The Jensen Zone: A New Booming Serve … Just a Click Away

February 4, 2015 | By Luke Jensen

It's a new year and time to pick up the pace. Have you taken inventory of where your game is now and where it has to go to reach your full potential?

I always found the offseason on the ATP Tour was an opportunity to attack the areas of concern in my game that needed to pick up the pace. I continue to be amazed by the evolving game at all levels, where the equipment technology and training methods continue to improve.

There are so many helpful hints these days, from highly-detailed instruction on the Internet and visual guides and videos on YouTube. Thousands of tips from the global guides in tennis that have many different perspectives that may just click into what you may need to win more big points are literally just a click away.

My tip for you in this edition of The Jensen Zone is the most important shot in tennis … it is the serve because it starts out every point.

The serve is complex and can be the difference between your game going forward or backwards. A confident shot can shine or fold under pressure.

My entire game revolved around a big first serve. When I was serving well, I could hold serve against any player on the planet, and that made me a very dangerous competitor.

The key to my cannonball, also known as the “canon bomb,” in certain parts of Asia—for some reason when I would announce my serve, it would get lost in translation so I just went with it.

Ah yes, I named my serves like my “Slippery Pete,” “Mommas Meatloaf,” “Pot Roast” and then there was the “FedEx” that had to reach my target absolutely, positively RIGHT NOW! There were many others like my “Arnold Palmer” that had some hybrid 50/50 action on it. My ability to serve effectively with my left and right arms gave me many options and advantages.

With my serves being coded, only my doubles partner, my younger brother Murphy, would know what I was throwing and he would adjust accordingly at the net or if he saw something at the net by the other team he would audible for another serve.

My main concern hitting the cannonball was having the right toss. I didn't need a perfect toss, I just needed one that lifted up to my contact point that would synchronize with my motion. If my toss was too high or low, my timing and serve would go off the mark.

My mechanics were pretty basic for both my left- and right-handed serves. I worked on a consistent starting point, where my racquet met with the ball in front of my body while standing fairly upright. Then, my focus was to bring both arms up at the same time. The great Pete Sampras would stagger his arms with the racquet arm dragging a little slower and longer to develop more of a whipping action through the contact point. For me, as soon as the toss paused at arm and racquet reach, it was time to throw as much torque into the ball.

The motion was designed after the 1972 Wimbledon Champion and fellow University of Southern California Trojan Stan Smith. His serve was much smoother, but the power the motion produced made me a flame thrower of 130 mph-plus from both sides.

To make your serve smoke like my idol Stan Smith, go to YouTube search for a video of his serve. You will really see one of the classic serving deliveries of all time!

And until the next issue … go for the lines and create a cannonball serve for your own game!


Luke Jensen
Director of Tennis, Sea Island Tennis Center

Raised in Ludington, Mich., Luke Jensen’s resume includes 10 ATP Tour doubles titles. He was also a member of the U.S. Davis Cup teams that reached the finals in 1991 and won in 1992. His ambidextrous play, including his ability to serve the ball with either hand at 130 mph, earned him the nickname “Dual Hand Luke.” Luke is currently director of racket sports at West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, N.Y. He may be reached by phone at (315) 403-0752 or e-mail LukeJensen84@yahoo.com.

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