Tennis: animations

The one-handed backhand is increasingly rare on professional tours. Junior academies default to teaching two-handers. Yet Federer's backhand won 20 Grand Slams. Wawrinka's won three. Dimitrov and Tsitsipas have built careers around theirs.

Is the one-hander an anachronism or a secret weapon?

The Debate: One vs Two Hands

Arguments for the two-handed backhand:

Easier to learn: Two hands provide more stability and control, especially for younger players.

Return advantage: Compact preparation helps handle fast serves.

High ball handling: Two hands manage shoulder-height balls more easily.

Arguments for the one-handed backhand:

Greater reach: One hand extends further, especially on wide balls.

Natural slice: The one-hander naturally incorporates slice, adding variety.

Net play advantage: One-handed players typically transition more smoothly to volleys.

Tactical unpredictability: The disguise between topspin and slice creates uncertainty.

Technical Foundations

The one-handed backhand requires specific technique:

Grip: Eastern backhand or slightly more extreme. The grip position enables a vertical racket face at contact.

Shoulder turn: More pronounced than a two-hander. The hitting shoulder turns back fully, loading rotation.

Non-hitting arm: Extends back for balance and helps initiate rotation. Critical for timing and power.

Contact point: Further in front than a two-hander. Early preparation is essential.

Follow through: Over the shoulder for topspin, across the body for slice.

The Topspin One-Hander

Generating topspin with one hand:

Racket drop: The racket drops below the ball during preparation, creating an upward swing path.

Wrist action: The wrist rolls over through contact, brushing up the back of the ball.

Leg drive: Power comes from the legs driving upward. The arm alone produces weak shots.

Full finish: The follow-through goes up and over the opposite shoulder.

The Slice Backhand

Every one-hander needs a reliable slice:

Preparation: Racket high, roughly ear height. Different from topspin preparation.

Swing path: High to low, carving under the ball.

Contact: Slightly later than topspin, with an open racket face.

Uses: Approach shots, defensive retrievals, changing pace, staying in points.

Handling High Balls

The traditional weakness of one-handers:

Early recognition: Identify high balls early and take them on the rise when possible.

Position adjustment: Move further back to let high balls drop to comfortable height.

Slice option: A high backhand slice, while defensive, is safer than a struggling drive.

Run around: When possible, move to hit a forehand instead.

Development Pathway

Should you teach the one-hander?

Physical requirements: One-handers require more core strength and timing. Very young players often lack both.

Natural preference: Some players naturally gravitate to one hand. Forcing a two-hander on a natural one-hander can backfire.

Long-term view: One-handers take longer to develop but may have higher ceilings for certain player profiles.

Playing style: If a player naturally gravitates to net play and variety, the one-hander fits better than for a pure baseliner.

Practice Priorities

Timing drills: The one-hander is unforgiving of timing errors. Repetition builds the precise timing required.

Footwork emphasis: Good preparation position is even more critical for one-handers.

Slice development: The slice should be as reliable as the drive. Practice both equally.

High ball work: Specifically practice handling high bounces - the known vulnerability.

Key Coaching Points

  • The one-handed backhand remains viable at all levels when well-executed
  • Technical foundations - grip, shoulder turn, contact point - are critical
  • A reliable slice backhand is essential, not optional
  • High balls require specific strategies and practice
  • Player profile and natural preference should guide the choice

Drills for Backhand Development

VIEW ALL BACKHAND DRILLS

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animations ANSWERS
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How do I draw drills and make them move in animation?

How do I draw drills and make them move in animation?

TN1987 Coach, Sweden

How do I share videos and drills I create with other coaches?

I have created lots of plays, sketches and animations etc and I have them in a folder and I would like other coaches I work with to be able to access them. How can I share folders

Steven Portplan Coach, England

What do I get with free membership?

Archived User Coach

Can I sketch over a diagram?

Archived User Coach

How can I create animations?

Steven Portplan Coach, England

Cannot see all animation

I have created hockey animations but when I view them/share them, some of the play is outside of the screen and for others it is zoomed out quite far. Is there any way to fix this? Asked using Sportplan on Mobile

Matthew Lappin Coach, England

Is there anyway to download animations for a powerpoint.

I am aiming to use the animations I have created for a coaching presentation and therefore it would be great if I could attach the animation in the powerpoint directly. (I am on a MacBook so using Keynote however this shouldn't make a great difference).Thanks

Joshua Newbold Coach, England

recent update and now i cant open my animations

why can't I open my animated drills

Karl Flinn Coach, England

Refund

i subsribe to pro and i can not edit or share my animations. can i have my $30 back as i feel you have not provided what you are offering!

Brad Healy Coach, New Zealand

How edit a drill

I can't edit my saved drill. In the folder section, I clicked my drill and then clicked edit option but I can't edit the animation.Thanks

Martin Bouhier Coach, Argentina

Editing Animations

How do I edit an animation that I have saved into my folders? I can't seem to find out how.

Ioan Coach, England

how do i edit an animation

how do i edit an animation?

Coach, United Kingdom

Is there a tutorial on creating animations?

Is there a tutorial on creating animations?

Jason Madvig Coach, United States of America

How can I create animations? |...

Steven Portplan Coach, England

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