How High Can You Go? Serve toss:

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  • stotty
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2009
    • 6634

    #31
    I must admit I remember watching Peter Flemming, and I think a guy called Brian Teacher, at Wimbledon and thinking how flat they seemed to serve. But I am relying on my memory from a long time ago, and we all know how unreliable memories can be. I guess some players can serve flatter than others for whatever reason. I guess it comes down to how low the RPM'S have to be before we term a serve flat.
    Stotty

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    • tennisdad
      Junior Member
      • Dec 2019
      • 17

      #32

      This is about as horizontal (as opposed to vertical) as I have ever seen. He just turned 13 yrs old and we were trying to get a sharp angle and dropping its short in Ad court box, so this was more experimental..
       

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      • John Yandell
        Senior Member
        • Feb 2005
        • 6883

        #33
        Stotty,
        Agreed. "Flat" is a relative term.

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        • J011yroger
          Senior Member
          • Jul 2019
          • 161

          #34
          My $0.02: When I say flat, slice, kick etc. I am taking about trajectory, not the actual amount of spin on the ball. If it goes fast and more or less straight through the air and after the bounce it's a flat serve.

          Andy Roddick's "flat" 138mph serve is going to have more RPM on it than a 3.5 player's "topspin" second serve.

          J

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          • John Yandell
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2005
            • 6883

            #35
            Jolly,
            Yep.

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            • don_budge
              Senior Member
              • Dec 2009
              • 6996

              #36
              Originally posted by johnyandell
              Stotty,
              Agreed. "Flat" is a relative term.
              Originally posted by J011yroger
              My $0.02: When I say flat, slice, kick etc. I am taking about trajectory, not the actual amount of spin on the ball. If it goes fast and more or less straight through the air and after the bounce it's a flat serve.

              Andy Roddick's "flat" 138mph serve is going to have more RPM on it than a 3.5 player's "topspin" second serve.

              J
              Excellent clarification. Per Tildin...there is no such thing as a flat ball. But in terms of trajectory there is less wiggle room to quibble.
              don_budge
              Performance Analysthttps://forum.tennisplayer.net/images/smilies/cool.png

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              • don_budge
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2009
                • 6996

                #37
                Originally posted by don_budge
                These are interesting photos and interesting data. What about the contact point inside the baseline?
                Interesting thread and interesting comments long after the original context meandered out of the discussion. So much for keeping threads on course. But two really brilliant video studies of the John McEnroe serve. Pound for pound...or rather inch for inch, one of the best serves ever in the game.

                There has been a fundamental breakdown in serving and that breakdown is due to the absence of serve and volley. McEnroe's motion is designed to propel him to the net which is what virtually every serve used to designed to do. Nowadays it is only blast and retreat behind the baseline.

                To hit a ball with less spin doesn't it make sense to toss the ball more into the court to expose the back of the ball and allow the server to stay behind the ball at contact? Brilliant videos...Old Boy.
                don_budge
                Performance Analysthttps://forum.tennisplayer.net/images/smilies/cool.png

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                • stroke
                  Senior Member
                  • Jan 2006
                  • 5156

                  #38
                  at least we don't have the ol thread killer around anymore

                  Comment

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