Hi, I'm Travis Corpening, and I'm about to
teach you how to do a two-handed dump. Lets
have some fun. Alright, first of all, we're
here in beautiful Carolina Beach, North Carolina,
their wonderful facility, we want to thank
them for allowing us to use it. Getting down
to the actual foot work of doing and completing
a two-handed dunk, what I want to first tell
you is, when you take off, some jumpers, you
have different taste, some jumpers like to
take off on two feet, some jumpers can take
off on one, but whichever your flavor. What
you want to do is, when you do take off, if
you're a one legged jumper, you want to plant
with the opposite hand, if you're right handed,
you want to plant with the left leg, if you're
left handed you want to plant with the right
leg. What you want to do, you want to plant,
and once you plant, you immediately bounce
and take off, once you take off- now if you're
doing a tomahawk dunk, the difference in a
tomahawk dunk and just a regular slam, a regular
two-handed dunk is a tomahawk- a regular slam
you actually just kind of can get away with
putting it in once you take off, once you
get up there above the rim. But a tomahawk
you actually want to take it, bring it back
here, and that's a little advance for a little
more advance jumpers, you want to take it
back here, and kind of get some hang time
so it looks really cool, and then you bring
it down with authority. A two-handed dunk
you can pretty much bring it down with authority
too, but a tomahawk two-handed dunk looks
a little cooler. So, you want to try it, go
ahead give it a shot, once you do try it and
you can get up above the rim enough to where
you can complete it, you might want to add
a little flair to it, maybe some different
styles using the legs. If you look at Michael
Jordan in the way he dunks, as oppose to Colby
Bryant, you'll see their own individual flair.
But there you have it, two-handed dunk.