Beginners should only have the disc in one hand at the last possible moment to throw. This applies for backhand and forehand.
Why are two hands better than one?
Let's start with the forehand.
Teach this. |
Secondly, a two-hand grip promotes using more of the arm. A good forehand throwing action involves movement in the shoulder, then elbow, then wrist. A disc held vertical by two hands allows this more easily than a disc held horizontal near the waist, with the elbow wedged against the torso (sticky elbow syndrome) and often not extended.
Don't teach this. |
In comparison, an experienced player throwing a forehand almost always rolls their wrist under (palm down to palm up). The two-hand grip puts the disc into a vertical position, where the wrist starts palm down. It greatly reduces this common beginner problem.
For the backhand, a two-hand grip is also valuable.
Start in two hands |
Perhaps you might ask: I don't hold the disc in two hands much, yet I throw well. So why should we teach beginners this way?
There are two answers.
Firstly, elite players do it. Watch Jimmy Mickle.
You also can watch 20 other elite players who were filmed in slow motion.
The Japanese use two hands. Look at the women's team (especially Eri Hirai, number 11) during this point. And look at the four throws the men's team use in this play (backhand, forehand, forehand, forehand). Nice put, Matsuno.
Secondly, the improvement in throwing technique across thousands of beginner and intermediate players from a better grip is utterly worthwhile. If elite players find different methods that also succeed that is awesome. But players learning our sport this year need to start from a base of better fundamental technique.
The gif below shows how to switch from a neutral stance into a two-hand forehand grip.