Felt like black was the big decider here. Insane racket head speed but had a little trouble in the beginning getting his shoulder into the ball and kept hitting the service line with his groundies. Seemed to fix it later on in the match.
I saw Arthur 4 or 5 years ago when he won the Rhodes ( Greece) Tournament he finished a lots of point at the net he was really good and we expect to see him in the ATP Tour and i think he is not very far!!!
This is awesome, you got a new subscriber! Did you meet J10S while filming this? It seems like it is the same match and your points of view are very close to each other :-D
i think just imagine these guys but a little more perfect- slightly harder balls, faster serves, better placement, more consistency- and i think you get to atp level
well arthur fery is british. but simply put college is not the best system for developing pro players. It is the safest as it can provide you with a secondary career through a degree, but as far as developing tennis players, European academies and coaches still have us beat.
Problem is mens college tennis is played on hard court, so they hit flatter and are more rewarded for hitting big than setting up the point with heavy topspin. Not sure why the better mens college players don’t go for a more spin heavy control style, if they could make that work on a hard court like most atp pros who adapt their game from clay, they could actually have an advantage going into the atp tour imo
@@ryantraniam his teammate clinched the win for the team at that time. Stanford had won regardless the results of the rest matches. So the empire stopped it. It’s a pity.
Stefan needs to let his right shoulder and arm travel underneath his chin to take advantage of the coil he initially has. He’s losing serious power by breaking the angular momentum chain too soon.
@@Fifarigged letting the right arm pass through before opening and stepping forward. Federer is the best example of this, and Rublev. Taking full advantage of the kinetic chain in order to maximize racquet head speed.
@@tr1ckster726 but dont you need to have your body uncoil using the hips and legs forst to initiate wrist lag and then let the arm pass through so the hitting shoulder is infront of the non hitting shoulder. Right?
@@Fifarigged the wrist lag isn't generated by the coiling of the hips and trunk, it's created by relaxed grip and light tension of the arm as the racquet accelerates forward. If you were sitting in a chair swinging an object, you could generate this same force principle.
@@benjaminskovbo3936 well I would call djokovic and sinner well rounded. Anyway calling this guy whatever it is that just tries to tire people out. Look up pusher Arthur is literally that
@@deathbombs you don't know anything about tennis if you're calling Arthur a pusher. You probably only payed attention to points where he was defending.
The match was halted when Arthur has 3 match points. his teammate clinched the win for the team at that time. Stanford had won regardless the results of the rest matches. So the empire stopped it.