When we start learning tennis, the coach always teaches the forehand before the backhand because it's easy before it's hard. It's hard to hit a backhand. It's also hard to choose between a one-handed backhand and a two-handed backhand, and the pros and cons of each make it feel like more of a headache. It's like there are two test papers to see which one you fit into. However, the coaches are young men who graduated from the gymnasium. They learned in school to fight back with both hands and say that the SLR is an outdated weapon. As a result, many practiced double-returns.
But the two-handed backhand is very demanding. First, one has to run into position as early as possible, the space away from the ball must be grasped, and it cannot be near or far from the point of impact. This gives students who are new to the game a headache, and some want to back off. Especially later, it requires you to kick your legs - turn your waist - fire - hit the ball - send the ball send it forward - swing with you, and so on. There's a lot to be aware of. If so, might as well learn DSLR. But it's just that some people's minds are spinning and they haven't put it into action yet.
It just so happens that some people have played ping pong before and feel that the DSLR grip is similar to the ping pong grip. Besides, Li Na also said that tennis is table tennis played on the ground. So these ex-table tennis players practiced DSLR and taught themselves because no one taught them. There's always a lot of laughter and giggles on these tennis courts in the unheard of place of practicing DSLR, because there's a lot of spectacle there and the atmosphere is relaxed and lively. And the people over there following the instructor to learn double reverse feel tired and worried, so they might as well just learn the SLR. Slowly people would pass by. In the end, the students learning single reverse greatly outnumbered those learning double reverse, making the coach lose his temper for a moment.
But the ones who stuck it out in the beginning are the double reverse turn players who are now active in these studios. They are skillful in their movements, have a solid foundation, and are already teaching apprentices. And accordingly, there aren't many people who whack one-handed like a model, and only a few who strictly follow tennis textbooks, with no shortcuts. There is a saying:Single-handed movements are played in a dashing and stretching manner, and bad movements are particularly ugly. Because in these tennis courts, the players are all amateurs and are used to each other, so it doesn't matter. Then someone discovered the problem and tried to recorrect it, and it was much harder to do so than when it was a blank sheet of paper. I had to accept my fate. I'm an amateur anyway and no one gets fined for playing.
Looking more closely, you can see that some people hitting the ball with a DSLR aren't looking sideways on the court, literally facing the net like a table tennis player. If you don't clap your hands, you don't help. You're just propped up on the side. It's all about holding hands, swinging backward and then forward. Sweep it across like a ping pong backhand shot. The tennis ball and racket weigh many times as much as the ping pong ball and racket. How do you hit the ball without the strength to turn your back and shoulders? You can only bounce the ball over the net, still with skillful practice, but what about ball speed? That movement is like the big mom dancing in the square dance, but she is holding a colorful fan.