Excellent tips for hitting consistent forehand shots. This is the most comprehensive rundown of the various phases of the shot including how to change the direction of the shot. Thanks a lot!
@heri1261able3 күн бұрын
Thanks Tomz. You always give me tips to increase the tennis ability.
@jimrokas852612 күн бұрын
Incredible first tip about the wrist. I always felt an instability and I just realized after all these years my wrist was straight when preparing..guess it's gonna be a game changer, thanks!
@RARA-fn3uv12 күн бұрын
youre the best coach on youtube! thank you for everything
@KherojitSingh-dk1ek5 күн бұрын
Thanks for super golden lessons sir tomz.❤
@marcom422011 күн бұрын
Today I was talking with my spouse about the wrist extension at the beginning of the FH, so this video came from heaven because it is a very visual way to keep it in the minds eye. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Wish you a wonderful week.
@JacksonDellaCasa12 күн бұрын
Tomaz, as always great work! A hall of fame for tennis coaches and you are first choice!
@feeltennis12 күн бұрын
Thank you very much!
@msf729110 күн бұрын
Thank you. The combination of upper body, arm, wrist and feet was excellent!
@MakisKorkontzelos9 күн бұрын
Dear coach, thank you very much for the valuable tips.
@stefan.josef.bartmann12 күн бұрын
impressive explanations and as well very clear demonstrations - thanks for everything! Happy to see you are back actively creating quality content
@feeltennis12 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot, and yes, have more videos on the way, stay tuned!
@gianni182711 күн бұрын
Great tips as usual, and very well explained. Thank you Tomaz!
@greetmoon12 күн бұрын
great tips as always!
@speedymr12 күн бұрын
Always the best video from Tomaz!
@dewirainey53036 күн бұрын
I had a lot of issues “feeling” the forehand and your explanations on this and other videos make so much sense as to why. Thank you for the mechanical and mental tips! Interestingly, never had these issues on backhand which seemed more intuitive for me.
@feeltennis5 күн бұрын
And thank you for the feedback!
@OneAdam12Adam12 күн бұрын
Glad that you paired up with Ian. He is a great guy.
@astropiazzolla5 күн бұрын
Great practical tips, as always. From purely the "ball's point of view", more accuracy and consistency should come when the racquet face remains in the direction of the target longer, which allows for slight variations and room for mistiming. You can see this quite clearly with slow motion replays of pros during and just after contact. At much lower levels of play, the racquet face is usually slightly open at contact (due to tight arm, less topspin swing path, etc). This means perfect timing can still result in a good flat shot, while slight changes in the angle of the racquet face can cause inaccurate results. So fundamentally changing the stroke to be more "correct" can massively improve accuracy for players at the lower levels, but of course this may be too difficult. Regardless, all these tips should help towards that goal as well as improving the timing even if hitting under the ball.
@K4R3N12 күн бұрын
Thank you Tomaz 🐐
@johnwright246011 күн бұрын
Great explanation. Thanks Tomaz.
@feeltennis11 күн бұрын
My pleasure!
@AtroXAir11 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@TenisLaMinut12 күн бұрын
One of the best! 💪👍
@miketang753312 күн бұрын
Great tennis FH tips. 👍🎾🙏
@oworren11 күн бұрын
Amazing 👍
@alexjustme198211 күн бұрын
You are doing an amazing job ! Thanks...make a video on how ro gaón consistency on serve for beginners. It drives me crazy some days i serve well,good speed and not many doble faults and other day I.m not able to put the ball in the box...
@feeltennis10 күн бұрын
Thanks for the feedback! Whatever stage you are in, whether beginner, intermediate or pro, the way to consistently serve in the service box is to find the speed and height above the net that is appropriate to your skill level. If you are not consistent, you are trying to serve faster than what you're currently capable of. Slow down and aim 2-3 feet above the net and find that speed at which the serves go in, regardless of your technique.
@상처리-v4x11 күн бұрын
Superb🎉
@ignacioechaide19788 күн бұрын
Wonderful tips as always Tomaz. I'm one of your old-time suscribers and one your many devoted followers from Spain. As you know, we have plenty of sun in Spain. Could you possibly give us some advice on how to play against the sun? I keep loosing lots of points, especially in doubles when those nasty opponents keep throwing me high balls that leave me blind as a bat. Of course I do the same to them, but that keep us even. I'd like to have an advantage. 😂. I notice professional don't seem so disturbed about that...Thank you and keep counselling!
@feeltennis7 күн бұрын
Thanks for the kind feedback! Not much you can do when you are lobbed, the ball will fly how it wants and the sun won't move. Don't try to hit a good smash, accept that your vision is compromised and either just pop the ball nicely and safely with the smash deep into the court and avoiding giving away a free point - or let the ball bounce if possible and play a groundstroke. On the serve you have an option to toss the ball differently and avoid looking into the sun. You will of course many times have to serve a slice or a topspin serve as your first serve to make the serve safer.
@ignacioechaide19787 күн бұрын
Sensible advice. Thanks a lot!
@tongfoocheong825410 күн бұрын
I watched many tennis coaches online and the best is Tomaz
@feeltennis10 күн бұрын
Much appreciated!
@ministerofjoy12 күн бұрын
Wonderful 🎉 thanks a bunch👁️🙌✨
@feeltennis12 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@joeMorgan-xd2oi4 күн бұрын
IAN , that is a great thought to have a player recognize and feel the angle and position of the racquet face. (like a sandwich )
@brucehawkinson89015 күн бұрын
So what happen to the beautiful clay court? Looks like it’s some sort of Astro turf now
@TenisLaMinut12 күн бұрын
But question : regarding the feel of the racket face with nondominant hand, how about people who stay in 2h Backhand grip in the ready position, how would you suggest to go into the ptep/take back for the forehand?
@feeltennis12 күн бұрын
Well, two options - first they should not hold the racket in 2BH position in the ready position. Djokovic is a 2H BH player and he has his hand higher up on the handle in the ready position so he can prepare well for the forehand. If he has to hit a backhand, he slides his hand down. But if the player for some reason insists on holding both hands together ready for 2H BH, then they need to slide their hand up for the forehand preparation.
@TenisLaMinut12 күн бұрын
@feeltennis thanks a lot for taking the time to answer so detailed and clear.
@UlyssesVillamin7 күн бұрын
Hi! I noticed that your racquet head doesn’t face the ground, instead, it faces your right side. Why is this?
@feeltennis6 күн бұрын
I hold an Eastern forehand grip and I am not hitting a heavy topspin. When I hit heavy balls the racket face may close a bit more, maybe up to 45 degrees. By the way, I highly discourage "tapping the dog" or intentionally facing the ground with the racket face just because some clown on KZbin says so. ;) Visualize how you want to hit the ball (height, speed, spin - kzbin.info/www/bejne/qXu3nIeedrCAg7M) and let your body naturally adjust to that.
@UlyssesVillamin6 күн бұрын
@ I also found out that teaching “pat the dog” is a stupid thing to do because it disrupts the natural swing of a player. I told my son to stop being too conscious about angling the racquet face to the ground.
@UlyssesVillamin6 күн бұрын
@ Is there any way I can contact you?
@feeltennis6 күн бұрын
@UlyssesVillamin Through my website feeltennis.net
@cesarfernandezlopez5063Күн бұрын
9 :40 WHOS THAT ? THEY ARE NOT GOATS BUT THEY LOVE TO EAT THE GRASS LIKE THE JOKER LOL < NICE LESSON < JUST JOKING< IM A JOKER TOO LOL