Look at why you are losing. Most commonly, it's due to: #1: Weak serve. #2: Weak return. #3: Too many mistakes. All of the above creates a lack of confidence, and a lot of losses, not only to our matches, but to our feelings and our future.
What causes these issues? Watch Jy series on serving, http://www.tennisplayer.net/members/...rve/index.html esp. the second serve. Second serving weakness is the greatest single reason why recreational and pro players alike lose!
Most don't: Load/coil enough. Most don't: RElax enough. Most don't: Leg drive and then drop to trophy, lagging and causing the vicious whip lash. Most don't: Drive the snap up the arm on a lagged line, so that the forearm pronation is forced to whip lash: see sampras increasing speed from 30-90 mph in the last 2/1000th of a second of the up drive. Most don't: toss well or value the importance of the toss well enough, and change toss position for first/second serves. Most don't: practice serving hardly at all, and go out for 1.5hrs, and hit down the middle all day, with maybe 20 warm up serves. What would your ground strokes look like if you hit 30 shots per practice? They would suck as badly as your serve does in match play.
Returning: Most don't: hit very many practice returns. Decide to hit to each line before the serve comes into play, or are able to hit each line from each side. Most don't: Practice against high ball kickers back hand side. Most don't: REady position wide enough, as all the top returners do. Most don't: use advanced split stepping, ie, landing on only one foot: the one away from the incoming ball, so they can place the other foot closest to the ball at a 90 degree angle to the planted foot, which turns the body faster sideways and coils the returner faster for a more coiled shot. Most don't: decide where to hit the return before the serve is hit. Do you ever hit a serve without deciding where it's going first? So why let the server dictate your decision at all?
Too many mistakes: Not enough practice: See craigslist, or usta team league play, or many other online sites for more partners, such as: letsplaytennis.com, usta find a partner, tennisoppolis, etc. The main reason we make too many errors is simply a lack of practice which causes a lack of winning. Even if you are practicing the wrong technique, more often, you will improve more than if you were not. Get sideways faster with faster feet and faster more energetic footwork. The top players are the best at this: getting sideways fast, attacking any incoming shot with the same intense foot speed, whether on defense running down a winner, or on attack on a weak slow short ball sitter! Most mistakes are made for two reasons: Most don't get sideways well enough. Most don't let low balls come into their body close enough, and most don't let high balls stay away from the body enough, and try to hit all shots at the same spot in front, regardless of the length of their own arms dictating the best arc to hit each different shot. Contact points depend on defending your space at arm's length, ie, the lower the shot, the more in the middle of the body it should be allowed to come in, and the higher the shot, the farther out in front it should be attacked. Hit the net, on a low shot? Too far out in front. Go long on a high shot? Too close to your body and you hit it late.
These are the greatest issues that separate open players from world class players as well as who wins the club battles. They create a lack of confidence. Being able to reach the zone depends on confidence, quieting the mind, releasing judgement of self, relaxing, believing in your ability to play well even if you are not. You can only do this if you have practiced it.
You will serve better if you decide to learn to and stop the bad technique. It's not your body causing the losses, it's your body's ability to obey your mind. It's not what you think you are doing, it's what you are actually doing. The sum total of your game is always more than you show in any one match! If the mind says, "Hit a good serve.", the body cannot if you don't practice the right technique and stop the bad habits. Same for returning and mistakes. Visualization, shadow swinging, video taping all will help, as does using the mind's more vulnerable moments. You can make the greatest gains when being beaten by a better player.
What causes these issues? Watch Jy series on serving, http://www.tennisplayer.net/members/...rve/index.html esp. the second serve. Second serving weakness is the greatest single reason why recreational and pro players alike lose!
Most don't: Load/coil enough. Most don't: RElax enough. Most don't: Leg drive and then drop to trophy, lagging and causing the vicious whip lash. Most don't: Drive the snap up the arm on a lagged line, so that the forearm pronation is forced to whip lash: see sampras increasing speed from 30-90 mph in the last 2/1000th of a second of the up drive. Most don't: toss well or value the importance of the toss well enough, and change toss position for first/second serves. Most don't: practice serving hardly at all, and go out for 1.5hrs, and hit down the middle all day, with maybe 20 warm up serves. What would your ground strokes look like if you hit 30 shots per practice? They would suck as badly as your serve does in match play.
Returning: Most don't: hit very many practice returns. Decide to hit to each line before the serve comes into play, or are able to hit each line from each side. Most don't: Practice against high ball kickers back hand side. Most don't: REady position wide enough, as all the top returners do. Most don't: use advanced split stepping, ie, landing on only one foot: the one away from the incoming ball, so they can place the other foot closest to the ball at a 90 degree angle to the planted foot, which turns the body faster sideways and coils the returner faster for a more coiled shot. Most don't: decide where to hit the return before the serve is hit. Do you ever hit a serve without deciding where it's going first? So why let the server dictate your decision at all?
Too many mistakes: Not enough practice: See craigslist, or usta team league play, or many other online sites for more partners, such as: letsplaytennis.com, usta find a partner, tennisoppolis, etc. The main reason we make too many errors is simply a lack of practice which causes a lack of winning. Even if you are practicing the wrong technique, more often, you will improve more than if you were not. Get sideways faster with faster feet and faster more energetic footwork. The top players are the best at this: getting sideways fast, attacking any incoming shot with the same intense foot speed, whether on defense running down a winner, or on attack on a weak slow short ball sitter! Most mistakes are made for two reasons: Most don't get sideways well enough. Most don't let low balls come into their body close enough, and most don't let high balls stay away from the body enough, and try to hit all shots at the same spot in front, regardless of the length of their own arms dictating the best arc to hit each different shot. Contact points depend on defending your space at arm's length, ie, the lower the shot, the more in the middle of the body it should be allowed to come in, and the higher the shot, the farther out in front it should be attacked. Hit the net, on a low shot? Too far out in front. Go long on a high shot? Too close to your body and you hit it late.
These are the greatest issues that separate open players from world class players as well as who wins the club battles. They create a lack of confidence. Being able to reach the zone depends on confidence, quieting the mind, releasing judgement of self, relaxing, believing in your ability to play well even if you are not. You can only do this if you have practiced it.
You will serve better if you decide to learn to and stop the bad technique. It's not your body causing the losses, it's your body's ability to obey your mind. It's not what you think you are doing, it's what you are actually doing. The sum total of your game is always more than you show in any one match! If the mind says, "Hit a good serve.", the body cannot if you don't practice the right technique and stop the bad habits. Same for returning and mistakes. Visualization, shadow swinging, video taping all will help, as does using the mind's more vulnerable moments. You can make the greatest gains when being beaten by a better player.
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