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Showing posts with the label tennis lesson

THE 5 MOST EFFECTIVE WAYS TO WIN POINTS

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Winning points in tennis is more than just hitting big shots—there are multiple ways to win points, and as a coach, your job is to help your players develop these winning options. Here are five different ways to help your players win points more in competition. 1. Take Time Away from Your Opponent Time is precious for a tennis player, and the less time your opponent has to react, the more pressure they feel. When your opponent is rushed, they are more likely to make errors or poor decisions that you can take advantage of. There are two main ways to take time away from opponents: Play Inside the Court – Encourage your players to step forward over the baseline and take the ball earlier on every opportunity. I call this " Inside Feet ". This reduces the amount of time your opponent has to react to their next shot. Playing inside the baseline also allows you to take control of the point - you're playing proactively while your opponent is forced to react to your shots.  Incre...

THE BLUE ELEPHANT: Helping Players Stay Focused When Distraction Strikes (Eng/ไทย)

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The Blue Elephant: Helping Players Stay Focused When Distraction Strikes (เวอร์ชันไทยด้านล่าง) By Paul Dale | The 3AM Tennis Method In my years working with competitive junior players, one of the most common — and frustrating — challenges I face is helping talented tennis players translate their practice performance into real match results. These players can strike the ball cleanly, move well, and execute drills as well as anyone. But when tournament day comes, something unravels. Their game becomes shaky, inconsistent, and the confidence we thought we’d built seems to vanish. One recent case brought this issue sharply into focus. Meet Kevin: A Case of Potential vs. Performance Kevin was one of those players coaches love to have. Technically solid, smart on the court, and coachable. After working together for a few months, his confidence rose, and his results reflected it — finals in two consecutive tournaments. It felt like we were finally turning a corner. Then came the setbac...

TEACH THE STROKE ALONG WITH THE STRATEGY

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  Don't Just Teach the Stroke — Teach the Context Why Every Tennis Lesson Must Link Directly to Match Play When we teach players a new stroke, footwork or tactical pattern, it's easy to fall into the trap of isolating the skill, perfecting the action in a vacuum. The issue? Tennis isn't a closed-skill sport like gymnastics or archery. It's an open-skilled, reactive sport. Success depends not only on how well a player executes a stroke but on when and why they use it. This is where context becomes everything. The Missing Link: Strategic Relevance Too often, players leave a lesson with a technically improved shot but without an  understanding of how or when to use it in a match. They've learned the how , but not the why or the when . We hand them a tool, but without a blueprint for how to use it effectively. The result? Players are left to "bridge the gap" on their own, trying to figure out how the new backhand, serve variation, or rally pattern fi...

THE DYNAMIC VS SET & UNLOAD GROUNSTROKE

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  More and more matches today hinge on just a few special moments, such as a loose shot that your opponent can take advantage of or one player pulling off a miraculous winner from almost nowhere. These situations occur frequently in today's highly competitive environment. It is becoming less about a technical or physical problem and more about a player's shot selection during important moments of the point. “…today…(losing the point) is becoming  less about a technical  or physical problem…” I’ve begun to see two distinct types of groundstrokes players are being asked to play during a point. I’m beginning to call these two types of groundstrokes the “Dynamic” and the “Set & Unload” options. Characteristics of a Dynamic Groundstroke: A Dynamic Groundstroke is any ball that doesn’t allow you time to set up and will be mostly hit while on the move or when you're at a disadvantage. If you are compromised in any way, you're  playing a Dynamic Groundstrok...

THE RETURN OF SERVE

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Paul breaks down 3 key techniques needed to master the Return of Serve. These three essential elements will enhance your ability to react quickly, change grips, and control the ball even on the fastest serves. The video gives you with on-court examples, and guides you through the process step-by-step.

BECOME A MORE DIFFICULT OPPONENT

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, You may have been looking at competition all wrong. Maybe competition should not only be about throwing the "kitchen sink" at your opponent to try and beat them down. Even if your strategy leans towards all-out offence: relying on a big serve and a dominating forehand, introducing some subtlety to your game might produce surprising results. After all, why would you want to play an opponent at full strength? Wouldn't it be better to neutralise their strengths first before playing them?  While that may seem overly simplistic to most, reducing your opponent's effectiveness is possible and entirely necessary if you want to reach the top.  STRATEGICALLY SMART "The first job of any army is to  make  themselves  unbeatable first" You must have a plan before every match that addresses your opponent's strengths and weaknesses; otherwise, you're inviting trouble. Without a plan, every match could be a battle because you could be allowing for the best version...

THE RETURN OF SERVE (Advanced Players)

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So much time is spent by players working on their groundstrokes, yet in my opinion the Return of Serve is a bigger factor in winning matches. If each player is dominating with their service games during a match, it's up to the Return Of Serve to create the break of serve to  win the  match. The Return of Serve is the key to unlocking tight matches.                                       THE GOAL WHEN RETURNING SERVE Your goal when Returning Serve is consistency. You want to get as many balls back to start the rally as possible.  Put yourself in the Server's shoes for a moment. You've been serving really well and landing lots of first serves, but your opponent keeps making their returns and forcing you to engage in the point. What should they do? Do they change something or continue to play the same? Whichever course of action the Server takes, you have managed to get into their ...

FOOTWORK FOR IMPROVED GROUNDSTROKES

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Poor footwork will significantly impact your ability to hit your ground stroke targets accurately, and y our ground stroke game will never reach its full potential if left untouched. There are two main components involved in the relationship between your Footwork and your Ground strokes: THE TECHNIQUE To achieve consistency and accuracy in your ground strokes, you must set up the ability to hit each ball with balance, timing, and inertia. Achieving these three elements allows the racquet-head to work through the ball uninhibited and without contamination.  This is all hitting great ground strokes involves, but each element is fundamental to achieving a controlled and powerful stroke. Let's break each element down separately; Any lack of balance creates contamination because if you are falling uncontrollably during the stroke, the path of the racquet is affected (contaminated). A solid platform allows you to execute the stroke smoothly and consistently. Any lack of timing during t...

CURE MISTAKES

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MISTAKES IN TRAINING During matches, all players face repercussions for their errors from the first point. There's no "play it again" or "continue the rally" in real match-play so don't allow for it into your practice session. Players must face repercussions for any mistakes they make in  practice , otherwise, they'll get lazy. I detest when players want to continue playing if the ball goes a little out during practice drills or points. Their reasoning is that continuing the rally or the point makes for a better practice. That's the wrong way to look at it. An important goal of any practice session should also be to create a stronger mentality for upcoming matches. That means adding pressure, decision-making, and unpredictability to your sessions. Look for any way you can to achieve this, it's really important! Reproducing the mentality of real match-play during practice sessions is one of the most important ingredients of my training   I like...