Human Beings and Tennis...Development Ages and Society
DougEng...I think that this particular part of the discussion is rather fascinating. The question of age and the basic requirements to learn to play tennis.
The way that I see it...tennis is a game about making decisions. Everything that you do on the tennis court is decision based in the end. Every movement has a purpose. Technically and tactically speaking.
The question is at what age does that sort of development begin to take place in a person. I am guessing most often around the age of 11 or 12. Of course sometimes it never happens. It strikes me as incongruent to focus so much attention on the recruitment of children before that age because then you end up with what we have today. Strong gripped forehands...two hand backhands, basic repetitive motions and repetitive thinking and that is the basis for the game of tennis today.
I like the idea of starting the little people off a bit later when they are a bit older and it is clearer that it is their decision...it is their own motivation that gets them to the tennis court. I realize that there are some prodigies out there but what does a six or a seven year old really know. Many that I have encountered do not know how to tie their shoes. They realistically are not fully prepared to learn what it takes to play the game of tennis. Even physically they are limited and not strong enough for the most part to tackle fundamental key physical, mental and emotional elements of the game.
Lots of resources are being pumped into this young age group and I wonder what the point is in the long run. This discussion about development is of course a long one...and young people develop at different rates too. Somehow the whole paradigm seems to be tilted...and it doesn't seem to be working.
Then there are the questions about society too...as you point out. These are huge factors and I am fairly certain that we are relatively clueless as to how the changes in the past thirty years have effected the development of young people in modern society. Then there is the question of the game itself. It is dreadfully boring. It always took a special sort of individual to be motivated to be a tennis player. It is a lonely road. With the current mode of playing the game today, the lack of creativity spells a dead end in some ways and young creative minds are not so passionately attracted to such a one dimensional endeavor.
So what's the answer given all of the opposing forces? More accreditation? More unification? More singularity? Or should it be as it used to be...more of a laissez faire proposal? Where all roads lead to Rome.
The questions are just the beginning.
Originally posted by DougEng
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The way that I see it...tennis is a game about making decisions. Everything that you do on the tennis court is decision based in the end. Every movement has a purpose. Technically and tactically speaking.
The question is at what age does that sort of development begin to take place in a person. I am guessing most often around the age of 11 or 12. Of course sometimes it never happens. It strikes me as incongruent to focus so much attention on the recruitment of children before that age because then you end up with what we have today. Strong gripped forehands...two hand backhands, basic repetitive motions and repetitive thinking and that is the basis for the game of tennis today.
I like the idea of starting the little people off a bit later when they are a bit older and it is clearer that it is their decision...it is their own motivation that gets them to the tennis court. I realize that there are some prodigies out there but what does a six or a seven year old really know. Many that I have encountered do not know how to tie their shoes. They realistically are not fully prepared to learn what it takes to play the game of tennis. Even physically they are limited and not strong enough for the most part to tackle fundamental key physical, mental and emotional elements of the game.
Lots of resources are being pumped into this young age group and I wonder what the point is in the long run. This discussion about development is of course a long one...and young people develop at different rates too. Somehow the whole paradigm seems to be tilted...and it doesn't seem to be working.
Then there are the questions about society too...as you point out. These are huge factors and I am fairly certain that we are relatively clueless as to how the changes in the past thirty years have effected the development of young people in modern society. Then there is the question of the game itself. It is dreadfully boring. It always took a special sort of individual to be motivated to be a tennis player. It is a lonely road. With the current mode of playing the game today, the lack of creativity spells a dead end in some ways and young creative minds are not so passionately attracted to such a one dimensional endeavor.
So what's the answer given all of the opposing forces? More accreditation? More unification? More singularity? Or should it be as it used to be...more of a laissez faire proposal? Where all roads lead to Rome.
The questions are just the beginning.
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