How To Hit CLEANER Shots - Watch the Ball Like Federer
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 2. 06. 2024
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The cleanest ball strikers in history - whether itâs Federer, Agassi, Nadal, or Djokovic - are known for their ability to watch and read the ball correctly and more accurately than everyone else. Itâs the 1st key to not only feeling that clean, crisp contact - but also looking effortless on-court and hitting shots that echo through the courts like gunshots. So today, youâre going to learn how to read the ball, your opponent, and his/her shots like an open book.
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Free 5-Day Serve Power Challenge ⥠racquetflex.com/serve-challenge
Weak to Winning Forehands ⥠racquetflex.com/forehand
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đ LINKS MENTIONED
Cristiano Ronaldo Dark Room Test: âą Cristiano Ronaldo - Te...
Dr. Damien LaFont Gaze Control: issuu.com/backtothezone/docs/...
â± TIMESTAMPS
0:00 The Hidden Skill of the Best Ball Strikers
1:37 The Mechanics of Vision
7:00 The Brain-Eye Connection
7:55 Step 1. Read Your Opponentâs Body
9:15 Step 2. Focus On Your Opponentâs Initial Contact
13:26 Step 3. Watch The Ballâs Flight & Bounce
17:17 Step 4. Visualize Your Contact Point
18:51 Step 5. Mastering Your Proprioception
đŠ LET'S CONNECT!
Email Me âș connect@racquetflex.com
Website âș racquetflex.com
Instagram âș / racquetflex - Sport
The science here is spot on. I am an ophthalmologist and was pleasantly surprised at this explanation and how it was articulated.
Why surprised?
@@AJfinity I think so much of tennis instruction is the blind leading the blind but this ostensibly wasn't the case
I am NOT a doctor (I don't even play one on TV!), but I too am impressed with the level of research that goes into your videos. For a bunch of goofy (okay, FUN LOVING) "kids" (I am 60), you guys really nail the science aspect. (The goofiness aspect is appreciated as well.) I love your videos, I watch every one, and I also happen to think you two are SUPER accomplished tennis players.
Oh, I forgot to mention how good your video production skills are - TOP NOTCH! Especially the use of graphics to illustrate a point. As a visual learner, this is paramount to how well I comprehend a subject. Thank you sincerely for all of the above! Plus the goofiness factor, did I mention that? Heh heh...
Ambitious! Iâm an MD and was impressed. Whomever you consulted to make this video, big thanks to them too for merging my two favorite life works. If it was just you, even more impressive. Canât wait for the next in this series.
I am a physician as well. (Family Physician)I havenât thought through this level of detail of special senses neuroanatomy since my first year of med
school. Wonderful refresher! Thank you. Really appreciate your logical strategic lesson. I thought to myself, âWhere is this guy? I would love to have him teach me.â Thank you. Jrnmd
â€your laughs đ, youâre very entertaining. Most important is i actually want to implement every tip in this video as soon as iâm back on the court! Thanks for putting this together đđđ
So well articulated. Great job and thanks for all your amazing tips
REally great video, appreciate all the work that went into this. Tons of great tips!
I just happened to come across your video, and as a Table Tennis player / coach, I can really resonate with the information shared ! Such as pre-visualising the shot and not actually looking at the ball all the way, and the proprioception where you can really differentiate between a clean shot from a not so ideal one. Always good to keep an open mind I guess, never stop learning ! Thanks for sharing đ
Beautiful work! Thank you
Excellent! Very, very informative, great production, editing and funny too. Thanks!
Excellent and helpful information. I admire the sense of humor too. Thanks much coach..
Best and complete explanation on quiet eyes and clean hitting. Excellent!
So funny and explanatory at the same time. Thank you so much.
Thank you! Great video
Awesome video guys! I love it
Excellent video!!
Thank so much the this video. It is really help me to understand how to watch the ball concepts, and your laugh make it so delightful.đ
didn't expect this great level of technical explanation ! đ. awesome
Man, love your guys' videos! Just when I thought that I didn't need someone new to follow in my learning journey, I realized that is not the case. Really liking your content! Thanks!
Great video as always. Cheers from Brazil!
Excellent guys!!!!
Fantastic, thanks
Love your videos!! đŸ đ
ThankÂŽs from Brazil! Very helpfull!
EXCEPTIONAL content, lots to absorb, this will improve my contact point. Strangely enough, yesterday, I just finished reading from the site Revolutionary Tennis on this same subject. Quiet eye, lovin it.
Thank you very much for this post.
This is one of the best videos i have seen. Keep up the good work broskis.
Sharing your exceptional and fun presentation with the "kids" I coach at my weekly pickleball clinic in a retirement center.
I love your videos. Please post more often.
You guys are not only informative, you're also funny. Thanks for sharing your talent and passion...
Bro!!! excellent video, you did a big research to make it, keep doing this because you're helping a lot of players!!!đđđ
Thanks for the kind words and support nogueraveneg!
This is so great
Brilliant content as always, so articulate as well. Kids at my local tennis club are benefiting from your content here in the UK
That's music to my ears christopherjohnson5486!
Love your video AND your goofy laugh! đ
Great vid
On 18:27, when trying to show how a courious person hits a ball your face is hilarious đ€Łđ€Ł. By the way, an excellent video đ
This guyâs entertaining to listen to. Watched the whole thing and it made a lotta sense.
such a good person, u got my sub and like keep it up
Genius content. Absolutely genius.
Apart from the great video i liked your laughter. Man your laughter is contagious :)
Great!
Have you released the video that you mentioned at the end of this one about ideal contact point?
Thx bro.
A master class!
One of the rare guys on the net who knows what he is talking about
I would like to add that the quiet eye technique allows you to keep a good balance
Ps: i like his way of laughing too
besides the helpful demo on how vision works in tennis, also enjoyed how smooth everything is in this video. The editing, writing, even the transition into ad read ;)
Thanks for the kind words Ji-Ye! I'm glad you liked it.
Thanks
You guys definitely have the best tennis coaching channel on YT. Spot on guysđ
Thanks grantdelmege2724!
Great video @Racquetflex. Totally unrelated question, but is that a Yonex VCore 97 310g youâre using? I see youâve weighted it in the throat? Anywhere else, and what are the final specs including the strings? Iâm on a journey with this racket so still searching for the right setup đ
Again! Great video! You guys are the quintessence of what makes CZcams the great equalizer! Lol last compliment (unless you guys come out with other bomb content - which you have! StillâŠ). Haha! Great work!
my fav Tennis tuber. great personality
WoW! Thank you, brothers. Keep up the good work. I hope one of us will meet you one day. We aren't giving up on this dream either. Happy Holidays.
I use the quiet eye. I don't bother to stare at the ball but look about a foot or two in front of contact. I just keep my head still. What I noticed is that I tend to mishit less if I hit more flat, that is have a more horizontal swing path. Especially when ball is on the rise. When the ball is dropping, it makes more sense to swing up on the ball. Since I play the baseline more, I tend to hit flat a lot.
I have a big flat backhand and I use Fed's topspin backhand for hitting the flat drive, the topspin drive, and I also slice drive with that finish
which also gives me sidespin. I don't always use the L Finish all the time to skim the ball when doing slice backhand. I like the Sidespin slice which looks like a normal flat drive but soon as the ball bounces it moves away from people..
Wally, you don't have a hard time keeping the ball in/hitting the net? I guess you take a little pace off the ball, yes?
Federer is left eye dominant, so watching the ball until contact on his forehand makes sense. For most of us, quiet eye works better being right eye dominant.
Exactly big thing missing in this video. The main reason why djokovic and federer have such different forehands is the difference in eye dominance.
Also think that Medvedev is left eye dominant, one of the reasons for his funky style. You cant turn your body as much during the forehand because you need to ensure you see the ball with your left eye
the tennis court where you played is very beautiful...where is the court located? Swiss?
A lot of science-based work resulted, as always, in a brilliant video, Dayday !
Thanks ruilima3234!
like me 18:18 as a beginner. btw nice smile dude đ
Sick split-step @10:43
Thanks for the very informative video. I've been working on the "Quiet eye" at contact. Could you please tell me the name/location of the court at 13:18? Bucket list vacation.
It's a beautiful tennis court indeed đ It's in a hotel called Adler Adelboden in Switzerland.
Brillant.
May we get a video regarding competition play and how to get better at it? Maybe a practice set between our favorite instructors?
Great video. Love the giggles. I did always wonder why Djokovic when he receives the service, he looks down, and up, back down and up again. Why is that? did you see this?
I think he is âtrainingâ his eyes to quickly focus onto the incoming ball before it actually happens.
If you watch some videos on baseball the coaches are goving similar advice to optimize the visualization of a fast incoming ball and improving your chance to hit it well. I think djokovic is focusing on his racket (close) and then onto the racket or ball of the opponent (far)
Gracias đȘđž
So good. "Look behind the strings"
We're glad you like it evanoscargilbert2592!
Hi Dayday: I have a question specifically about STRENGTH. Imagine that a tennis player has perfect strokes, footwork, all of it. Imagine that their serve, forehand and backhand look EXACTLY like Federer in his prime, BUT, this player has only 1/2 the muscle strength of Federer. How much would this player's serve speed and groundstroke speed be reduced?
great video! btw.. can you tell me where I can buy that uniqlo shirt you are wearing. LOL
Thanks for the awesome content. One question about contact point: I always thought that the best is at hip level, but my son's coach (he is 10, plays in junior tournaments) advices him to hit the ball at shoulder lever. Any thoughts?
At shoulder level, you can still have good control of the swing, and the advantage is you'd take the ball earlier. However, that's not easy to do if the pace is fast. And to do that effectively your foot speed needs to be fast also. This is how Federer plays lots of time, but it would be hard to emulate, even for pro players.
@@tomsd8656 thank you! yes, for a 10 year old is quite difficult, especially on the BH side
@@lilies9251 If he plays two handed BH, it's not as difficult to take the ball at shoulder level, and I think these days just about all kids were taught the two hander BH. Sampras played two hander BH until he was 14. The coach might be trying to get him comfortable taking ball at shoulder level, as that is more challenging. But you see pros do that all the time, both sides. Did you see them lifting one leg and jump to hit a high two handed BH ? Even Shapovalov did that with a one hander.
@@tomsd8656 I see, many thanks for your comments
If i'm not mistaken, Fed is left eye dominant, thats the main reason. He need to watch the ball with his left eye.
what grip do you have on that Yonex? L7? :D it look huge.
Would be funny if you were left eye dominant and your hair covered your left eye when it was long. OMG your smile at 18:17 made me lol
Great video, by the way, what is the racket you are holding? it looks beautiful!
I'm pretty sure is the Yonex Vcore Pro, latest model.
Yes, Yonex Vcore Pro 2022.
@@RacquetFlex 97 or 100 inches?
your laugh is contagious bro
I like this guyâs laughing đ
Good
Man you.. your laugh is funny as facks⊠ey hey hey hey đ and this is a very helpful video great job đ
You have the best laugh!
You have an amazing talent to present, ever thought about pursuing a presenter career besides YT?
I wish you were my tennis and science teacher
At which point would you recommend a player to consider where to place the returning shot? Is that when you also imagine how the shoot should feel like?
@Anders Riedel it depends on your positioning, how confident you are in your footwork (after the split step [always split step right before opponent contact] )at the time of shot, the tactical demand the incoming shot is putting on you (high bouncing topspin vs easy sitter without a lot of spin dynamics etc), whether you are in the middle of the baseline/they are in middle of baseline, what tactical demand did your outgoing shot put on them (strong deep heavy topspin vs pushed mid distance easy sitter). Your self-shot recognition as well as recognizing their shot making process tells you a lot about what you can do based on your skillset. Recognizing the quality of your outgoing shot can in itself be a tactic if the opponent struggles with heavy dynamics (spins) you put on the ball. You are building an idea of how and where to respond to incoming shots this entire time. Even though the explanation is huge, this is all actually happening in a short amount of time.
Cheers Anders!
Took the opportunity to watch the video again. This is high quality coaching guys. Absolutely loving it.
Great explanation and great video, perhaps you could do a follow-up video on "Five Drills To Hit Cleaner Shots" - part two?, something along those lines?
I will be applying those concepts to my Pickleball play. Those concepts would not have been easy to explain by most people. What a great job you did!
That's awesome guittadabe5214! Thanks for watching.
pickleball gay
@@yourlocalpotato7483 Hate to agree with a homophobic troll, but... yeah. Pickleball is for *_weennies_*
The sound alone makes me wanna *_HEAVE..._*
Proprioception is a very difficult skill to master. Training in calisthenics or gymnastics is a great way to learn how your body moves and learn how to sense what your body is doing
Yonex vcore pro 100, 300g?
are you guys based in Long Beach?
came here for tennis tips, got a lesson in evo biology đ
Great video guys.... You would be get double payment from CZcams for teach tennis and for make us laughs...
Bro's the type of guy to punch someone and tell the judge that atoms never touch and therefore he's innocent đ
Is he using a Yonex 105? Is the sweet spot actually bigger?
I recall this was a demo of the Yonex Vcore Pro 97. It's a great racquet and pretty forgiving!
Laugh is childish, content professional.đ
â€â€â€
Daytri with the Wii tennis pose đ
đ
@@RacquetFlex another good video! đ . I learned 3 of the eye movements you described when at the beach in Miami watching the " scenery đ" Saccadus led to Occular Extentions until finally leading to the one that needed Smooth pursuit!
17:17 wtf his left foot
Is. The quiet eye even more important at the net?
If my kid keeps breaking his strings like every week can you recommend a long lasting or advice ?
Look at Black Knight 16 by tier 1 with Durafluxx in the cross (also by Tier 1) it is a great product. However, if Daytri hits a brand new bed at 16ga it will be crap at the end of the session HAHAHAHAHA. Seriously, don't let Daytri hit your brand new strings!
Thank you, you Eddie Griffin Tennis Coach looking online friend
As an amateur player, my biggest problem is not judging the contact point within reasonable accuracy. I am not consistent with making that split second footwork adjustment that would enable me to swing freely to contact. As a result, the swing is not smooth, or the timing is off or the hit is off centered. Worst case, a combination of all three. To make it worse, I am seeing the ball till the last second to contact and I am painfully aware of how bad the shot is. When I judge the strike zone correct, the swing is clean and perfect. If only I could do it on every shot. Any drills you could suggest to use the non-dominant hand AND make the quick footwork adjustment to judge the contact zone would be hugely appreciated.
Thank you ! Looking the target while shoting was one of issue of bad shots. This video helped me a lot.
Very very very important informations in this video. But many people will prefer to watch best racquests 2023 video more than this video unfortunatelly. Populism is s*ck
18:16 BEST PART. Thank me later
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I thought dude was a tennis master, not a doctor đź
Federer's way of holding his head still and looking at the contact point after the shot, is "idiosyncratic". It is not fundamental. It is something he developed along his career, unconsciously, as an aspect of personal style. Other top players like Djokovic and Nadal don't do this, they "follow the ball". So it can't be a fundamental thing. Worse: trying to imitate Federer and holding our head still towards the contact point, can break our intuitive usage of our body and our intuitive way of looking at the ball.
What all players do though is they look at the incoming ball. And then after the shot, even Federer, they're watching where the ball goes, to prepare for the next situation, predicting what the opponent is going to do based on the trajectory of the ball. That fraction of a second in between, where Fed freezes but the others don't, is really irrelevant.
When we learn from the greats, we should focus on what they share in common, because that is likely to be fundamental. What they don't have in common, is more likely to be "idiosyncratic" that is, a matter of style.
I respectfully disagree. The Big Three all dwell on the contact more than average. Federer to an extreme - but watch slow motion footage of Nadal and Novak and you will see them fixated on the contact point every time. They never get ahead of the shot downrange until after contact. Lesser players do not do this, and rec players "intuitive" tracking is responsible for countless mysterious mishits.
The hairâŠ
Shorter vĂdeos please! All said in this 20 min could be told in 5
Love your videos. But just noticed you have the largest racket head in history.