Dictionary Definition
backhand adj
1 (of racket strokes) made across the body with
back of hand facing direction of stroke [syn: backhand(a),
backhanded] [ant:
forehand(a)]
2 (of handwriting) having the letters slanting
from left down to right [syn: left-slanting]
n : a return made with the back of the hand facing the direction of
the stroke [syn: backhand
stroke, backhand
shot] v : hit a tennis ball backhand
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- a stroke made across the chest from the off-hand side to the racquet hand side; a stroke during which the back of the hand faces the shot.
- Handwriting that leans to the left
- In the context of "Ultimate Frisbee": the standard throw; a throw during which the disc begins on the off-hand side and travels across the chest to be released from the opposite side.
Translations
stroke in tennis
- Croatian: bekhend
- Icelandic: bakhandarhögg
handwriting
- Icelandic: rithönd sem hallar til vinstri
Verb
- to execute a backhand stroke or throw
- to slap with the back of ones hand
Translations
- Icelandic: slá bakhandarhögg
Adjective
- (handwriting) any left slanting handwriting
- (of strokes or throws) in the backhand style
- Any play that uses the back side of the hockey stick
- He scored on a backhand shot.
Translations
- Icelandic: handarbaks-, bakhandar-, bakhandarhöggs-
See also
Extensive Definition
The backhand in tennis is a stroke hit by
swinging the racquet away from one's body in the direction of where
the player wants the ball to go. For a right-handed player, a
backhand begins on the left side of his body, continues across his
body as contact is made with the ball, and ends on the right side
of his body. It can be either a one-handed or a two-handed
stroke.
The backhand is generally considered more
difficult to master than the forehand. Because the dominant
hand "pulls" into the shot, instead of pushing, the backhand
generally lacks the power and consistency of a forehand. Beginner
and club-level players often have difficulty hitting a backhand and
junior players often have trouble because they are not strong
enough to hit it. Even many advanced players have a significantly
better forehand than backhand, and there are many strategies based
on exploiting this weakness.
Grips
- Main article: Grip (tennis)
With some exceptions, one-handed backhand players
move to the net with greater ease than two-handed players because
the shot permits greater forward momentum and has greater
similarities in muscle
memory when hitting backhand volleys and backhand
groundstrokes. They also do not develop a common two-handed
backhand habit of playing volleys with two hands. However,
one-handed backhand players with less extreme grips are prone to
slicing or chipping returns when shots bounce too high over their
strike zones; and skilled opponents often play into that
weakness.
A one-handed backhand should be more powerful
than a two-handed backhand.In practice, however, many tennis
players do find more power with a two-handed backhand. That's
because players often miss the racket's sweet spot, and two hands
give players a stronger grip to stabilize the racket head on off
center hits.As a result we feel confident to swing harder with two
hands than with one.Two-handed backhanded players are much more
steady from the baseline at lower levels.Two-handed backhands do
not offer the same reach that one-handed backhands offer, so
two-handed players have to be sharper in their movement when going
after hard to reach backhands.
Great backhands
The player long considered to have had the best backhand of all time, amateur and professional champion Don Budge, had a very powerful one-handed stroke in the 1930s and '40s that imparted topspin onto the ball. He used an Eastern grip, and some pictures show his thumb extended along the side of the racquet for greater support. Ken Rosewall, another amateur and professional champion noted for his one-handed backhand, also used a continental grip to hit a deadly accurate slice backhand with underspin throughout the 1950s and '60s.In his 1979 autobiography
Jack Kramer devotes a page to the best tennis strokes he had
ever seen. He writes: "BACKHAND—Budge was best,
with Kovacs,
Rosewall and
Connors in
the next rank (although, as I've said, Connors' 'backhand' is
really a two-handed forehand). Just in passing, the strangest
competitive stroke was the backhand that belonged to Budge Patty.
It was a weak shot, a little chip. But suddenly on match point,
Patty had a fine, firm backhand. He was a helluva match
player."
On the men's pro tour, dramatic changes have
occurred since then. In the 1980's, many great players such as Ivan
Lendl and John Mc Enroe were leading the charge with their one
handed flat backhand. But a new wave of players, such as Bjorn
Borg, Mats Wilander or Andre Agassi, started to show the world that
two-handed backhands could also offer major advantages. Players
could now increase the speed and control of their two-hander in key
defensive shots, such as returns, passing shots and lobs. Since
then, many players followed this trend. Among the main ones, we
count Andrei Medvedev, Marat Safin and David Nalabandian. However,
the one-handed backhand is still used by many great players, such
as Richard Gasquet, Aaron Yovan and of course Roger Federer.
On the girls pro tour, one of the great rivalries
of the 1980's was symbolized by two different backhand styles:
Martina Navratilova's smooth one-handed sliced backhand versus
Chris Evert's perfectly controlled two handed backhand. Many
different styles of backhand arose in the late 1980's. Among the
best ones, we count Steffi Graf's exceptional sliced backhand, and
Monica Seles's two-handed backhand, characterized by its rapidity
of execution. This trend was followed by many players in the
1990's, such as Martina Hingis, Izabela Mijic, or the Williams
sisters.
Other professional players noted for their
exceptional backhand:
- Gustavo Kuerten
- Jimmy Connors
- Ivan Lendl
- Stefan Edberg
- Nikolay Davydenko
- Novak Djokovic
- Rafael Nadal
- Marcos Baghdatis
- Andre Agassi
- Yevgeny Kafelnikov
- Marat Safin
- Chris Evert
- Monica Seles
- Richard Gasquet
- Justine Henin
- Tommy Haas
- Roger Federer
- Lleyton Hewitt
- David Nalbandian
- Venus Williams
- Serena Williams
- Maria Sharapova
- Pete Sampras
- Boris Becker
- John McEnroe
- Ivan Ljubicic
- Gastón Gaudio
- John McEnroe
- Björn Borg
- Jelena Janković
- Gabriela Sabatini
- Marcelo Rios
External links
backhand in Hebrew: חבטת גב יד
backhand in Dutch: Backhand
backhand in Polish: Backhand
backhand in Slovak: Bekhend
backhand in Swedish:
Backhand