I (Tom Allsopp) have designed a website called TPAtennis.com
I work WITH coaches, tennis coaching parents and players to provide services tailored to clients specific needs.
I demonstrate how parents can effectively coach their children by 'Creating an Effective Working Relationship' using 'Effective Questioning' involving 'Decision Making' and providing 'Purposeful Practice Methods'
On the front page of my website you can see a video that I made for a client. The video was designed to help the parent improve his son's footwork by demonstrating alternative footwork patterns while showing him coaching methods that involve decision making so his son is engaged in his own development and can use the footwork at the right time and for specific reasons.
I focused on his movement because I saw it to be his only real flaw in the short video that I was analyzing. I believe it is important to have kids learn how to move with the shot and make adjustments rather than to watch Roger Federer and stand their trying to imitate him.
I understand that this website is based around watching and analyzing the strokes of professionals and I don't want to be disrespectful towards it or this method of learning (I am a paying customer after all!) . However, it is only purposeful to copy professional's strokes if you do it within context of your own game and the specific improvements you are trying to make.
This is a conversation I had in regards to my video analysis. I thought I would post it to see what everyone else thinks on here:
I think the pattern u r demonstrating doesn't fully plant the right side so u can drive back forwards. You've neutralized the lateral momentum, but I think the force from your right leg is going essentially straight up. In fact, in your slomo video, your right foot is still moving a couple of more inches to the right as that foot goes up in the air. I'm suggesting u plant and sink into the right leg and then drive up and forward about a vertical axis through your left ear, which would pull your right foot immediately back to the left of where it is planted. Admittedly, u may not always have time go do this, but I'd like to see it as an option; in my opinion, the preferred option.
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I could have done, and often do teach that forehand, but I wanted him to get used to just moving with the shot gracefully rather than leaning. Hopefully I can work with him and his dad again and have him hitting a more aggressive stroke where he can load up. I think at 6 years old he won't be loading up as much as moving with the shot, unless he is in a very controlled environment.
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Shri is an exciting prospect. Shows a lot of promise. I just like to see the kids learn to stop (obey the rules) before they start moving through everything (breaking the rules) I hope they continue to work with u. Be interesting to see what he looks like 3 years from now.
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Yes he seems very talented. I have to disagree with you. Real life tennis is moving as you hit so you can make adjustments and have your body working together. This is the first thing kids should learn.
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I'm hoping to have to try to isolate some rallies in that Aussie Open final. For the moment, we'll have to agree to disagree. I want them to learn the basic a little better before they incorporate it into the reality of movement; u r taking the opposite tact. We both agree in the end there is a lot of hitting on the move. But I think it is amazing how well Djokovic and Murray are able to set themselves up completely still for so many very fast balls.
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Yes, I think the complete opposite. I want him to understand the basics of real life tennis where you constantly move and make adjustments and improvisations before he gets the privilege of the relatively easy task of standing still and loading.
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I don't have time right now to go through and really isolate what I am advocating, but look at this clip:
In particular, the rallies the first couple of minutes at 1:17, 2:04, 2:21, 2:55, 3:33 and 3:42, especially the 2:55 and 3:42. I didn't have time to go further in this clip (at least not right now; I love the clip). You would be absolutely right to say they are hitting most of the balls exactly as you demonstrate in your video; but, when they have the choice, it is amazing how well they set up and how simple their footwork is. The back foot might get pulled into the court, but otherwise, it is an almost textbook example of how one might teach a beginner: turn, balance, finish on the front foot, head very still. Certainly, the student needs to learn what you are demonstrating, but shouldn't the gold standard of how you hit the ball (my choice of terms), at least be included as an option for how you hit the ball. I'm saying it needs to be emphasized first to have any hope that there remains a shred of that fundamental principle in the shot that gets ripped to shreds by the hellacious speed that is playing a bigger and bigger role in the game.
looking forward to continuing the discussion (it should be on the forum)
..............
From what I see, he doesn't seem to be in immediate danger of losing the "fundamental principle in the shot." His technique is extremely good but his movement wasn't. Therefore I gave him better patterns to help him achieve certain things on court. I could have added the shot you love but it's still not as important as learning to play the game that requires moving, adjusting, improvising and a whole lot of reading skills.
Feel free to keep this conversation going....
I work WITH coaches, tennis coaching parents and players to provide services tailored to clients specific needs.
I demonstrate how parents can effectively coach their children by 'Creating an Effective Working Relationship' using 'Effective Questioning' involving 'Decision Making' and providing 'Purposeful Practice Methods'
On the front page of my website you can see a video that I made for a client. The video was designed to help the parent improve his son's footwork by demonstrating alternative footwork patterns while showing him coaching methods that involve decision making so his son is engaged in his own development and can use the footwork at the right time and for specific reasons.
I focused on his movement because I saw it to be his only real flaw in the short video that I was analyzing. I believe it is important to have kids learn how to move with the shot and make adjustments rather than to watch Roger Federer and stand their trying to imitate him.
I understand that this website is based around watching and analyzing the strokes of professionals and I don't want to be disrespectful towards it or this method of learning (I am a paying customer after all!) . However, it is only purposeful to copy professional's strokes if you do it within context of your own game and the specific improvements you are trying to make.
This is a conversation I had in regards to my video analysis. I thought I would post it to see what everyone else thinks on here:
I think the pattern u r demonstrating doesn't fully plant the right side so u can drive back forwards. You've neutralized the lateral momentum, but I think the force from your right leg is going essentially straight up. In fact, in your slomo video, your right foot is still moving a couple of more inches to the right as that foot goes up in the air. I'm suggesting u plant and sink into the right leg and then drive up and forward about a vertical axis through your left ear, which would pull your right foot immediately back to the left of where it is planted. Admittedly, u may not always have time go do this, but I'd like to see it as an option; in my opinion, the preferred option.
.......
I could have done, and often do teach that forehand, but I wanted him to get used to just moving with the shot gracefully rather than leaning. Hopefully I can work with him and his dad again and have him hitting a more aggressive stroke where he can load up. I think at 6 years old he won't be loading up as much as moving with the shot, unless he is in a very controlled environment.
.…
Shri is an exciting prospect. Shows a lot of promise. I just like to see the kids learn to stop (obey the rules) before they start moving through everything (breaking the rules) I hope they continue to work with u. Be interesting to see what he looks like 3 years from now.
…
Yes he seems very talented. I have to disagree with you. Real life tennis is moving as you hit so you can make adjustments and have your body working together. This is the first thing kids should learn.
......
I'm hoping to have to try to isolate some rallies in that Aussie Open final. For the moment, we'll have to agree to disagree. I want them to learn the basic a little better before they incorporate it into the reality of movement; u r taking the opposite tact. We both agree in the end there is a lot of hitting on the move. But I think it is amazing how well Djokovic and Murray are able to set themselves up completely still for so many very fast balls.
.....
Yes, I think the complete opposite. I want him to understand the basics of real life tennis where you constantly move and make adjustments and improvisations before he gets the privilege of the relatively easy task of standing still and loading.
.........
I don't have time right now to go through and really isolate what I am advocating, but look at this clip:
In particular, the rallies the first couple of minutes at 1:17, 2:04, 2:21, 2:55, 3:33 and 3:42, especially the 2:55 and 3:42. I didn't have time to go further in this clip (at least not right now; I love the clip). You would be absolutely right to say they are hitting most of the balls exactly as you demonstrate in your video; but, when they have the choice, it is amazing how well they set up and how simple their footwork is. The back foot might get pulled into the court, but otherwise, it is an almost textbook example of how one might teach a beginner: turn, balance, finish on the front foot, head very still. Certainly, the student needs to learn what you are demonstrating, but shouldn't the gold standard of how you hit the ball (my choice of terms), at least be included as an option for how you hit the ball. I'm saying it needs to be emphasized first to have any hope that there remains a shred of that fundamental principle in the shot that gets ripped to shreds by the hellacious speed that is playing a bigger and bigger role in the game.
looking forward to continuing the discussion (it should be on the forum)
..............
From what I see, he doesn't seem to be in immediate danger of losing the "fundamental principle in the shot." His technique is extremely good but his movement wasn't. Therefore I gave him better patterns to help him achieve certain things on court. I could have added the shot you love but it's still not as important as learning to play the game that requires moving, adjusting, improvising and a whole lot of reading skills.
Feel free to keep this conversation going....
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