Spin is one of my three tennis fundamentals, and in this video, we look at both topspin and underspin and uncover a simple method to teach both spins easily
Why Tournament Champions Thrive While Practice Players Crumble (And the 3AM Theory That Builds Instant Adaptability) By Paul Dale | www.3amtennis.com Several years ago, I was on a practice court with Tamarine Tanasugarn at 7am after a long international flight. While everyone else struggled to adjust to unfamiliar conditions, Tamarine was striking the ball as cleanly as ever. Her timing was perfect from the first ball until the last. Here's what most coaches need to understand: Every tournament breakdown, every first-round loss by a superior player, every collapse when conditions change stems from training methods that prioritise comfort over competitive reality. We're approaching tournament preparation completely wrong. Players don't need more perfect practice—they need systematic exposure to the unpredictability that defines competitive tennis. Your next breakthrough doesn't come from perfecting strokes in ideal conditions. It comes from mastering what I call the...
Master the Two-Handed Backhand: 4 Essential Tennis Techniques for Control and Power By Paul Dale | The 3AM Method Complete guide to developing a versatile two-handed backhand with professional-level control, spin, and directional accuracy The two-handed backhand can be one of tennis's most reliable and powerful strokes when executed with proper technique. However, many tennis players struggle with consistency and versatility because they focus on rigid grip positions rather than understanding the fundamental mechanics that create control and power. These five essential elements will transform your two-handed backhand from a defensive liability into an offensive weapon. By mastering hand positioning, power generation, and directional control, you'll develop the backhand versatility needed for competitive tennis success. 1. Bottom Hand Positioning: Controlling Your Contact Zone Length The bottom hand grip position directly plays a part in the length of your two-handed backha...
By Paul Dale - www.3amtennis.com Over fifty years of coaching at every level — from grassroots juniors to ATP and WTA professionals — I've seen one trait separate the players who actually compete from the players who merely participate. It isn't the fastest serve. It isn't the prettiest backhand. It isn't even fitness. It's the ability to solve problems — in real time, under pressure, when everything is going wrong. Tennis is chaos management. Every match presents new puzzles: an opponent who hits with heavy topspin, a gusty crosswind, a surface that plays slower than you prefer, a score-line that suddenly feels insurmountable. The players who succeed are the ones who look at those challenges and ask, "What do I do about this?" The players who struggle ask a very different question — or worse, stop asking altogether. Below are four players I have coached or encountered during my career. I've changed their names, but the patterns are ones any experie...
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