Movement is the base of everything we are going to do on a tennis court and most people complicate it. in this video I help make it simple and clean so that you can practice with no confusion. HAVE FUN😁
Hi Will!!! Greetings from Argentina. I find your videos very helpful, entertaining and precise. I would like to see a "one minute clinic“ on how to hit smashes the best way. Thank you very much.
Hey Will, thank you very much for your video and answer to my request, YOU ARE THE BEST 🙌. I watched your video carefully and even watched it in slow motion to fully appreciate all the movement and footwork. keep it up man 💪
This is a great video. What would you reccomend when you play a grinder or a pusher and they’re ball is slow. I feel like I stop moving my feet and it’s like I take the steps and then I just kind of wait there is that bad?
This is becoming one and only YT channel I am following and watching, and as always I click on "I Like it". As you stated "your recovery leads to your split step . . . " Although you didn't cover in details - or if you wish it is not summarized what would be the optimal foot pattern for quick recovery (shuffle, crossover or running step) I understand this is the video on Footwork Framework as an idea how to practice footwork. Excellent
I intended to do a more in depth video on different parts of footwork. But since this was a 1 minute clinic, I wanted to do it as concise as possible and then I'll go into detail in another video.🤓
Wow exactly right on the shift of weight. I taught this to my son from 4 years on who signed a NLI to play d1 tennis. It is amazing how many “professional “ coaches do not teach this .
thank you for the compliment on the teaching.i have been neglecting this aspect for a while, can u make a video (footwork for open stance backhand), great video indeed
Will, some of the best instruction online! Have you made a video dedicated to keeping your eye on the ball or however you may word it. Thanks keep it up.
Hi Coach Will, I greatly appreciate your content. Your explanations and demonstrations has been a valuable resource for improving my game. I hit double handed back hand, and balls above the waist and about shoulder height have always been a problem for me. I have little to no control and zero power when hitting those shots. Can you do a clinic that would help me correct this problem? Thank you.
This was great. I feel like I focused so much time on my upper body and never thought about my legs. I want to move better on the court and this will help. I think the trouble I have is applying what I learned. This requires some muscle memory too. What would you recommend as far as applying this to the court? How can I build that muscle memory?
Thank you for your knowledge sharing like ever. I have a question... Could you teach how can I (in double playing) read the opponent's racket and know where he/she will hit the ball to?
I learned two things by watching it on the stationary bike: 1. Move away from the ball first for the balls that are hit at the body. 2. Different split steps. I might watch it again.
Hi Will, question here. I was just wondering how you would recommend structuring points on serve in a game, so how you would recommend structuring a 30-30 point or a 15-30 point and what the differences would be between a 40-15 point (other than you can be more relaxed).