Originally posted by tennisplayer
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The caracteristics are very important for the teacher. Although the GBA first looks at what the student now can do with the ball in the same game situation. But the caracteristics are important to check if there is room for improvement/development. But unimportant for instructional purposes in the way John Yandell described. Maybe it works for beginners. But I am talking about transferring the pro techniques to elite players. I wouldn't call it simpler.
I call it the inner system as the opposite of the outer caracteristics. But I thought the description of John was excellent. "Second there is a very complex interplay of movements that creates that speed in that fraction of a second, movements that include the upper arm, the elbow, the forearm, the shoulder and the wrist. These body segments are all moving at the same time, and also changing shapes and positional relationships with each other.
You can forget about seeing all that accurately with the naked eye." It says it all.
Where you ever curious why somebody could throw a ball much faster than an other person? They roughly have the same caracteristics. I am convinced that the one had the talent or by coincedence (!) found the right way to find the perfect interaction pattern. So yes I think it is about body kinetics. (The inner system of stroke production is the sum of the relationships which parts of the body must have. Actions of parts of the body must be synchronised and/or flow out of each other. In nowadays tennis the inner system for the groundstrokes, smash and service is a push-in-push system. This principle follows the kinetic chain. From the ground up and from the inside to the outside like tennis teachers learn in their education. This stays like it is. Only that does not mean that the inner system follows the kinetic chain step by step. The inner system, derived from the pro’s, showed me that there must occur synchronisations/connections of lower and higher body parts. By “skipping” some bodyparts the kinetic chain gets faster because the transfer is directer.)
The Game Based Approach is not a method. It is the approach of the ITF and all the national tennis commitees in almost all countries. In Europe I know that coaches at all levels must be trained in this way nowadays. The basic fundament of GBA is the change from seeing tennis from a closed skill sport to an open skill sport. In short the GBA looks at much more than the technique alone. It really changed view in a very positive way.
The inner system of tennis is my invention and ofcourse based upon The Inner Game of tennis (Although I disagree with most of the book). It has nothing to do with GBA.
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