Posted on June 11, 2011 at 9:30am 0 Comments 0 Likes
Many players have experimented with additional weight added to their racquet yor years. You can try different methods from lead tape to other types of weight attached to the racquet in different areas.
The main thing to remember is the positioning of the weight. Try to keep the racquet balance point as close to center as possible. Another very important part to adding weight to your racquet is to build strength in your tennis muscles so that you can maximize the benefits of…
ContinuePosted on June 10, 2011 at 8:30pm 0 Comments 0 Likes
I hope many of you have seen our new TV commercial on Tennis Channel or ESPN News over the past week. Many of us cant watch much TV except maybe on the weekend and it may be hard to catch it. I have only seen it twice myself. Anyway, This is a link to the web page and the commercial. www.ptwinsock.com . Please check it out and order if you can. Every sell counts to get more air time. The commercial will be running until wednesday. Thanks for your…
ContinuePosted on April 17, 2009 at 9:30pm 0 Comments 0 Likes
© 2024 Created by Mark / The Mayor. Powered by
Comment Wall (20 comments)
You need to be a member of Tennisopolis : Tennis Social Network to add comments!
Join Tennisopolis : Tennis Social Network
CoachVtennis Approved!
Do you have a twitter account, Bill? I want to tweet my review again and link you. M
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/28086099
why not? Vote everyday!
Thanks Bro!
Will do! I'm actually a member of Summit. Thanks!
Bill, I just found this cool quote from the Sampras autobiography and thought maybe you could use this:
When I started playing, it was still the wooden-racket era, and Robert [Lansdorp] taught me to hit properly. A few years later, technology would transform the basic tennis racket, and eventually it would be easier for everyone to develop a weapon. But I shaped mine the hard way. Some of the things we did were very basic. Robert would open his racket cover--back then, it was just a soft, zippered vinyl case that covered the racket head down to the throat--put his keys inside of it, and close it back up on the head of the racket. (Robert always had about forty keys, so his key ring was heavy as an anvil.) Then I would practice the forehand stroke with the weighted racket. For a little kid, that was tough, but it taught me to drive through the ball. With Robert, it was all about the sweet spot and driving through the ball. There was no secret technique in Lansdorp's repertoire. His big thing was repetition, which had a critical side effect: it taught extreme stroking discipline.
Hey Great Stuff I have seen this before. Got Any Samples for me to Resale here in Atlanta and a Couple for myself. Thanks
CoachV
View All Comments