I thought that the post by drichards and the response was great. A member who loves tennis and wants to improve reaching out to other members for suggestions and help and wonderful responses from Don Budge (Steve), Don Brosseau, Bottle and others. The more of this the better. Inspired by that, I ask a couple of questions below. I am particularly interested in these questions as they have direct relevance to a program I have become involved in near my home town which teaches tennis to kids at risk kids. Don Brosseau has already given me some great help on technical advice for strokes and other advice for the kids.
1. I thought Don Budge' s(Steve's) thoughts on practice for drichards was really interesting - the practice wall drill, etc. I would be very interested in obtaining his expanded thoughts, and others' responses, as to good practice drills (on or off court) to use to help the kids practice their technique. They have 4 courts and a practice wall (not that a good of one but somewhat functional) for the program (courts are right next to the public housing project).
2. One of the biggest problems we face is getting the kids to buy into the importance of good technique. They have some success at first just poking at the ball and want to stick with it esp. in matches. I have some great thoughts from Don (as well as my prior experience from learning from Welby Van Horn and others) about technique but getting kids to buy into the importance of learning it has been really hard. Most of these kids come from single parent homes living in public housing with no tennis background in the family so there is not usually a parent to talk to about the importance of long term development (I know that parents can be a real problem to but at least some parents will "get it" and then encourage their kids to not take shortcuts and learn the right technique). Great kids, good camaraderie among them and great director of the program but the technique thing is holding them most of them (a few exceptions mostly from families with the more stable families). Any thoughts on getting them to buy into wanting to really work on it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
1. I thought Don Budge' s(Steve's) thoughts on practice for drichards was really interesting - the practice wall drill, etc. I would be very interested in obtaining his expanded thoughts, and others' responses, as to good practice drills (on or off court) to use to help the kids practice their technique. They have 4 courts and a practice wall (not that a good of one but somewhat functional) for the program (courts are right next to the public housing project).
2. One of the biggest problems we face is getting the kids to buy into the importance of good technique. They have some success at first just poking at the ball and want to stick with it esp. in matches. I have some great thoughts from Don (as well as my prior experience from learning from Welby Van Horn and others) about technique but getting kids to buy into the importance of learning it has been really hard. Most of these kids come from single parent homes living in public housing with no tennis background in the family so there is not usually a parent to talk to about the importance of long term development (I know that parents can be a real problem to but at least some parents will "get it" and then encourage their kids to not take shortcuts and learn the right technique). Great kids, good camaraderie among them and great director of the program but the technique thing is holding them most of them (a few exceptions mostly from families with the more stable families). Any thoughts on getting them to buy into wanting to really work on it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
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