Starting grip in ready position

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  • gsheiner
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2005
    • 143

    #1

    Starting grip in ready position

    IS there any pattern to what grips two handers guys use when they return to the ready position in a rally situation?

    From looking at Djokovic and Nalbandian, I think they go to a continental grip leaning to the backhand. This allows them to go to the two handed backhand grip without much movement in the right wrist. They seem just to have to angle the racket face down and slide the left hand down the racket.

    I know that John has written about the neutral grip that guys use to return serve. Do they also use a neutral grip ( continental) in the rally ready position?

    Does anybody have students who stay in the semiwestern forehand grip and then have difficulty getting into an appropriate backhand grip when faced with fast balls?
  • uspta146749877
    Guest
    • Jun 2007
    • 827

    #2
    Ready position



    of some interest

    Comment

    • gsheiner
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2005
      • 143

      #3
      Very relevant. Thanks.

      It shows Agassi with a continental grip in his right hand. IS this the most common pattern on the tour?

      Comment

      • uspta146749877
        Guest
        • Jun 2007
        • 827

        #4
        Ferraro and others

        Gsheiner,

        please see

        Ferraro is more Eastern forehand,I believe.
        Please see THE BEGINNING of THE VIDEO.

        Another example:
        Safin
        #galleria{ width: 660px; height: 690px; background: white; padding-top: 50px } Galleria.loadTheme(‘https://www.tennisplayer.net/includes/galleria/themes/twelve/galleria/themes/twelve/galleria.twelve.min.js’); Galleria.configure({ transition: ‘fade’, imageCrop: false, autoplay: 3500, minScaleRatio: 0, maxScaleRation: 0, thumbnails: “numbers” }); Galleria.run(‘#galleria’);

        does NOT look very continental.

        Kiefer



        Players born on a red clay tend to believe that they have a lot of time to switch to a backhand grip
        so very often they start with more eastern forehand.
        Whether it is efficient,I do NOT know.

        I believe that playing a quick indoor surface almost everybody has a continental in a ready position.

        Sometimes a grip depends on WHAT A PREVIOUS SHOT was plus an element of antcipation.

        It happens with juniors too.I am NOT sure whether a coach should change or NOT
        when a player at a baseline.
        regards,
        julian
        Last edited by uspta146749877; 01-04-2009, 04:33 PM.

        Comment

        • gsheiner
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2005
          • 143

          #5
          Great answer --thanks.

          Comment

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