I wasn't sure where to put this thread, please move it if necessary. But...
I'm only a high school junior varsity player, rated a low 4.0 by several experienced pros. However, I was asked by my family to help my younger brother learn how to play tennis. He's 7 years old. He's extremely athletic, and...as much as I hate to say it, probably will end up far better than me. He's picked up a racket a couple times, and in terms of natural finesse is already excellent.
Actually, I'm overjoyed that I'm able to teach somebody. But...how? What should I start him with? What should I focus on?
I'm planning to just see how he picks up the racket, and I'll just have him use his natural grip. Which...actually, I'm limiting to Eastern or Semi-Western. Western and he'll limit his game (if he hopefully pursues an allcourt game, the western grip will limit his versatility), and Continental and he won't be able to handle the extreme topspin and pace.
If he picks it up otherwise, I'll try to adjust accordingly. i.e. Western to SW, Continental to Eastern.
And...do I start him off with a one handed BH or two handed? He's got an athletic build, and probably wouldn't have any problems with stability on one handed. I'm not really sure though. Do I explain both to him and have him choose?
This is a long post, but I'm just desperate for information. For the first few weeks or so, at the local tennis club, I'm just going to teach him basic strokes and feed balls to him from the baseline and net, starting with a straight backswing on groundstrokes. I hope I can work out any basic flaws in form on the court.
But after that (and I'm not sure if that's what I should do during that time), I have no idea how to teach him. While we have a tennis club close to our home, there really aren't many experienced teachers. To find an experienced one that isn't fresh out of high school, we'd have to drive far away. Our clubs merely offer small, junior beginner programs which mostly train hand-eye coordination and basic skills. I don't want to limit my brother, who already has these and would be put in with four year olds starting the game.
So most of the teaching pretty much falls on me. Thanks for any feedback.
I'm only a high school junior varsity player, rated a low 4.0 by several experienced pros. However, I was asked by my family to help my younger brother learn how to play tennis. He's 7 years old. He's extremely athletic, and...as much as I hate to say it, probably will end up far better than me. He's picked up a racket a couple times, and in terms of natural finesse is already excellent.
Actually, I'm overjoyed that I'm able to teach somebody. But...how? What should I start him with? What should I focus on?
I'm planning to just see how he picks up the racket, and I'll just have him use his natural grip. Which...actually, I'm limiting to Eastern or Semi-Western. Western and he'll limit his game (if he hopefully pursues an allcourt game, the western grip will limit his versatility), and Continental and he won't be able to handle the extreme topspin and pace.
If he picks it up otherwise, I'll try to adjust accordingly. i.e. Western to SW, Continental to Eastern.
And...do I start him off with a one handed BH or two handed? He's got an athletic build, and probably wouldn't have any problems with stability on one handed. I'm not really sure though. Do I explain both to him and have him choose?
This is a long post, but I'm just desperate for information. For the first few weeks or so, at the local tennis club, I'm just going to teach him basic strokes and feed balls to him from the baseline and net, starting with a straight backswing on groundstrokes. I hope I can work out any basic flaws in form on the court.
But after that (and I'm not sure if that's what I should do during that time), I have no idea how to teach him. While we have a tennis club close to our home, there really aren't many experienced teachers. To find an experienced one that isn't fresh out of high school, we'd have to drive far away. Our clubs merely offer small, junior beginner programs which mostly train hand-eye coordination and basic skills. I don't want to limit my brother, who already has these and would be put in with four year olds starting the game.
So most of the teaching pretty much falls on me. Thanks for any feedback.
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