Rafael Nadal Forehand Slow Motion - Love Tennis.
Novak Djokovic earned the biggest win of his comeback from a right elbow injury on Saturday, outlasting World No. 1 Rafael Nadal 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(9), 3-6, 10-8 in their record 52nd FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting (Djokovic leads 27-25) after five hours, 15 minutes. The No. 12 seed moves into the Wimbledon final, which will be his first championship match at a major since the 2016 US Open.
Rafael Nadal has been a super-specialist from technical point of view, built on what is the most effective forehand (speed and topspin) ever. Great backhand from right-dominant and great touch at the net (no frills, no magics, but always perfectly placed volleys, and exemplary positioning at the net). The only thing technically barely above.
To hit every forehand with an eastern grip and a straight arm, you need to have exceptional footwork and great timing. When you face Djokovic or Nadal, who shrink the court with exceptional defence and drain you by making you fight for each point, you have to go for the lines.
Roger Federer Forehand Slow Motion. Roger Federer Tennis Forehand is a thing of beauty that many coaches use as the benchmark for the perfect tennis technique. Federer is able to generate tremendous power and spin even though he uses the eastern grip he has efficient body mechanics and timing that allows him to hit it with accuracy and great variety.
Classic Tennis Forehand This style of the forehand is often hit with either an eastern forehand grip or a continental grip (the same grip we serve with) and the racket path is much more linear, out towards the target with the arm extending fully and then finishing over the non-hitting shoulder.
Spain's Rafael Nadal celebrates after defeating Taylor Fritz, of the United States, 6-3, 6-2 in the men's final of the Mexican Open tennis tournament in Acapulco, Mexico.
Rafael Nadal just finished a masterpiece of a final capturing his 13th Grand Slam title at the 2013 US Open. After beating number 1 ranked Novak Djokovic in 4 sets, he sets his sights on besting Roger Federer for the most career major titles. Nadal was off for about 7 months from 2012 until 2013.