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Joel Figueras
Registrace 13. 02. 2010
Video
rafadelpotrorevesfrontalatrascontencion
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rafadelpotrorevesfrontalatrascontencion
Roger Federer Forehand on the APAS System YouTube
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Roger Federer Forehand on the APAS System CZcams
Good video but where’s Bill Tilden, Ellsworth Vines, Jack Kramer, Pancho Gonzales, and Roger Federer? I love the Sampras inclusion. I practiced with him just before the 1988 US Open, but we just hit short court and lots of groundstrokes. I didn’t know he was gonna become the Greatest Server of All Time!
What? No Kramer serve with stepping into the court quickly? No Pancho Gonzales with over 70% first serves in? This is an incomplete look at the progression. Becker shown was late in his career with a different motion than his early Wimbledon smashes.
With rond laver we can see Mateco in front of him. Any information about that ?
Entre rod laver et sampras/becker, on a fait un bond dans le temps.
Big rule change in 1960. Before then, the server had to keep at least one foot in contact with the ground.
Some player between Laver and Sampras (I mean between 1965 and 1995) ....? (Tanner, Mc Enroe, Becker etc.)
The Scud should have been included. Mark Philippoussis has a textbook serve. Also, John Newcombe, 3 time Wimbledon champ.
Becker should have been between Rod Laver & Pete Sampras.
and Tanner, Mc Enroe etc etc
I've been watching lots of tennis from mid 50s to late 60s. Amazing how good these guys were. I began playing in 74' and was entering USTA turnies in 76' 10 and unders. I don't remember how good players were using wood raquets until I began watching these CZcams videos.
Puissant ce squelette !
Where is Pancho Gonzales?
99 years, and the serve hasn´t really changed, except for the rule that they can´t jump. The mechanics was the same, even the today´s famous "pronation" was present there.
Beautiful
The poster should pull this off CZcams ... it is so bad. What's the point? How has the serve evolved, and who from decade to decade typifies the changes? That's what we'd like to know and see. One possible theme is that Patterson's serve in 1919 looked pretty much like today's servers - classic. Only difference is the power put behind it (i.e. falling onto the court). You stopped labeling the guys after Laver, and you showed Sampras twice (why?). And you missed Federer (why?).
Roddick
Gonzales, Newcombe, Tanner, Becker, Ivanisovic, Roddick, just to name a few. And those are only the big servers. What about the likes of McEnroe, Edberg, Borg, etc., whose serves were notable, if not for pure power. And that is before the power rackets of today with the likes of Isner and Karlovic. Today, everyone has a big serve.
He shouldn't pull it off CZcams. It is still a great video and gives us a look at the history of the serve through time. It's an informative video. I think it's excellent.
It's been four years - have you put up a better veideo yet?
QUIEN ES EL ULTIMO?
Carlos pascual romero Se llama Elver Gatiessa
I love these APAS videos they are great as learning tool. Thanks for uploading them. Do you know what would be even better? Have these 3D skeleton models from the APAS imported into some 3D Game/Graphics engine and compile them into a program/application that can run on anyone's computer with the ability to zoom, pause, rotate, change angle/perspective, etc. Or even better, run them in virtual reality with the Oculus Rift headset or Samsung Gear VR. That way one can trace, shadow and mirror the strokes or swing in real time, like having a pro standing next to you in VR.
Bill Tilden's cannonball serve was among the best. Why didn't Joel include that, I don't know. At first, I thought it was Tilden serving the ball. It was Gerald Patterson. He looked like Bill Tilden.
shikat2371 i think that roddicks serve is The best in the entire history of tennis,with sampras and rod laver.But why does everyone love years30-40 tennis??Open era is much more better!!!
i think the greatest server of all-time is roscoe tanner. he did something that NOBODY ELSE DID. he could strike the ball, while it was still on the way up, and close to its apex.
and he was clocking in the 120s and 130s with AN ALUMINUM RACKET
Yes, I thought that too
Apparently Tilden made a record service in 1931 of 263 km/h which is 163 m/h I learned that's the most powerful service ever recorded
Que video mas malo, especialmente por las lineas que le pusieron al cuerpo de roger. Se nota que no saben de tenis
AMAZING VIDEO!
Do you have anymore videos like this? Patrick is my favorite plz post more I will love u forever XD