cool-sites-net.com
Home :> About Us :> Add Url :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add URL
 

Recreation & Entertainment

Society & Issues

Health & Hygiene

Finance & Banking

Food & Recipe

Careers & Employment

Teens & Children

Medical Care

Garden & Home

Realty & Property

Fashion & Relationships

Automotive

Shopping Online

Outdoor & Sports

Research & Science

Politics & Government

Events & News

Education & Reference

Business & Commerce

Hotels & Travel

Indoor Games

Self Healing

Internet & Computers

Art & Culture

 

Home › Events & News › Sports News
 

Does Faster Mean Better in Tennis? (Part I)

 

Author: Sergio Cruz

The impression I have from many TV commentators and almost every tennis expert that I have read or listened to, is that they all seem to be in awe on how fast the game of tennis today is. Everyone seems convinced that players of the past played slower games and therefore could not cope with today's fast game. Is it true that power and power alone and faster means better in Tennis? I dare challenge everyone to think twice.

Remember Mike Tyson in boxing? Who drove him to the border of insanity? A boxer that had mastered an "old" punch, the jab, Evander Hollyfield.

In tennis the two most dominant male players of the last few years Pete Sampras and Roger Federer mastered the "tennis jab" the "old" backhand slice from "eons" past. When you have understood the importance of such a shot and the advantages it brings to your game you will understand why sometimes slower is better.

Like in boxing the jab is designed to open up the opponents defense to allow a KO, in other words a powerful straight right (or left if you are a left-hander). In tennis the slice backhand is to allow you the put away forehand. In many cases if you do have an excellent slice, many opponents get so frustrated that they end up making unforced errors before you even need to put the ball away! That is a bonus!

What happens when the slice is well executed? That changes dimensions in the whole game, from fast to slow, from waist or higer level shots, to low skidding balls, from not bending to getting down on your knees, from being comfortable with your racket grip to having to change gripping slightly to get under a lower ball, from using the opponents pace to having to generate it yourself and so on.

So what does a good slice backhand do for you?

- If you are in trouble it can give you more time to get back into position by floating it deep.

- It can force the opponent into giving you a slower high shot that you can put away.

- If you play it short with an angle it can bring any opponent into no man's land and allow you to hit behind them into the open court.

- Again, if you play it short with an angle it can force your opponent to have no other choice but to come to the net (where he may not want to be) from an uncomfortable position. Roger Federer has mastered it.

- Once you have displaced your opponent out of the court with a punishing stroke, you can easily surprise him with a sliced drop shot (if you disguise it well) instead of a deep ball.

- You can use it as an attack on second serves from your opponent (the so called chip and charge) and go to the net. Pete did it both with the forehand & backhand and Tim Henman executes it classically.

- Then again, from an attacking position inside the court, if you play it deep with good pace and keep it low, you can approach the net with a much higher likelyhood of winning the point with your next volley.

In almost all point situations, time and variation are crucial factors. By playing the backhand slice judiciously, you will be putting both elements in your favor.

Copyright 1999-2005 Tenniscruz.com. All rights reserved.

Author Bio:
Sergio Cruz is a well-known scripter. Sergio likes to create articles about this industry.
You can also reach this article by using: sports news, sky sports news, sports news scores, motor sports news, sports news online
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Jack The Ripper - Is This The Real Killer?
 
Ship Building, Cargo Fleets, and the Dubai Deal
 
Diego Velasquez
 
Masonic Groups Losing Ground in Present Period; Can they survive to Future Periods?
 
The Recuay Culture of Peru: [400 BC-800 AD-Ancash, Region]
 
About Spain - a Historical Day?
 
God and the Gays: Make Up Your Mind (Part 6)
 
The Anchor Holds, Tho the Sails are Torn
 
We Have Lost Another Zen View
 
RSS(Real Simple Syndication)-- EXPLAINED In Plain English
 
 
 
 
 

Avian Flu - Hoax or Threat

The Avian Flu is in the news a lot lately. The question is, is it a real threat, or a clever hoax? I ... - Charles Snyder
 

Technology Can Lose Sight of the Goal

The technology sector has its own sacred cows feeding on its potential success. For the most part, t ... - Tom Dougherty
 

Accelerating Abandoned Down Town Rebuilding in America

One thing is certain if you look at the illegal immigration and undocumented worker problems in Amer ... - Lance Winslow
 
 

Top 10 Scams for 2001

Excerpt from Internet ScamBusters (tm) The #1 Publication on Internet Fraud Scams on the Internet ar ... - Audri Lanford and Jim Lanford
 

Anti American Bloggers and the Iranian Leadership with Nuclear Weapons

It is incredible the amount of rhetoric on the Blogs over the Iranian nuclear weapons manufacturing ... - Lance Winslow
 
 
Home :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use  
Copyright © www.coolsitesnet.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.