
Thanks for the vid! I am from Cape town, South Africa and a Tennis coach. Im making the same change but on my FH. Good luck on practising and upcoming competitions!
@josenoya-InspirationNation8 ай бұрын
Love your openness great work! Closing the strings as you come down from the draw back definitely helps👏
@krachbummerpel7078 ай бұрын
Thanks again for your content. I am going through the same process with my for- and my backhand (onehander). It helps a lot, to see and hear your advice and that even an awesome Coach and tennisplayer feels the same way as i do. It is horrific to see yourself on camara and see to have not made the changes that it felt you did. Then it‘s crucial not to be disappointed for too long and focus on the next step for aprovement. Greetings from Germany and keep it up ❤
@chipdalby59259 ай бұрын
Super helpful video! Great to focus on racket face position. Chip from San Francisco
@andradinaazevedo9 ай бұрын
Andre from Brazil. I'm a filmdirector. I used to play a lot when i was kid and teenager. And then I quit. after 15 years Im struggling to get back. love your videos. thanks
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to meet you Andre, glad you’re coming back to tennis! Being a film director is a cool job… I’m really loving video creation (at the lowest level!)
@jamieh77889 ай бұрын
Jamie from sunny Portsmouth! Great video. I’m back playing tennis having not played since my school days and I’m loving it. Your videos are a great watch and have been really helpful for me so thanks for all your hard work. Just got to try and get my game up! 😅
@SamuelJamalPope9 ай бұрын
Sam from Somerset, but living in Argentina. Love watching your videos, so well made - clear and instructive. Thanks so much!
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Somerset and Argentina!! Beautiful parts of the world!
@SamuelJamalPope9 ай бұрын
@@TheTennisMentor Agreed!
@servingaces8 ай бұрын
Yeah I tried that as well - as I have pretty much the same issue. I also tried this position and it felt so akward. I need a ball machine as soon as possible! Great Video Ashley
@charlie52048 ай бұрын
My backhand is a mess - even I improved it - and I think I have to start at an earlier point than you in your video 😞But your video gives me the motivation and good advice how I can fix it. The only I have to do now, is taking my ball machine onto the court and do it... and take some videos 🙂 Thanks a lot from Germany.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Work through the process, it may take some time but it’ll be worth it!
@TheTennisDaddy8 ай бұрын
Great video, Shane from Gold Coast Australia…I’ve just started doing similar with my ball machine and wish I had these phone cameras back when I was coaching full time years ago😅Such a great tool to have for coaching others and self analysis. I look forward to the serve video
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Great to have you Shane!
@danielmannix87779 ай бұрын
Great video Ashley appreciate the content Couple of questions I have a slinger can you Advise on settings I have a one hander anything different with theses drills thanks again 🙏
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
For the slinger settings, I like using it positioned on the T (shown) at the slowest speed, feed at 1/3 and trajectory 15ish. The drills can stay the same for a single hander.
@rawtennis59029 ай бұрын
I’ve been using SwingVision to review my technique and try to improve. The open racket face in the two handed backswing is exactly what I noticed on my weaker floatier backhands. I plan to try your progressions. No ball machine but fortunately I’ve got some kind practice partners willing to do some feeds. Also trying to hit fewer slices in point play. Nice video! Tennis at lunch today.
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Video footage is so valuable! Do you know which grips you’re using for your BH?
@rawtennis59029 ай бұрын
@@TheTennisMentor Continental/Chopper on dominant (right) and Eastern forehand on non-dominant/left. I’ll try semiwestern and laying wrist back for non-dominant like you were.
@Ormsby5048 ай бұрын
good to see a coach actually hitting the ball from back view and admitting they are still working on a few points. I'm moving from single to double backhand so its great to see takeback and swing path. Think other thing is contact point and what happens to left hand at contact? does it overtake right hand?
@adrianvillaganas42458 ай бұрын
Adrian from The Philippines here. Nice tips Trying to apply it here.
@gavinod19736 ай бұрын
Gavin, Ireland. I have a similar problem but in the opposite direction, racket too closed in the backswing. This is very useful, thanks.
@TheTennisMentor6 ай бұрын
Glad to help Gavin!
@StevenMabey-m6o8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge ❤ Steven in PHX, AZ USA
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
My pleasure, you’re in the squad now!
@lilies92518 ай бұрын
Laurean from Tokyo. Nice video, I also try to record myself as much as possible to improve technique. I noticed that on your take back, the strings are still open, then you close them. You record only from the back, maybe different angles (front, lateral) would be more informative, especially regarding the contact. And a question/suggestion: many people don't have access to a ball machine, but can easily practice at the wall. A demonstration of implementing the three steps using the wall would be interesting.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Thanks Laurean, you’re right about filming from different angles! And I like your hitting wall suggestion
@jfdube66699 ай бұрын
JF from Quebec, really appreciate your descriptions, precise and logical, hopefully I can put in practice properly, I'm a one hander, but wondering if I should move to a two hander!
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Nice to meet you… why are you considering the change?
@jfdube66699 ай бұрын
My backhand is my secret weapon, but I've developed a shoulder injury skiing and I have a hard time lifting my arm to complete my follow through.@@TheTennisMentor
@andrewbarrenger8 ай бұрын
Interesting video thanks Ashley. I'm currently trying a higher rear elbow in the take-back to tackle this same problem.. The inherent internal rotation produced closes the racket face. It feels less invasive as the wrist positions are unchanged. What are your thoughts?
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Interesting, I’ll give it a go!
@fernandoobn8 ай бұрын
Fernando from Brazil here. Thanks for your videos. I bought the Head Speed 2024 after seeing your video at Head HQ.
@pratikdas23469 ай бұрын
Hi Ashley, I'm from India but have been based in Greater London, UK for the past 2 years. I have been trying the same BH with an eastern grip and this helped a lot to visualize. Although I have played nationals in my country before, now I play in LTA grade 4/5 tournaments and apart from the weather adjustment, the technical adjustment is what I have found to be the toughest. I'm used to taking the ball early and my racquet face stays open at contact but also on the follow through my arms go straight and towards my chest, sort of jamming the ball instead of allowing it to flow all the way through to my right shoulder. Any tips on that would be awesome, again great content looking forward to more (maybe a similar video for a better and effective second serve including kick and slice?), cheers!
@Sam-uy1ym5 ай бұрын
Hey coach Sam here from Lebanon thanks for your video 🙏
@NickNeras8 ай бұрын
Ashleigh Barty style…. Slice slice and more beautiful slice on backhand 👌👌👌
@zetristan4525Ай бұрын
Let's see if Barty can win one game against the men with that... oh dear, they handled her every ball with ease.
@riivoelmat80118 ай бұрын
Hi, I’m Riivo from Estonia. You make great content 👍
@aidaortiz95298 ай бұрын
Love your videos Aida from Puerto Rico
@GhananiePhotography8 ай бұрын
watching from Accra, Ghana.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Nice to meet you!
@ferre90028 ай бұрын
It's all about extention,shb,dhb or forehand.
@oleksandryablonskyy8 ай бұрын
New subscruber here. Do you have any videos for one handed backhand? Thank
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Welcome! I have an old video on the slice here kzbin.info/www/bejne/i5XXeH-Id7aKla8si=EUAQjxJM1pfMWZsG but not the single handed backhand yet!
@AlonParis228 ай бұрын
Alon, Paris. Just wondering if you are using closed stance on 90% of your shots by design? neutral on the other 10. No open stance. Hmm. Maybe you can get more power with slightly open? Also makes me wonder if you are right eye dominant and that explains your preference for a more closed stance? Always great content. Thanks. PS happy with your Slinger?
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Good observation… I’d like to be more neutral, I should watch myself more often!
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
And yes, had the slinger for years now, don’t use it loads but good for hand feeds like this. I made a few videos on it a while back (they’re on a playlist on my channel)
@karliskalnins71878 ай бұрын
Hey. I hope you will read this one. If you want to fix your backhand, just bring your right elbow as high as possible. And start that by beginning the shot when the racquet head is down, and just drill for 40 shots, nothing else just from down up and finish the shot with right elbow up. Try it.
@codifilo8 ай бұрын
The main technical problem I see with your backhand is that the racket head is primarily horizontal during the racket drop. If you don't address this, your backhand will quickly break down during match play. You'll lack consistency, power, and control, especially against stronger players. You can see this for yourself by watching the video in slow motion. Pause the video on KZbin after the unit turn, then press the "." key to advance one frame at a time until you get to the racket drop position. The next step is to compare your racket drop to that of Djokovic, Sinner, Zverev, or Rune. You'll see their racket head is pointing mostly downwards. Pay attention to how they bend their wrists, especially the right one. In the racket drop position, the right wrist and hand should be mostly relaxed, and the left one should control the first part of the stroke. As the racket ascends to hit the ball, the right hand starts to act, adding power and solidity.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Yes, I mention in the video that I’m too tight, I need to relax my wrists a little more to encourage the drop. Mines closer to Cameron Norries 😅
@chriswedel71588 ай бұрын
The open racket face is not a problem per se tho? Am I right? It is just harder to time it when the ball comes fast at you
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
Correct
@nickherbert25918 ай бұрын
Nick, Aspley Guise UK. Great channel
@ccsdk8 ай бұрын
Chris ...from San Diego
@paulcarter36209 ай бұрын
Melbourne Australia
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to have you here
@27blanx9 ай бұрын
Move your right hand another bevel counterclockwise!
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Not a bad idea, I have tried it in the past but always come back to conti/eastern
@27blanx9 ай бұрын
@@TheTennisMentor Are you left eye dominant? If so, experiment with this; move your right hand to bevel 8 so you’re actually feeling like you’re hitting the ball more with your right palm. The path will be more vertical and you’ll create a lot of top spin. You can push off with the left hand and even let go of the left hand immediately after contact so the right hand is free to fly. It’s literally worked miracles for me. I am a 5.0+ player, no exaggeration.
@NamesAreRandom8 ай бұрын
Not sure the racket angle is the real issue, I'd work on footwork first. Shot looked wrong - tight and rotational, as opposed to relaxed and projecting forward through the ball. Looking for you to get behind that ball, seeing the racket drop as you relax your wrists, leaning in and then projecting forward and through the ball. If you look your back foot is in completely the wrong place for an optimum cross court backhand - need to step across with the left, step foward with the right and hit. You end up stepping across with the right leaving you positioned nicely to hit the left doubles corner and then instead do some amazing rotation manoeuvre to spin and hit the right corner. When you switched to hit the inside out which should be harder your feet were actually better placed (identically placed to the cross court) and it looked so much more comfortable.
@TheTennisMentor8 ай бұрын
You make excellent points. My footwork is definitely under par on my backhand and agree that my stance is too closed. Years of not playing but coaching has led me to pick up many bad habits.
@peterguerreri71438 ай бұрын
Good plan to work on the backhand before you play Johnson! Still think even with Jake Macey backhand you are going to lose :P
@koa_warrior9 ай бұрын
United States - Georgia
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Nice to meet you
@twogunsholla9 ай бұрын
Tommy from North Carolina
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to have you Tommy!
@АлександарГитарић9 ай бұрын
Greetings from Banja Luka, Republic of Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to meet you!
@danielllorca49929 ай бұрын
daniel - italy
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to meet you!
@gorankamber27869 ай бұрын
Germany
@andrewkyau5 ай бұрын
Looks like you are also not closing your racket face a little on the racket drop. Most pros do that.
@vukmajstorovic70339 ай бұрын
Serbia 🇷🇸
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
Great to have you here
@danielenzoo9 ай бұрын
To fix it you can take your left hand off!
@info7819 ай бұрын
After the ball is hit , yes.
@TheTennisMentor9 ай бұрын
😂😂 I do when I coach (as you saw on the very last shot!)