November 2006

Monthly Archive

Holiday Pro Shop Sale!

Posted by Michael Starke on 28 Nov 2006 | Tagged as: General

BTC’s 15th Annual Holiday Pro Shop Sale!

20% OFF ALL Clothing, Shoes and Bags!

Nov 24th- Dec 31st

Take advantage of all the extra savings for the Holidays!

Sale includes all New BTC Embroidered Clothing, New and Clearance Tennis Clothing for Men and Women, and All New In Stock Shoes!

Super Racquet Specials for the Holidays!

  • Wilson nFury                                      $79.95
  • Prince Air Freak                                               89.95
  • Prince O3 Hornet                                            149.95
  • Head Flexpoint 4 *Extra Savings*            139.95

We also have Gift Certificates available for purchase!

Give the gift of Tennis for the Holidays!

USTA League New Player Clinic

Posted by Dickey Sopchak on 13 Nov 2006 | Tagged as: General

Tuesday, November 28, 2006 at noon to 1:30 pm.

Bring your racquet for free tennis & a clinic to help determine your rating for USTA League tennis. 

Meet the  2006 Women’s 2.5 Teams. 
Local awards to be presented to the 2006 2.5 League team winner.
Learn about USTA League Tennis
Refreshments

RSVP required for court time or a place in the clinic.  Call Reeta at 722-3491 or email Dickey at dbs13790 at stny.rr.com 

The Ball Toss by Michael Starke

Posted by Michael Starke on 06 Nov 2006 | Tagged as: General

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The ball toss is a seemingly insignificant part of one’s arsenal, and a frequently ignored facet of basic instruction. Just because the toss lacks the glamour and sexiness of other shots does not mean it should be overlooked. The toss is a key component of the serve. Much of the success of your serve will be dictated by the accuracy of your toss.

I break down the placement of your toss into 3 categories, height, distance forward or backward, and the distance the ball travels to the left or right of your body. Not that I am a geometry whiz, but a 3D XYZ graph could easily illustrate what I will attempt to put into words. I will work on one, but until I do, you should probably read on.

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Our mystery guest Jeff Swails is illustrating a low or incorrect point of contact. For height, one simply wants the toss to be as high as the outstretched arm. Reach your racquet arm up as high as you can so you feel your ribs stretch, then look up at your racquet. You want your toss that high, landing on the center of your strings. Ideally, you want to meet the ball as it sits still in space, neither on the way up or down. That is the easiest place to time the ball. It’s a pretty cool concept if you think about it.

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Jeff, showing rapid improvement, correctly illustrates the height of contact. Next, you want your toss to be slightly forward of your body for a 1st serve. There is an easy test to perform that tells no lies. Enter into your service motion and toss the ball, but do not swing. Watch where your toss lands. If it lands in front of the baseline, within a foot or so, you have done your job. If it lands somewhere behind the baseline, you are leaning back to adjust to your toss, not really a good thing. A 2nd serve or spin serve is different. Toss the ball slightly behind and to the left ofyour body for your 2nd serve. This will enable you to arch your back and kick your body upward into the serve. Leftys must do the opposite. Again, take the toss test. It is harmless and tells the tale.

Finally, and I hate to get technical here, you must control your toss left or right in relation to your body. Generally speaking, you want your toss to be just to the right of your head, near your ear, where your natural arm motion travels. Like throwing a ball, you want to release just off to one side as opposed to behind your head or sidearm. Instructors tell students to toss the ball at 1 pm, 11 am for leftys.

Aside from where to toss the ball, there is the question of how to toss the ball. I will not really address that here. You’ve already had enough to digest in one reading. Instead, I refer you to the picture in our lobby of John McEnroe, taken in the early 80’s at the season-ending Masters Tournament then held at Madison Square Garden. Notice how high John’s tossing arm has reached before he released the ball. Perfection. Note also the open palm, how the ball has been lofted out of his hand as opposed to being tossed or thrown. Leftys please note that I have used one of you as the example.

For those of you who change your toss for serve placement, my suggestion is to control your serve placement with your wrist, not your toss. However, that is another tip for another time. In closing, while the above are general tips, the control of your toss is very important. The more accurate you are with your toss, the less your service arm has to adjust, making your serve more accurate and efficient.

Member Small Business Profile

Posted by Michael Starke on 03 Nov 2006 | Tagged as: General

ann-marie-cabri-party.jpgcabri-party.jpgAlong with a pro tip of the month, we will post an article around the 1st of each month on a select member who engages in a side hobby, small business or endeavor of interest. This months feature member is Ann Marie Sampson, who recently became a distributer of Cabi, a retail women’s clothing line designed by Carol Anderson Clothing.

Ann Marie has been in business just 3 months, and does home shows to display her clothing line. Kris & Debbie hosted such an affiar at BTC this past Thursday, much to their delight. I must admit, the line was extremely attractive, high quality and alluring, and those in attendance were most impressed.

Ann Marie’s business philsophy is refreshing; “to make shopping fun & easy and help women to feel great in their clothes.” Ann Marie & her husband Jeff both play tennis at BTC 1-2 times per week.

Anyone interested in hosting a party or seeing the Cabi line may contact Ann Marie at 644-9169. We wish Ann Marie the best of luck.