Why 99% of Tennis Pros swing this way...(Drill included)

2024 ж. 14 Нау.
100 486 Рет қаралды

Get ready to transform your one-handed backhand from a challenge to a triumph! This video will reveal the main issue holding your backhand back, plus an essential technique that will totally change the game. I'll guide you through selecting the perfect grip to boost your one-handed backhand and the leverage move you can start using to give you increased power and control.
Free Game Changer Community - www.skool.com/total-tennis-do...
Instagram: / total_tennis_domination

Пікірлер
  • I wish I'd have watched this video 30 years ago. It's everything anybody needs to know about a single hand backhand drive. It's not about mimicking any pro player but understanding the foundations, the function. Congratulations and a big thanks, Kevin!

    @comraquete@comraqueteАй бұрын
  • This video has transformed my one-handed backhand. My backhand is my favorite shot and I have been told by my coach that it's very effective and not to make any changes, so I was hesitant. However, your forehand tutorials changed my forehand to be deadly and the content of this video made a lot of sense to me, so I gave it a go. Now my backhands are so much heavier and going even deeper into the court. Brilliant! Thanks, Kev. Much appreciated. Please continue to produce these excellent videos.

    @ManjuPalam@ManjuPalamАй бұрын
  • Yes please we definitely need a tutorial of the one handed backhand from A to Z 🙏🎾

    @iSaiTek@iSaiTekАй бұрын
  • Excellent video Kevin! What I would like to see in the tutorial is how to hit backhands from the back court so that they go over to the opponent high, hard, and heavy but also how to make the ball go up and down quickly when you are very close to the net for both a one handed backhand and a two handed backhand. We love your channel. Thank you for all you do to help us be better players!

    @edreyes5381@edreyes5381Ай бұрын
  • This man knows what he is talking about. What a sensible, bright, pleasant approach to teaching how to hit a one handed backhand. Where was he when I was trying to understand this stuff back in 1975. I know he wasn't born yet. I am happy i discovered him tonight.

    @ciarraibuzz@ciarraibuzzАй бұрын
  • Thanks Kevin! I've been playing tennis for almost 30 years and knew my backhand has some technical issue. Thanks for explaining in details and make it easy to understand.

    @hyperwarrior908@hyperwarrior908Ай бұрын
  • Perfect video. I was practicing my backhand the other day hitting against a wall as a I do. I was aware that I needed to point the butt of the racquet at the ball but felt like the backhand was constricted. Then I noticed that if pulled across my body rather than swing up in front of me I had better power. What I was discovering was your abduction explanation without realizing it. This video put it together in such a succinct way for me. Also, the notion that you load the body a little on the turn to prepare for the shoulders to be in the right position during contact is something I've never heard of. Again, great explanation..

    @MarcMoresky@MarcMoreskyАй бұрын
  • Great lesson. I’d definitely like to see further tutorials about mastering the one handed backhand.

    @eyeknowzz@eyeknowzzАй бұрын
  • This was the fastest crashcourse of tennis ever. 🎾. The speed was amazing. Haha. As a person who have played tennis over 50 yrs, also competing as young, I agree that your advice is valid for one hand backhand. Mine changed to two handed backhand, but sometimes miss my one handed backhand. It was Björn Borg, who I can 'blame' my change of this key stroke. Keep up yr great work, and slow down the pace a little! Or make a bit longer vlog. You are a pro tennis coach, by far.

    @Capo51@Capo51Ай бұрын
  • This was the best backhand lesson I ever watched

    @mohammedalijeferli478@mohammedalijeferli478Ай бұрын
  • Great video Kevin!! I finally understand this shot . Thank you so much

    @felipezamorano6001@felipezamorano6001Ай бұрын
  • i was struggling w my 1 handed backhand, after watch ur video, my mind felt woww i think i got the answer of my problem

    @huynhanhtin90@huynhanhtin90Ай бұрын
  • Great Video and Yes a full tutorial on the one handed backhand from A to Z please!

    @raysurx2010@raysurx2010Ай бұрын
  • yes it was very good thanks, great explanation/presentation

    @fairman1455@fairman1455Ай бұрын
  • Awesome lesson Kevin - perfectly loaded with information w/t being too much! Congrats & thanks for sharing your knowledge.

    @gml8282@gml8282Ай бұрын
  • Wow. One of the best one handed backhand videos I have ever seen. Thank you for breaking it down like that. Taking time to go over the grip, the basic mechanics.. phenomenal.

    @andrewcoley7596@andrewcoley7596Ай бұрын
  • Best backhand lesson I've seen. Good communication

    @davidfreeman9039@davidfreeman903924 күн бұрын
  • awesome break down of the key movements. best i've seen yet!

    @Denis-vr3sh@Denis-vr3sh13 күн бұрын
  • This was the best backhand lesson I ever watched !! Thanks

    @euryphilippe8507@euryphilippe850717 күн бұрын
  • Love it Ryan an amazing reminder, always trying to make sure I finish high like the chin shoulder to shoulder you’ve talked about previously! Thanks man

    @josenoya-InspirationNation@josenoya-InspirationNationАй бұрын
  • Very good explanation!

    @Mpathi1@Mpathi1Ай бұрын
  • Excellent! You sir have a very nice backhand.

    @robertrenk7074@robertrenk7074Ай бұрын
  • You are a great teacher - thank you!

    @davejentsch824@davejentsch824Ай бұрын
  • Your training sessions were impactful I need more training on single backhand

    @irohkingsley@irohkingsley10 күн бұрын
  • Great lesson as usual! My 1HBH is solid but I'm planning to move to a 2HBH, would love a video on that.

    @theyruinedyoutubeagain@theyruinedyoutubeagainАй бұрын
    • Noted! I'll put that on the list. thanks

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
    • @@TotalTennisDomination thanks so much, you're the best! ❤

      @theyruinedyoutubeagain@theyruinedyoutubeagainАй бұрын
    • Why are you switching if you don’t mind me asking..

      @702bigron@702bigronАй бұрын
  • Agree with others, this is a game changing video for me. Thanks TTD !

    @brassedoff2437@brassedoff2437Ай бұрын
  • Great video, thank you!

    @djdiversify@djdiversify13 күн бұрын
  • Could you please do a video on how to build match confidence/mindset for rec level players? i feel that i do well in practices but as soon as i start a match, my play level sinks. really annoying.

    @mallinmall1327@mallinmall1327Ай бұрын
  • Great video Kevin! Could definitely use more! Also I'm interested in your thought on how to transition from a one handed to a two handed backhand. Having had a (flimsy) one handed for over 30 years, I haven't found a way to change.

    @guillaume_69@guillaume_69Ай бұрын
    • I think one key is making sure he use the same idea of the lever swing, but just two hands. I think one of the differences that I've been experimenting with, is having the right arm pull to create leverage position and the left hand extending through the contact and adding stability. Good luck!!

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
  • Great video!

    @seylomayivi@seylomayivi8 күн бұрын
  • Not mentioned is footwork. Right foot has to step toward sideline more than to target for power and not to open up too quickly as shown.

    @randellmiller3514@randellmiller3514Ай бұрын
  • Awesome video

    @bombasticson@bombasticsonАй бұрын
  • Tyvm & GodBless!

    @dnomdelopez1921@dnomdelopez192128 күн бұрын
  • These are really good videos. Could you please do the same thing for a two handed backhand I seem to struggle with pulling the left arm. I can’t seem to find the feeling. Thanks again.

    @miguellauandos1902@miguellauandos1902Ай бұрын
  • - Очень понятное объяснение! Благодарю! 🎾👍🤝

    @StrageSrebreniy@StrageSrebreniyАй бұрын
  • When You talk about leveraging, what kind of lever is it? Fulcrum is the shoulder joint, it's understood. Is it single arm lever? And when You talk about wrist action isn't it a forearm action?

    @maxiv8744@maxiv8744Ай бұрын
    • I don't know if I understand your question. The shoulder is the fulcrum, and the shoulder muscle provides the force to move the arm. In this video I've mostly isolated the single movement combined with rotation of the torso. Rotation of the torso starts the first portion of leverage, then shifts to the shoulder. thanks

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
    • @@TotalTennisDomination Thank you for your answer! I'll try to clarify my question. When You showed the leverage on racquet: short power arm - fulcrum - long arm, it was clear and it was very good visual material. But next explanation was not clear for me. I understand, that human arm is a single-arm lever, not a double lever ( I hope I have chosen an understandable term - english is not my native language) But why - straightened arm, horizontal abduction, shoulder muscles, 90° angle between racquet and forearm + eastern backhand grip = "leverage", and all these factors + neutral grip = "no leverage"? Grip makes that difference? Or something else? If it possible, could You please clarify it? If not - no problem. Thanks in advance!)

      @maxiv8744@maxiv8744Ай бұрын
  • Great video, Kevin! Thank you. It’s almost like pulling the racket to the ball to hit it with the buttcap. I’m thinking of designing a method to groove this correct swing. I’ll wear one of those wrist braces with a splint in it so that my wrist is immobilised in that cocked position throughout the stroke. PS: thinking about maintaining the cocked leverage position of the wrist, I’ve just discovered that there are two one handed backhand killers: wrist flexion and ulnar deviation. It’s crucial to avoid these two from happening. Thoughts, Kevin?

    @watcher687@watcher687Ай бұрын
    • I agree that flexion isn't optimal during hitting because you're using a smaller muscle, but it is necessary in situations where pros don't have time and they're not able to use their optimal swing. In these moments it's purely survival to do whatever you can to get the ball over, in my video, I focused on optimal swing where we have time to set up and swing properly without the pressures of ball, speed, spin, and power.

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
  • Brilliant, so useful, yes please, love to see further tutorials on the one hander backhand.

    @davidlutan7727@davidlutan7727Ай бұрын
  • You are an AMAZING TRAINER!!!

    @Smar-rc4ce@Smar-rc4ceАй бұрын
    • Thanks for your support!

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
  • Nice.

    @davidaronson9475@davidaronson9475Ай бұрын
  • This video transformed my one handed backhand into a two handed backhand

    @JeffreyMarciano@JeffreyMarcianoАй бұрын
  • Explain the concept of hitting the ball in front of you . If I am the baseline with my shoulder pointing to the net, where is my front ?

    @user-no3ou1jo1c@user-no3ou1jo1cАй бұрын
    • The people that comments what a great video or instruction this video is are either noobs that want to learn or people who wants to learn tennis. This video has too much information for someone to learn. Also don’t drill by dropping the ball in front of you. A beginner can make it look easy. Either have someone feed u from the other side or get a machine and feed it to you. Way different than just dropping the ball in front. I practice playing with a one hand BH and I’m not taking his advice.

      @FMD023@FMD023Ай бұрын
  • Fantastic vdo

    @jfdube6669@jfdube6669Ай бұрын
  • The grip with the "hook". Interesting... I need to try it. I was always trying to keep the rocket in the relaxed, loose way, to have more head-rocket speed resulting with more spin and more power. But yeah, control was not there ;-)

    @pawelmod3292@pawelmod329215 күн бұрын
    • and thanks for the video! You are always sharing a lot of positive energy!

      @pawelmod3292@pawelmod329215 күн бұрын
  • I call it the "metal rod position". I stick my arm straight in front of my body. At first, keep your knuckles forward like you're throwing a punch. Now slap down on your knuckles with your other hand and notice how the wrist breaks and the hand goes down. Now do the same thing but stick your arm in front of you and turn your knuckles up toward the sky. Now slap down on them as hard as you want and the wrist/hand will not budge. I call this the "metal rod position" and just think about keeping this metal rod/knuckles turned upward position the entire time throughout the swing.

    @JohnSmith-pb4ri@JohnSmith-pb4riАй бұрын
    • Wonderful! In other words ‘maintain the COCKED wrist’ throughout the stroke.

      @karadale5219@karadale5219Ай бұрын
  • oooops, you are bit early with your pic and this was already discovered.... you need to be focused on the CTM "slot entry" position. That this the key point.

    @AdvancedTennisFoundation-ph9zo@AdvancedTennisFoundation-ph9zoАй бұрын
  • 👍🎾👌

    @michaelobell7032@michaelobell7032Ай бұрын
  • Do you not think your non dominant hand plays a role in a solid backhand? From my experience it's less about pivoting correctly and more about equally throwing your left hand behind you to counter the swing so you don't over swing like you showed in the video. basically open both arms as if you're about to hug a big wall, every time you swing to keep yourself positioned correctly.

    @sn1kzZe@sn1kzZeАй бұрын
    • Absolutely does..I feel like my left hand is like the anchor holding the stored tension from my racquet arm right before I’m ready to unleash it..without that anchor, it’d be purely a one hand swing(which it’s not unless you’re actually an amputee)..with the left arm going away, I use the analogy of squeezing the shoulder blades together…but everyone resonates with different analogies

      @TheTennisDaddy@TheTennisDaddyАй бұрын
    • Mine non dominant hand plays a pretty big role. I use it to pull back on the racket a little bit before letting go in order to create extra power on the ball. It's a nice little move but I use a straight arm throughout the swing more like Thiem. I'm not sure if it works when hitting with a slightly bent arm like Federer or Wawrinka.

      @JohnSmith-pb4ri@JohnSmith-pb4riАй бұрын
    • @@JohnSmith-pb4ri I kinda do the same, I use the analogy like my left hand is the anchor holding the stored energy my coiling body is producing and there’s a slight pull with the off hand/extra shoulder turn right before my racquet drops and hand lets go

      @TheTennisDaddy@TheTennisDaddyАй бұрын
    • I think the left arm is important but more so for helping pull the racquet back during the take back and maintaining balance. The hand going back that your referring to is delayed and at contact and fully extends to counter the racquet swing on the opposite side of the body. Great question thanks.

      @TotalTennisDomination@TotalTennisDominationАй бұрын
    • @@TheTennisDaddyI would kind of equate the move with taking a plastic stick and bending it with both hands. When you bend and let go, the plastic stick will violently snap back into place. If the rest of your technique is solid, the ball comes off the racket like a rocket.

      @JohnSmith-pb4ri@JohnSmith-pb4riАй бұрын
  • I did not understand how to hold the racquet

    @user-no3ou1jo1c@user-no3ou1jo1cАй бұрын
  • Why isn’t Almagro getting the same mention as these players he has the best backhand I’ve ever seen

    @daynesymons2843@daynesymons2843Күн бұрын
  • Nice video but if you are barely getting into tennis or learning this video is wayyyy too much overload. Luckily for me, I do have knowledge of tennis and understand what he’s trying to say. Even I think it is wayyyy too much information. It’s best and simple way to learn is remember to remain sideways when you hit a one HB. Maintain an L shape wrist on contact and your follow through. DO NOT flick or manipulate your wrist. Hold the throat until it’s at your side pocket (in the slot). From there make sure your arm is straight and wrist in an L shape. So your arm and racquet should look like an L as well. If you are just learning or starting on a one HB, don’t worry about creating top spin first. Worry about your footwork, staying sideways, and timing the contact with the ball. Once you get that down with reps then you will eventually incorporate a shoulder rotation on the follow through. Practice with a ball machine or partner. Dropping a ball in front of you does nothing. It is completely different when a ball is coming at you rather than drop a ball in front of you. For the sake of not sounding like a hater, appreciate the hard work on the video but I am definitely not using these drills to practice on how to hit a one handed BH. A lot of this information can be simplified.

    @FMD023@FMD023Ай бұрын
  • Great instruction. But …. I learned a lot simply. You probably could not get away with saying this today - think 80’s Not Safe For Work lingo. (I was also a teenager at the time). I learned: -Eastern grip -Full turn And … -Slap Your Boyfriend. 😂 It worked like a charm in the 80’s because there were so many slap stick movies - at the time from the 50’s and 60’s of people getting B-tch slapped at the time. People were so used to seeing these movies of people winding up to backhand slap someone. I don’t know if that saying would work today. 😂 But the arc of the backhand follows the same path as if you B-tch slapped someone with the back of your hand. I taught people who just could never get it until I took the racket out of their hand and just told them to pretend that they were slapping someone they hated. 😂 😂 😂 People are violent. 😂 I never met anyone in 30 years who had problems with their swing after I told them that. Also, relaxing on the grip and only squeezing just before impact when I said the phrase, “Slap your - insert -boyfriend or hated person. But keeping hand relaxed on the grip and squeezing just before impact. I never met a person that did not get it after hearing that phrase. And I thought that people would need a lot of tweaking of the stroke after that basic instructional phrase, but nope … people got it right away and it stuck. The only time it needed any tweaking was MAYBE when they got to the advanced level of the game. People AUTOMATICALLY get into the leverage position when they are about to B-tch slap the most hated person in their life. Their hand automatically goes back into a leveraged position- some people may be a little timid and not give it a real big wind up and not go back that far; so I might tell them, “No, you REALLY hate this person, give it a big wind up”, and they automatically bring their hand further back and they ALWAYS follow through naturally- because you would naturally follow through if you were slapping someone. (Nothing like using people’s natural instincts). It sounds horrible and funny, but I have never had a child or adult that didn’t get it and they never slipped back and forgot the swing path after hearing it.

    @lrebsten7155@lrebsten7155Ай бұрын
  • 4:17 That is DISGUSTING! Roger's only technical deficiency, imo - that pronation on that takeback. The racquet face is pointing almost almost straight up = 70-80 degrees of pronation!! Grigor, Justine, Haas etc - the great technical exponents - would be 0 degrees at that point. Perfect simplicity.....

    @danguee1@danguee1Ай бұрын
  • Don’t waste your time. 2 hands is better.

    @hongkongtennis@hongkongtennisАй бұрын
  • Fantastic and thank U very much!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    @investorswantedchannel8059@investorswantedchannel805916 күн бұрын
  • What about Carla Suarez Navarro? For me... the most beautiful backhand in WTA. Please make analysis about her backhand for all of us. Tks for share.

    @antoniobriciomoreno7190@antoniobriciomoreno7190Ай бұрын
KZhead