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✋Stop Brushing the Wrong Spot: The Real Contact Point Explained

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Next, let's take a look at the contact point for brushing. Now, we're using red and yellow split like this. All right, everyone, take a look. Are you brushing the bottom of the yellow area or the middle? That is the area between yellow and red or should you be brushing the red area? Everyone tell me, is the first contact point on the yellow area or the middle area or the red area? Watch me loop the ball. A yellow, B middle. C red. Who taught the people choosing yellow? So with yellow as the first contact point, the back swing has to be this kind of open racket. What do you all think for this? Just follow what feels right to you. You don't need to listen to me. the first contact. Watch me complete the follow-up motion for you. First yellow, then the middle, then the upper half. Which one do you think it should be? Which one feels smoother to you, the athletes you see on TV? What kind of motion are they using? If your first angle at yellow stops in the middle, the ball will slip off the racket like this. If your contact point is here, you might still catch a bit of red. If your contact point is on the red area here, then you're brushing the upper middle part of the ball. For those choosing yellow, is your racket opening like this first? But does that really create spin with yellow? The racket face has to be like this, right? It is indeed easy to loop. It's actually my first time looping like this. But balls without spin will fly out. Very easy to go long. Let me talk about it. Let's first talk about the middle.

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