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5 Serve Rotation Mistakes That Are Killing Your Power

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    What is up athletes?
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    In today's video, we're covering the five most common mistakes that
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    might be sapping your power when it comes to the serve.
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    This video is gonna be dedicated to one of
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    the most important aspects of power on the serve,
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    and it's also one of the most misunderstood parts as well.
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    That's right,
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    we're talking about
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    none other than
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    the thumb.
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    I'm just kidding.
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    We're talking about body rotation,
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    and until you properly learn how to actually use this action,
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    talking about loading away and rotating in,
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    chances are you're missing out on a huge potential for power on your serve.
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    So, let's get into the five common mistakes,
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    one of which you might be doing right now,
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    and let's learn how to fix it.
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    The first common mistake I see players making all
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    the time is not getting enough body rotation,
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    and this is especially if your stance is too open.
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    Getting the proper rotation away from the net
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    will be quite difficult.
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    Now I get why this happens a lot,
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    and when I was just starting out,
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    I often did this as well.
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    When we open up to the net,
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    our chest,
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    our stance,
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    we feel a greater sense of control because
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    naturally we're facing the direction we're trying to hit,
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    so hitting a basic serve is much easier.
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    But then of course we don't have enough space to rotate in and accelerate,
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    and this leads to a very arm dominant shot or over rotating at contact.
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    Now maybe you've watched a few videos,
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    maybe including ours,
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    that said
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    rotate your body more away.
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    (What was that?) (LAUGHTER)
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    And maybe listening to this advice you've closed your stance off a lot more.
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    If you did,
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    chances are you might be making common mistake number 2.
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    When we think about players who have a lot of body rotation on the serve,
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    who do we think?
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    Maybe Sampras,
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    definitely McEnroe,
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    perhaps even Federer.
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    We've all probably tried to emulate these players at one point.
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    And
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    I must admit
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    I spent about 10 years too long in the Federer copy land
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    trying to emulate every single thing he was doing,
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    including the routine.
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    And what happens when you copy these very extreme
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    stances is exactly that, it ends up being very,
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    very extreme.
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    Now, of course, this isn't necessarily incorrect,
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    it's just a lot more difficult to pull off.
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    Let me explain.
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    Federer and Sampras had some of the best serves in history,
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    and the closed stance helped them to generate more spin
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    and access greater angles.
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    But for most rec players,
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    this extreme stance often tends to just
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    lead to more difficulties with coordinating because if
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    your chest and your hips are faced all the way to the back fence here,
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    there's a much greater distance now that we have to rotate all the way in
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    if we want to reach our contact point.
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    And a lot of the times in order to do this we end up sacrificing a good swing
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    and a good contact point and this counterproductively decreases a lot of power.
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    Now by this point,
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    I know what you're probably thinking.
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    Datre,
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    this is ridiculous.
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    How am I supposed to rotate away but not rotate away too much?
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    I totally get it,
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    and this is one of the core challenges that Datre and I had on the serve as well.
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    And it wasn't until we developed this
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    crucial concept
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    that we really started to dial things in.
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    Developing an elite serve is kind of like walking a tightrope,
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    because if you lean too much on one side or the other,
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    it harms your performance and you end up falling
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    probably
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    to your death.
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    And just like that,
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    everything requires balance on the serve,
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    otherwise known as the middle path.
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    (INDISTINCT)
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    you must walk the middle path.
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    So, to solve this,
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    we first need to know that there are two main types of rotation on the serve.
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    The first is the full body rotation.
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    Like we mentioned earlier,
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    you can see some of the like Sampras doing this with the back foot offset,
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    the pelvis rotating further back,
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    and the rest of the body following,
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    the entire body rotates away further from the net.
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    Another modern player you can take a look for this is Shapovalov.
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    You can see he gets a lot of body rotation away for a pretty effective sir.
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    Now the second type of rotation is called the hip and shoulder separation,
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    and this is like the forgotten younger brother,
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    the Datre... (LAUGHTER)
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    But arguably it's a more fundamental element of the serve as well.
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    The hip and shoulder separation refers to
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    the separation angle between
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    the hips
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    and your shoulders.
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    So, imagine I've got these two rackets and this is my upper body,
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    my line of my shoulders,
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    and this is the line of my hips or my pelvis.
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    Now full body rotation is when my entire body turns away as a unit.
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    Hip and shoulder separation means my upper body is rotating further away,
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    and what happens when we do this is we actually end up creating a stretch
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    in our core that allows us to explosively snap it back in for contact.
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    Why did I do that?
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    Now to see this effectively being done,
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    you can take a look at players like Tsonga,
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    Kyrgios,
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    or Ben Shelton.
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    You can see that they don't nearly get the same
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    amount of full body rotation as somebody like Sampras,
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    but they're still able to utilize rotation as a powerful element on their serve.
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    You can see that even though they're moving their back leg toward the right,
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    which creates more of an open stance,
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    they're pulling the hitting elbow back in a way,
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    so they're getting tremendous rotation in their trunk and
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    again a lot of that hip and shoulder separation.
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    Now what I recommend this if you have mobility issues and spine issues,
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    or
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    you're 100 years old?
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    Probably not.
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    This is because the greater hip and shoulder separation angle you have,
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    the more strength
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    and mobility you're gonna need in your spine and back.
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    So, even players who are more athletic or younger,
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    I still recommend at the very least building your body up first
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    so you can develop the tolerance for that amount of load.
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    So instead,
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    as a starting point,
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    I recommend following this. For your stance,
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    if you've got a platform stance,
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    you can align your back foot roughly to the midpoint of
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    your front foot just like so about shoulder width apart.
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    Now if you have a pinpoint stance you can get a little bit closer to parallel
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    and from here get your hitting elbow in that throwing like position just like this
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    and focus on pulling your elbow back and away just like so. When you do this properly,
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    you'll notice
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    a powerful stretch in your core created again by that hip
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    and shoulder separation angle. And if you do this powerfully,
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    you'll be able to uncoil explosively into contact,
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    creating that powerful rotation you see the pros doing.
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    Like so...
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    So, try this out,
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    experiment with it,
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    and you'll notice yourself developing an effortless,
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    smooth,
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    and explosive serving motion.
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    Now after the loading phase,
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    we get into the acceleration
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    which leads us into common mistake number 3,
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    the overactive upper body.
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    This is one of the most common mistakes I see at the rec level.
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    It's where you use your upper body to initiate your swing instead of your lower body,
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    either
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    with the hitting arm,
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    which leads to tightness or a shallow racket drop.
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    Or for some players you might even be using the trunk muscles just a bit too much.
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    If you're doing this,
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    chances are you might be completely fine doing warm-up serves,
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    but the second you get into a match or you try to add more power,
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    this is when things start to feel tighter and the service box starts to shrink.
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    This is because when we're actively trying to use our arms,
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    we're actually recruiting
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    more muscle fibers throughout our arm,
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    which means that we're contracting
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    or tensing these muscles.
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    And counterintuitively when we're more tense,
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    instead of having that nice, relaxed swing,
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    we end up encountering more enforced errors and less power.
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    And this oftentimes leads us to mistake number 4,
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    over-rotation.
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    The way a lot of players start learning to serve is kind
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    of like a forehand where they use a lot of body rotation
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    because it's a rather intuitive motion to learn,
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    but oftentimes when we don't learn how to rotate the right way,
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    this leads us to common mistakes like dropping the off-arm down too soon,
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    dropping it too much,
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    or dropping it way too over to the left side.
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    And if you see yourself do any of this,
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    you'll probably notice that this off-arm is actually hindering your ability to
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    rotate and it's creating that feeling of more of a dragged slow rotation
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    feel, almost like your entire body is being pulled down by gravity.
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    Other times if you swing your off arm too far to the right,
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    there's nothing you can counterbalance with and it's gonna
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    easily cause you to over rotate into contact.
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    And this, of course, leads us to a poor contact point,
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    not allowing us to utilize as much
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    of this powerful internal shoulder rotation motion
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    and never learning to get that whip-like release
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    of the racket head through the contact.
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    And as an effort to fix this,
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    you might be falling victim to common mistake
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    number 5, trying to keep your body sideways.
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    I know,
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    I know,
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    yet another dichotomy.
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    Let me explain.
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    If the rotation of the body
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    is a tremendous power source that we can actually use,
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    we don't want to eliminate it.
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    Personally,
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    this is one of the things that caused me to suffer on my kick serve for the longest time.
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    So instead,
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    I was using these weaker movements like elbow extension
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    and wrist extension to try and just topspin the
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    ball over the net.
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    Now don't get me wrong,
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    you still don't want to over rotate on the serve because
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    that leads to a lot of problems that we mentioned earlier.
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    So, then again you might be thinking,
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    how are we supposed to rotate
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    without over-rotating?
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    According to Dr. Brian Gordon's research on high level serves,
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    he says that although there's more research required in this area,
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    the back leg extension
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    might play a major role in generating this
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    hip rotation by forcing the pelvis to turn.
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    It does this by pushing the right side of the pelvis forward.
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    In his analysis of Sampras' serve with John Yandell over at tennisplayer.net,
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    they found that Sampras is accelerating his body by leading with his hips.
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    Now if you want to check out the full article on this,
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    I'll leave a link to it in the description below.
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    Now one of the most important parts of creating power is this initial
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    push of your hips rotating as you drive your legs through the ground.
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    But after our legs actually finished driving to the ground,
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    there's actually no more ground reaction force that's propelling
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    our body and this means we're gonna naturally
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    stop our hips from continuing to rotate in,
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    which means that theoretically there should be no issues with over rotation
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    so long as you properly initiated that back hip rotation before you began.
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    So, any other problems you have with your rotation might have to
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    do more with your stance or bringing your entire off-arm around,
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    which is causing your body to sway.
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    So, next time you're on the court,
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    instead of trying to initiate that swing with the trunk and the arm,
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    try to create your acceleration by pushing hard from your back
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    hip and keep your off arm up for longer,
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    make sure that it's dropping into the correct position.
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    And lastly focus on accelerating and releasing that
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    hitting shoulder up as high as you can.
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    Now personally,
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    a good visual cue that I like to keep in my head is that
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    while I'm actually making contact hitting through the serve,
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    I'm actually still ascending.
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    Now this isn't exactly happening on the serve,
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    but it's a great visual cue to be able to keep ourselves from coming down too early.
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    And if you do this properly,
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    you'll be able to naturally
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    decelerate and you'll get that nice whip like
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    release with your hitting arm at contact.
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    As you've probably experienced,
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    the serve is innately hard.
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    There aren't very many motions that are as counterintuitive as this,
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    and a lot of the instructions that we hear are overgeneralized
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    or don't give you a full description of what's going on.
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    So for example,
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    while closing your stance off and staying sideways
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    might get you 50% of the way there,
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    if you wanna actually maximize your potential on the court,
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    it's key that you use these techniques that are backed
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    by actual biomechanics and then simplify
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    them into simpler cues and progression drills.
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    And that's exactly what we did in our five-day serve power challenge,
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    which is a series of techniques,
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    instructions,
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    and progression drills,
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    some of which you probably saw today.
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    And if you apply what we cover over the course of the challenge,
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    you're gonna start hitting the most powerful and consistent serves of your life.
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    So, join now by clicking the first link in
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    the description below and go out and train hard.
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    I will see you
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    in the next video. (MUSIC)
Title:
5 Serve Rotation Mistakes That Are Killing Your Power
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
BYU Continuing Education
Project:
SWELL-182 (BYUO)
Duration:
12:09

English subtitles

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