Interactive Forum November 2021: Daniil Medvedev Forehand

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  • John Yandell
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2005
    • 6883

    #1

    Interactive Forum November 2021: Daniil Medvedev Forehand

    Daniil Medvedev Forehand

    Daniil Medvedev is the reigning U.S. Open champ. A while ago we put up some you tube video of his forehand (Click Here), but here is the real deal in high speed video.

    I am sharing my thoughts in a separate article this month (Click Here.) But take a look and tell us what you see in the Forum.

    Last edited by John Yandell; 11-01-2021, 05:04 PM.
  • bman
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2010
    • 171

    #2
    Well, he's the second best player in the world, so what do we know?

    Comment

    • John Yandell
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2005
      • 6883

      #3
      Bat,
      Quite true.

      Comment

      • abc0045
        Junior Member
        • Apr 2016
        • 3

        #4
        Whatever works works

        Comment

        • John Yandell
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2005
          • 6883

          #5
          This is true

          Comment

          • klacr
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 2900

            #6
            Medvedev is a unique case. His aesthetics aren't as appealing as Federer or Dimitrov, his left arm stretch is not full or complete, his backswing is larger than normal, his extension shorter than normal...but the tennis ball doesnt know this. He has 1 grand slam title more than all of us combined and is #2 in the world. As long as he knows how to hit it, I think he's doing just fine. The moment of truth in strokes is his contact point. As John mentions it is appropriate for his grip structure.

            One thing I find interesting is his exceptional timing and focus on the ball. Notice his head position at contact and after the ball has left his strings and he has begun the extension. His head is still down watching the contact. If the rest of his stroke may be lacking appeal, this part seems to be a nice model for others to emulate.

            Important to separate the style from the fundamentals. Medvedev moves like a gazelle, has elasticity beyond what seems human and has a very high tennis IQ. Provide any player these three things and I'm sure they will figure out the rest as they see fit.

            Kyle LaCroix USPTA, PTR
            Delray Beach
            SETS Consulting
            http://www.setsconsult.org

            Comment

            • stotty
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2009
              • 6627

              #7
              Originally posted by klacr
              Medvedev is a unique case. His aesthetics aren't as appealing as Federer or Dimitrov, his left arm stretch is not full or complete, his backswing is larger than normal, his extension shorter than normal...but the tennis ball doesnt know this. He has 1 grand slam title more than all of us combined and is #2 in the world. As long as he knows how to hit it, I think he's doing just fine. The moment of truth in strokes is his contact point. As John mentions it is appropriate for his grip structure.

              One thing I find interesting is his exceptional timing and focus on the ball. Notice his head position at contact and after the ball has left his strings and he has begun the extension. His head is still down watching the contact. If the rest of his stroke may be lacking appeal, this part seems to be a nice model for others to emulate.

              Important to separate the style from the fundamentals. Medvedev moves like a gazelle, has elasticity beyond what seems human and has a very high tennis IQ. Provide any player these three things and I'm sure they will figure out the rest as they see fit.

              Kyle LaCroix USPTA, PTR
              Delray Beach
              SETS Consulting
              http://www.setsconsult.org
              A very accurate analysis and summary. Just when the technicians think they've nailed the optimum way to play, along comes an anomaly to put the spanner in the works.
              Stotty

              Comment

              • tobinlim
                Junior Member
                • Oct 2016
                • 5

                #8
                His high take-back reminds me of a Delpo melded with a WTA-style forehand. I think he hits real loose and generates a lot of racquet head speed that results in his hitting arm consistently wrapping around his left shoulder. His style is unique but not necessarily "unattractive" IMO. The man is destined to be Djokovic 2.0.

                Comment

                • ejkantor
                  Junior Member
                  • Apr 2011
                  • 6

                  #9
                  Well, its been a VERY long time since I've interacted here. Everything everyone has written so far is on point. One thing not talked about that I see is the massive lag in the wrist followed by the wrist snap forward ever so quickly before contact. Looks to me like a lot energy, power, spin, all of the above happens in a thousands of a second when he sort of throws the racket head into the ball. Maybe this why he's able to generate the power and the spin without the longer follow throughs all us mortals have to do. Just a thought.

                  Comment

                  • stroke
                    Senior Member
                    • Jan 2006
                    • 5156

                    #10
                    Originally posted by ejkantor
                    Well, its been a VERY long time since I've interacted here. Everything everyone has written so far is on point. One thing not talked about that I see is the massive lag in the wrist followed by the wrist snap forward ever so quickly before contact. Looks to me like a lot energy, power, spin, all of the above happens in a thousands of a second when he sort of throws the racket head into the ball. Maybe this why he's able to generate the power and the spin without the longer follow throughs all us mortals have to do. Just a thought.
                    His spin rates on the forehand per ATP shotspot data is anywhere from 600-1200 rpm's less than almost all other ATP male players.

                    Comment

                    • ejkantor
                      Junior Member
                      • Apr 2011
                      • 6

                      #11
                      Stroke, my post really has nothing to do with whether or not his spin rates are high or low. The post is just my take on how he can generate spin and/or pace with such a short arm extension unlike most pros. In my opinion if you look very closely at the videos there is a moment where he accelerates his wrist forward that allows him to create whatever he's looking for. He can hit nasty spin or nasty pace.....maybe not spin like Rafa, but he can create anything he wants.....he's kinda good!

                      Comment

                      • stroke
                        Senior Member
                        • Jan 2006
                        • 5156

                        #12
                        Originally posted by ejkantor
                        Stroke, my post really has nothing to do with whether or not his spin rates are high or low. The post is just my take on how he can generate spin and/or pace with such a short arm extension unlike most pros. In my opinion if you look very closely at the videos there is a moment where he accelerates his wrist forward that allows him to create whatever he's looking for. He can hit nasty spin or nasty pace.....maybe not spin like Rafa, but he can create anything he wants.....he's kinda good!
                        No doubt he is good, probably #1 very soon. I guess I just misinterpreted what you are saying. No problem at all.

                        Comment

                        • jimlosaltos
                          Senior Member
                          • Jan 2011
                          • 4111

                          #13
                          Originally posted by klacr
                          Medvedev is a unique case. His aesthetics aren't as appealing as Federer or Dimitrov, his left arm stretch is not full or complete, his backswing is larger than normal, his extension shorter than normal...but the tennis ball doesnt know this. He has 1 grand slam title more than all of us combined and is #2 in the world. As long as he knows how to hit it, I think he's doing just fine. The moment of truth in strokes is his contact point. As John mentions it is appropriate for his grip structure.

                          One thing I find interesting is his exceptional timing and focus on the ball. Notice his head position at contact and after the ball has left his strings and he has begun the extension. His head is still down watching the contact. If the rest of his stroke may be lacking appeal, this part seems to be a nice model for others to emulate.

                          Important to separate the style from the fundamentals. Medvedev moves like a gazelle, has elasticity beyond what seems human and has a very high tennis IQ. Provide any player these three things and I'm sure they will figure out the rest as they see fit.

                          Kyle LaCroix USPTA, PTR
                          Delray Beach
                          SETS Consulting
                          http://www.setsconsult.org
                          So, Flash plus Gumby plus Brainiac.
                          Quite the combo of super hero skills
                          But apt.

                          Comment

                          • arturohernandez
                            Senior Member
                            • Apr 2011
                            • 1094

                            #14
                            Originally posted by klacr
                            Medvedev is a unique case. His aesthetics aren't as appealing as Federer or Dimitrov, his left arm stretch is not full or complete, his backswing is larger than normal, his extension shorter than normal...but the tennis ball doesnt know this. He has 1 grand slam title more than all of us combined and is #2 in the world. As long as he knows how to hit it, I think he's doing just fine. The moment of truth in strokes is his contact point. As John mentions it is appropriate for his grip structure.

                            One thing I find interesting is his exceptional timing and focus on the ball. Notice his head position at contact and after the ball has left his strings and he has begun the extension. His head is still down watching the contact. If the rest of his stroke may be lacking appeal, this part seems to be a nice model for others to emulate.

                            Important to separate the style from the fundamentals. Medvedev moves like a gazelle, has elasticity beyond what seems human and has a very high tennis IQ. Provide any player these three things and I'm sure they will figure out the rest as they see fit.

                            Kyle LaCroix USPTA, PTR
                            Delray Beach
                            SETS Consulting
                            http://www.setsconsult.org
                            I was reading about the mystery of his forehand and how everyone had questions about it.

                            So, I showed it to my son and daughter. My daughter did not like aesthetically. She seemed to think it was not pretty.

                            My son said he did not think it was a stroke you should teach. But he thought it worked for him and most importantly he used his energy well. He felt that Medvedev was putting energy through the ball. Not ideal technique but it was good use of energy.

                            Comment

                            • jschaff
                              • Mar 2013
                              • 21

                              #15
                              Incredibly consistent stroke motion. He starts with the longest possible moment arm with excessive extension back behind him. Then his body rotation gets the racket moving and he progressively shortens the moment arm to and thru contact. The wrap around his neck on the follow thru is where the shortest moment arm occurs. This is the equivalent of a skater spinning with arms out to start and pulls them in to speed up the rotational velocity. Same thing. And that movement keeps the racket head stable thru the contact zone. It is a great shot. Comparatively flat for a top level pro. I am excited that Daniil is bringing back flat shots. It is gonna expand the game a lot.

                              Comment

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