6'1" dominating with Sampras and Fed, etc. That's my height, in my sneakers! Ha, ha. GEoff Williams the multiple grand slam fantasy winner!
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10,000 Hours??
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6' and up
Since Borg, McEnroe and Connors stopped dominating in the early 80's, there have been very few players under 6' to win a major. Gaudio at the French in 2004, not quite 10 years ago, is the last.
At the Australian Open, only Johansson and Agassi since Kriek in 1982.
At Wimbledon, only Agassi and Hewitt since McEnroe in 1984.
At the US Open, only Agassi and Hewitt since McEnroe in 1984.
The French is a little different, but only Gaudio, Costa, Agassi, Muster and Chang since Borg in 1981.
But come the French Open next month, it will be a full 10 years since anyone under 6' has won a major.
don
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Originally posted by tennis_chiro View PostSince Borg, McEnroe and Connors stopped dominating in the early 80's, there have been very few players under 6' to win a major. Gaudio at the French in 2004, not quite 10 years ago, is the last.
At the Australian Open, only Johansson and Agassi since Kriek in 1982.
At Wimbledon, only Agassi and Hewitt since McEnroe in 1984.
At the US Open, only Agassi and Hewitt since McEnroe in 1984.
The French is a little different, but only Gaudio, Costa, Agassi, Muster and Chang since Borg in 1981.
But come the French Open next month, it will be a full 10 years since anyone under 6' has won a major.
don
5'11" is tall enough so long as a man is strong with it...as Borg, Agassi, Connors were.
Beyond reason, I wouldn't discount players who are shorter. The beauty of tennis is that physical attributes can be a trade off. Laver had tremendous footwork which compensated nicely for his lack of height.
Someday there will another grand slam winner below 5'10"...it's just written.Stotty
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It's The Bounce...
Originally posted by licensedcoach View PostIt's tough to get to the bottom of this one because, on average, people in the Western world are taller now than they were in the 60's, 70's and 80's. The average height of a man over here at the last count was 5'11''...probably taller in the US.
5'11" is tall enough so long as a man is strong with it...as Borg, Agassi, Connors were.
Beyond reason, I wouldn't discount players who are shorter. The beauty of tennis is that physical attributes can be a trade off. Laver had tremendous footwork which compensated nicely for his lack of height.
Someday there will another grand slam winner below 5'10"...it's just written.
It's the bounce of the ball...and the spin. Due to equipment and court engineering. As tennis_chiro illustrates the advent is 1984...the culmination point from classic tennis to "modern" tennis.Last edited by don_budge; 04-06-2014, 01:25 AM.don_budge
Performance Analysthttps://www.tennisplayer.net/bulleti...ilies/cool.png
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10,000 Hour Rule Article
Actually the article made several mistakes. First, it was not based on an experiment from the 1990s. It was based upon research from the 1960s and then with chess players. Second, if anyone really examined the data, it didn't say 10,000 hours or 10 years. It was a range maybe about 5,000-25,000 and actually the best athletes were those who were able to achieve a level of expertise at 5,000-10,000. Third, development is important and neglected in sports. Regardless of training, most children start sports at 6-12 years old and don't become professional until 19-23 years old. That translates to 10+ years. Much of it is NOT the development of expertise but physical development and maturation of the body.
Recently, among elite teams, coaches, NGBs, the 10,000 hour rule was abandoned…perhaps in the past 2 years, talent development coaches now don't look at 10,000 hours. They basically abandoned it as the article says, maybe in the past 2 years. They found too many coaches and players were getting neurotic over recording 10,000 hours and expectations were misguided.
As mentioned, it is largely a result of misinterpretation of data. In addition, it will vary from sport to sport or activity to activity. Finally, one has to define what level of expertise? The original studies was with grandmasters in chess, at the time, was maybe top 1 player in 1,000. But in terms of players at physical and mental peaks (disregard ages under 15 and over 60 years old generally for chess), that would mean perhaps even 1 in 1,500-2,000 frequent players in the peak age range.
In tennis for the ATP Tour, that translates to 1 in 1,500-2,000 male players aged 18-37 years old. For example, the US has maybe 3-4 million regular male players age 18-37 and maybe 500,000 frequent players (and infrequent accomplished players, e.g, a strong college player who doesn't play much anymore at age 30). That amounts to the top 200 male tennis players age 18-37 in the US. About 133 are current on the ATP Tour…include another 75 talents players…so it says someone who is on the ATP…the 10,000 hour rule for expertise guidelines.
Best,
Doug
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Just another remark about Donald Young:
Even though Donald had exposure to 2 tennis-teaching professionals as parents, as even though he had exposure to many world-famous "expert' coaches, Donald was not taught the tennis he really needed. Thankfully, Donald has improved somewhat over the past couple of years.
Donald shows to me that he does not know the basic rules I teach in covering court and anticipating balls. Donald uses that misguided Macci style unit-turn forehand, although he seems to be getting away from that, somewhat. Donald also hits those lousy backhand slices that so many players hit so badly.
In general, Donald was taught "today's game" -- which has so many holes in it. Because Donald was mistaught and miscoached, it really is impossible to judge whether he was truly talented or not. The USTA certainly has not helped Donald significantly. "Experts" and the USTA are always so quick to blame parents and other coaches for not providing sufficient coaching, but of course the USTA really cannot show that it provides sufficient coaching, either.
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10000 hours
As a coach for over 30 years I read this forum for tiny amounts of new information. One example would be how the pros make the ball move left to right or vice versa with topspin groundstrokes. Another would be the use of left and right arm in two handed backhand. The lefty forehand to me seems like a strength exercise the right backhand seems dangerous because the slot is in the wrong place. Too parallel to back wall for a 2 hander. On 2 handed backswing why is back shoulder higher than front. Same at contact. I think our forum can be better used by some of the great minds on this site.
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