I read your article and I think that you made some interesting points. Your comment regards the serve being poorly understood is spot on. There is a very, very small fraction of tennis observers nowadays that understand anything beyond "MPH" or "spin rates". The serve is a long, long story. It is well over a hundred years old. There is a tremendous history about it. Many great, great servers over the years. Did I mention that it was Don Budge himself who put the "finishing" touches on my motion? I can honestly say that I had a great serve. Fifty years later players that I knew back in the day always say something about my serve. I did it with a wooden racquet. All the spins. The big flat one. Tactics. Left handed even. I know a lot about serving. I preach the "frictionless" motion. We rarely see the likes of this any longer. Roger Federer was close. I always felt that there was a little bit of his own interpretation in his initiation of the downswing and sometimes wondered if might have had some potential for development in that phase of the motion. That's the way I see it. If it isn't perfect...it's not.
I want to see frictionless motion. Perfectly lubricated motion. No hitches. No glitches. No interruptions or hesitations. I want to see perfection. I was that way with my own serve motion. I tried to grease it all along the way. I tried to let gravity dictate the path of the racquet head. I believe that I had it right. I worked very hard at it. Whenever I see pinpoint stance...I see compensatory moves. Adjustments. Imperfection. I want to fix it. I always tried to change the pinpoint server to platform.
"Federer, Djokovic, Sampras and Dimitrov are all platform servers who used spot placement serving accuracy as a weapon. In addition, they have a great tactical plan of using variety of speeds and spins to set up flat serve opportunities on first serves and set up combinations of serve plus one on both 1st and 2nd serve scenarios. However, they were not known for having the biggest power serves in the game."
I ask the student...what is power? It's rhetorical question...the answer is "control is power". We see this in life and we see it in tennis. What is control? The three elements of control are speed, spin and placement. But you must know this already, even if you haven't actually said it in so many words. Being a good doctor it wouldn't surprise me if you started making this kind of argument from know on. You see the brilliance in it. You used these words accurately enough when describing the serves of "Federer, Djokovic, Sampras and Dimitrov". You first mention "spot placement as a weapon". Excellent observation. You mention the spin and placement and the sum of it these elements define the limitations or the expansion of tactical acumen. Then you conclude that they are not known for "the biggest power serves in the game". I would contend that the Federer and Sampras were the most powerful servers during their respective careers given their ability to control their service games. These two had the biggest control of their respective repertoires in their respective eras. Not to mention the most beautiful motions that seemed to get better given any extra pressure being put on their games. The motion just got better when the chips were down. This is a characteristic that all truly great servers have. By "coincidence" both players served from platform stance...as you noted.
Djokovic is an excellent example of somewhat great serving. His ability to control his service game is done with extra emphasis on extremely good placement with subtle variation of spin. He doesn't serve the fastest ball in the game...but then again, he doesn't seem to need to. Dimitrov is not in the same class I don't believe as he has a very perceptible hitch in his backswing that I have forever wanted to take a grease gun to and iron it out. I believe that a hitch like this can come creeping into the serving psyche at the most inconvenient time...when the chips are down. Or when serving out a nerve wracking match. Not that he has a "bad" serve...but it certainly has room for improvement.
Truly when I think of power...I think of control. This is very true in the golf swing as well. It is great to be able to hit the ball a mile...but there is a very wise saying that goes "the woods are full of big drivers". Great speed comes at a price...a lack of control. In the case of the serve...pinpoint placement. What element of control is the most important? Speed, spin or placement? It's hard to say. But one thing is for certain...it is the combination of those elements in any given situation that saves the day. The variations of the elements that at the command of the given server is based on the motion and the ability of that motion to dictate speed, spin and placement.
It seems to me that over the years the platform servers have been in control of most major championships over time. Not always of course. There are pinpoint servers who have been great champions but coming up with one seems to evade me. Another thing that I wonder about is what percentage of professional players use which stance. You have made examples of Tsitsipas and Sinner in your posts. Tsitsipas has always had a lot of room for improvement in his service motion as he has an even more obvious glitch in his backswing than does Dimitrov. His fiddling around with the pinpoint stance is merely a reflection that he knows and can feel that something is not right with his motion. So he is searching. It is really a shame too because he has such huge potential left in that motion. I don't feel that changing to pinpoint is going to be the thing that will help him realize that potential. He is going to have to address that glitch in his backswing. A little tinkering with his setup and initiation of the backswing is what he needs. Sinner is an interesting example as you note he changed from platform to pinpoint. More accurately...he changed from pinpoint to platform and back to pinpoint. I noticed immediately when he changed to platform and I wrote in detain on the forum here about it. Unfortunately my observations don't get much traction with the brain trust any longer. These contributors are not very sophisticated these days in the subtleties and intricacies of the game. But when I first saw Sinner using platform my immediate thought was that he was going in the right direction and I liked what I saw. Although there was still work to do in ironing out some of the glitches.
So yeah...who cares if we agree or disagree. Who is to say who is right and who is wrong? My philosophy has always been to try and be clear. Paint a picture with words. It makes these types of discussions more interesting and entertaining. Very, very interesting article on a very interesting subject.
I ask the student...what is power? It's rhetorical question...the answer is "control is power". We see this in life and we see it in tennis. What is control? The three elements of control are speed, spin and placement. But you must know this already, even if you haven't actually said it in so many words. Being a good doctor it wouldn't surprise me if you started making this kind of argument from know on. You see the brilliance in it. You used these words accurately enough when describing the serves of "Federer, Djokovic, Sampras and Dimitrov". You first mention "spot placement as a weapon". Excellent observation. You mention the spin and placement and the sum of it these elements define the limitations or the expansion of tactical acumen. Then you conclude that they are not known for "the biggest power serves in the game". I would contend that the Federer and Sampras were the most powerful servers during their respective careers given their ability to control their service games. These two had the biggest control of their respective repertoires in their respective eras. Not to mention the most beautiful motions that seemed to get better given any extra pressure being put on their games. The motion just got better when the chips were down. This is a characteristic that all truly great servers have. By "coincidence" both players served from platform stance...as you noted.
Djokovic is an excellent example of somewhat great serving. His ability to control his service game is done with extra emphasis on extremely good placement with subtle variation of spin. He doesn't serve the fastest ball in the game...but then again, he doesn't seem to need to. Dimitrov is not in the same class I don't believe as he has a very perceptible hitch in his backswing that I have forever wanted to take a grease gun to and iron it out. I believe that a hitch like this can come creeping into the serving psyche at the most inconvenient time...when the chips are down. Or when serving out a nerve wracking match. Not that he has a "bad" serve...but it certainly has room for improvement.
Truly when I think of power...I think of control. This is very true in the golf swing as well. It is great to be able to hit the ball a mile...but there is a very wise saying that goes "the woods are full of big drivers". Great speed comes at a price...a lack of control. In the case of the serve...pinpoint placement. What element of control is the most important? Speed, spin or placement? It's hard to say. But one thing is for certain...it is the combination of those elements in any given situation that saves the day. The variations of the elements that at the command of the given server is based on the motion and the ability of that motion to dictate speed, spin and placement.
It seems to me that over the years the platform servers have been in control of most major championships over time. Not always of course. There are pinpoint servers who have been great champions but coming up with one seems to evade me. Another thing that I wonder about is what percentage of professional players use which stance. You have made examples of Tsitsipas and Sinner in your posts. Tsitsipas has always had a lot of room for improvement in his service motion as he has an even more obvious glitch in his backswing than does Dimitrov. His fiddling around with the pinpoint stance is merely a reflection that he knows and can feel that something is not right with his motion. So he is searching. It is really a shame too because he has such huge potential left in that motion. I don't feel that changing to pinpoint is going to be the thing that will help him realize that potential. He is going to have to address that glitch in his backswing. A little tinkering with his setup and initiation of the backswing is what he needs. Sinner is an interesting example as you note he changed from platform to pinpoint. More accurately...he changed from pinpoint to platform and back to pinpoint. I noticed immediately when he changed to platform and I wrote in detain on the forum here about it. Unfortunately my observations don't get much traction with the brain trust any longer. These contributors are not very sophisticated these days in the subtleties and intricacies of the game. But when I first saw Sinner using platform my immediate thought was that he was going in the right direction and I liked what I saw. Although there was still work to do in ironing out some of the glitches.
So yeah...who cares if we agree or disagree. Who is to say who is right and who is wrong? My philosophy has always been to try and be clear. Paint a picture with words. It makes these types of discussions more interesting and entertaining. Very, very interesting article on a very interesting subject.


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