Such a great tournament! I was looking some results up (and of course a lot can happen or go wrong) but just for comparison iga Swiatek was almost exactly the same age (15 years 4 months) when she won her first senior title a W15 in Stockholm. Obviously there needs to be a bigger sample size but hopefully she can continue to progress at senior level! Perhaps I am getting a little to ahead of myself haha
where the poster highlights what she does with her right knee, and I'm more interested in the degrees of rotation her racquet head goes through. 360 degrees. At the end of her follow through, she's got her right racquet hand up around her left shoulder and the racquet head is half way down her back. There's a heck of a whip on that shot, from wrist elbow and shoulder simultaneously.
Not a tennis coach myself, so interested in the thoughts of others...
Mika gets LTA support by being at the National Academy in Loughborough where she has come on leaps and bounds since joining. The change of coaching set up by joining the Academy seems to have accelerated her development.
The Pro Scholarship Programme is, for women, for 16 to 22 year olds that meet specific criteria. Girls under 16 can be eligible if they meet the criteria for an older age group. If Mika has a WTA ranking of 800 or better at any point between 22 July and 25 November then she will meet the eligibility criteria for a 16 year old (and under) to be shortlisted for next year's programme. Being a junior grand slam semi finalist doesn't get a junior girl on the programme, they would need to win a junior Grand Slam to be shortlisted for selection consideration irrespective of WTA ranking [and I don't recall that being a shortlisting criteria in previous years]
If she joins the PSP then she would have to leave the Academy as she can't be on the PSP while at the Academy. I think she'll stay at the Academy until next summer when she does her GCSEs and then graduate to the PSP if selected, as is likely.
Just my tuppence-ha'penny, wimbletont, for what it's worth (i.e. not a lot )
Completely agree with Lambda - Mika has come on MILES since joining the academy. She used to be coached by Andrew Lewandowski, not a guy I'm particularly fond of, but he obviously did well in getting her to a certain point. But the improvement since moving is really marked - not only in movement, shot selection etc but even in actual attacking forehand itself
As to the video, just me, but her swing doesn't look particularly unusual to me
You have to a have a full follow-through, i.e. wrap it round your back - it's like a golf swing - it has to be the full arc
In fact, if you foreshorten it, you'll injure yourself for sure, because now you're applying the brakes, so you've got forces for the other direction - the best swing is completely relaxed that just follows a full arc and stops because it can't go any further (like golf) (Club players obviously have a shorter swing without injuring themselves but that's because they have a far slower speed of arm and the arm stops by itself, a bunt, so to speak)
Mika's ends up quite low down her back - but she's a tall girl - a shorter player's swing is more likely to end up higher
The LTA write up above has a pic which suggests that Mika has grown a bit since last photographed, and is developing a very good physique to bring to the women's game.
Glad to hear that the they're looking after her well - with a Serbian Dad and a Polish Mum she does have other options. Also a younger sister, so best if they're all happy. Sounds like she's being well coached if they're improving her footwork and shot selection, which are current weaknesses. Given that if she's won two more matches last year at girls Wimbledon, she'd have won a Wimbledon women MD wildcard, perhaps they should consider a Wimbledon QWC for her.
RE the forehand - I still think that the amount of rotation she's doing is unusual. Slowly miming her starting position with a kitchen spatula, I've done myself a minor injury, and I've been watching other players to see if I can see anybody who is starting from that far back and finishing that far back again. Haven't seen one so far. She's moving that racquet head a long way in the course of that shot.
There is no perhaps about it. She will be considered for a QWC and unless somebody out of the picture now does surprisingly well during the early grass events then I'm confident she will get one of the 5 available (once you've discounted those that are reserved for the play-offs and the 18U Junior national winner and that 1 will likely be given to last year's girls winner). Unless Katie Swan returns in time I only see 5 realistic candidates for those 5 available QWCs, with Mika being one of them. I'm not sure how you think she'd have won a MD WC. That's not Wimbledon convention. Junior winners tend to get a QWC the following year which may be upgraded to a MDWC if they are in qualifying directly. Or am I missing something?
There is no perhaps about it. She will be considered for a QWC and unless somebody out of the picture now does surprisingly well during the early grass events then I'm confident she will get one of the 5 available (once you've discounted those that are reserved for the play-offs and the 18U Junior national winner and that 1 will likely be given to last year's girls winner). Unless Katie Swan returns in time I only see 5 realistic candidates for those 5 available QWCs, with Mika being one of them. I'm not sure how you think she'd have won a MD WC. That's not Wimbledon convention. Junior winners tend to get a QWC the following year which may be upgraded to a MDWC if they are in qualifying directly. Or am I missing something?
Any thoughts on how MD WCs may play out over the summer for the up and coming juniors? Looks like it may be difficult with so many seniors needing them?
The LTA write up above has a pic which suggests that Mika has grown a bit since last photographed, and is developing a very good physique to bring to the women's game.
Glad to hear that the they're looking after her well - with a Serbian Dad and a Polish Mum she does have other options. Also a younger sister, so best if they're all happy. Sounds like she's being well coached if they're improving her footwork and shot selection, which are current weaknesses. Given that if she's won two more matches last year at girls Wimbledon, she'd have won a Wimbledon women MD wildcard, perhaps they should consider a Wimbledon QWC for her.
RE the forehand - I still think that the amount of rotation she's doing is unusual. Slowly miming her starting position with a kitchen spatula, I've done myself a minor injury, and I've been watching other players to see if I can see anybody who is starting from that far back and finishing that far back again. Haven't seen one so far. She's moving that racquet head a long way in the course of that shot.
We can agree to differ
The best forehand shot bascially does a full arc, it has to - the actual trajectory of the arc will be different (depending on top spin, height, etc) but it has to go practically full circle
Short of inury, or sudden shocking loss of form, she's definitely getting a Wimbeldon QWC, IMO
She is now the third-best ranked 15 year-old (just behind Emerson Jones (WR 640) and Hannah K (WR 665)
well done to Mika. Really interesting watch now along with our other juniors, including Hannah and Mimi. Wouldnt like to bet on who will break through into the top 200 first TBH. Exciting times. Spend most of my time following the juniors now, more interesting than the a lot of the WTA and ATP!
What is likely to happen wild card wise with Mika at Wimbledon - given a non Brit Wimbledon junior champ gets a main draw wild card is a Brit junior slam champ likely to get one regardless of ranking or is she likely to need to prove something a little in the adult game before then? ....also would her getting one have a possible knock on effect that others like Mimi, Hannah, Isabelle etc would be more likely to get something if they're higher ranked than her at that point too?