Will Hamilton: Welcome to the one-handed backhand progression section of the website. In this section, we're going to assume that you don't know how to hit a one-handed backhand, you never picked up a racquet before, we're going to from absolutely nothing go there up to a series of steps, a series of progressions to a fundamentally sound one hander that you can then take and start expanding upon really making that shot dynamic and turn that shot into a weapon.
Now the way we would approach the one-hander in this section is different from how we examined the one-hander in the one-handed backhand, the fundamental section of the website. In that section, we're going to quantalogically a few other shots. So, we started with the pivot in shorter turn and we moved to the grip change etcetera and ended with the follow through, but that's not necessarily the best way to learn how to hit the shot knowing what good players do when they hit a one-hander, it doesn't necessarily teach you had to hit a one-hander. In this section, we'll approach things a little bit differently. For example, we start with the contact point and the follow through because understanding what contact should feel like is critical than hitting the affected one-handed backhand.
So, the lessons are a little bit different, the organization is a little bit different in this section. Now if you going to maestro steps with the progressions that we've laid out, you're going to have a fundamentally sound one-handed backhand and you're going to be able to take that shot and then turn it into a dynamic and forceful weapon.
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