Tennis coaches often say: "We need to teach the player how to play the game now."
A few coaches approached, and said told me my daughter needs to enter their Olympic certified training facilities and remarked: "You're daughter is big and athletic, now she needs to enter our system so we can teach her how to play the game."
I commonly ask the following questions:
- Tell me how points are won, talk about point construction
- What is the average rally time in a pro match in seconds
- Rest periods are how long
- What is the tempo of a match
- How much distance does a player run in a match
- How many stops and starts does a player do
- Explain to me patterns
- Tell me about zones on the court
- You mention constructing points, how many examples do you have for me of this in play?
- Do you have grids, charts, maps, analytic's to backup your claims
- How many minutes is the ball in play in a match
I hear a lot of, "I have coached twenty years, tennis is a unique sport, you need to listen to us and we've got the technical experience to take a player a long way."
Anyways, over the winter I worked with two buddies (one is a top 1500 ATP player who is done as a player, not achieving his potential and just now coming to grips with what really set back his career development, and the other is an 80 year old coach) who has a superb passion for this type of stuff!
I will explain it now:
- I created a chess board on the court (64 slots, 32 each side, as I thought I'd bring in Russian chess masters to teach how to read the game properly, memorize, patterns and hard wire certain aspects). As well the grid is easy to learn if you can successfully teach stacking. I have learned from Mike Tyson's training that they would train him by numbers, so Jab-Cross-Left uppercut-Cross would be a a 1-2-5-2 and a Jab-Right uppercut-Left hook-Right hand would be a 1-6-3-2 for example. A young Tyson number crunched better than anyone else, and had a solution for every problem. The best athletes obviously know the raw numbers, percentages, time and space needed to overcome that specific problem in their head.
So, I took a match of the best (old, Venus) and the up and coming next (Bouchard), and went to town.
- I charted where each ball landed
- I charted every points length (time)
- I charted the amount of balls hit in each rally (this shocked us)
- I charted the time of each rally where the ball was in play (this shocked us)
- I timed the break in between points (for rhythm and rest period)
- I charted where each point was won or lost
- I charted where the ball went if it was lost (and did my best if it hit the net
to chart where it went on the net)
- I charted where the feet were in relation to the ball
- I charted the pathway of the feet
- I've charted time, and obviously I can chart the running patterns, sort out the times in the running patterns, and work with Olympic sprint coaches and NFL coaches to better run these specific movements in all phases (and truly activate the correct muscle activation pathways needed to move properly).
- When I get this entered into a computer I will create a serious of chess cards for my athlete to look at (like chess players do), so they can learn to see the game in their head. I read Agassi's dad would play tennis in his head, so he was likely doing some very specific placement in certain zones, and teaching young Andre in a different sort of manner.
So, now my questions for all of you.
I need to expand this research. I will add the following to it (forehand, backhand, slice, pace, stances, angles of shots, mechanical errors etc, and I am get the wife who coaches running to figure out the technical non racket reasons for an error without even looking at the racket.
So, the million dollar question, if you had a dream of mapping things out what would you map out? In addition to what I am doing? How would you make our raw to the bone, underdeveloped and badly funded analytic program better?
The second million dollar question, what are some links to this type of research. I have had a hell of a time finding it? I found one guy was doing zones, but the tennis ball was small, and his zones were the size of the Atlantic ocean to me! People must have this data with hawk-eye now at the professional level yes? Does Hawk-Eye know spin rate, speed and velocity, man that would sure be useful to have, and my map charts would be a hell of a lot more accurate!
Regardless, I think when I am all done, and run some analytic data on it I will have a few more concrete solutions on how the game should be played from a pure numerical standpoint. It will be interesting when I get it put into a computer program, as it'll show me what needs to be trained, and what doesn't.
If I can chart a match correctly, over the long term I believe I can create a developmental pathway. I'm also going to love comparing the work - physical load outputs of a tennis player to a hockey, basketball, football and MMA player.
My best regards:
worldsworsttennismentorwhoknowsnothingaboutgripsan dwillhaveashortshelflikewithcoaches
A few coaches approached, and said told me my daughter needs to enter their Olympic certified training facilities and remarked: "You're daughter is big and athletic, now she needs to enter our system so we can teach her how to play the game."
I commonly ask the following questions:
- Tell me how points are won, talk about point construction
- What is the average rally time in a pro match in seconds
- Rest periods are how long
- What is the tempo of a match
- How much distance does a player run in a match
- How many stops and starts does a player do
- Explain to me patterns
- Tell me about zones on the court
- You mention constructing points, how many examples do you have for me of this in play?
- Do you have grids, charts, maps, analytic's to backup your claims
- How many minutes is the ball in play in a match
I hear a lot of, "I have coached twenty years, tennis is a unique sport, you need to listen to us and we've got the technical experience to take a player a long way."
Anyways, over the winter I worked with two buddies (one is a top 1500 ATP player who is done as a player, not achieving his potential and just now coming to grips with what really set back his career development, and the other is an 80 year old coach) who has a superb passion for this type of stuff!
I will explain it now:
- I created a chess board on the court (64 slots, 32 each side, as I thought I'd bring in Russian chess masters to teach how to read the game properly, memorize, patterns and hard wire certain aspects). As well the grid is easy to learn if you can successfully teach stacking. I have learned from Mike Tyson's training that they would train him by numbers, so Jab-Cross-Left uppercut-Cross would be a a 1-2-5-2 and a Jab-Right uppercut-Left hook-Right hand would be a 1-6-3-2 for example. A young Tyson number crunched better than anyone else, and had a solution for every problem. The best athletes obviously know the raw numbers, percentages, time and space needed to overcome that specific problem in their head.
So, I took a match of the best (old, Venus) and the up and coming next (Bouchard), and went to town.
- I charted where each ball landed
- I charted every points length (time)
- I charted the amount of balls hit in each rally (this shocked us)
- I charted the time of each rally where the ball was in play (this shocked us)
- I timed the break in between points (for rhythm and rest period)
- I charted where each point was won or lost
- I charted where the ball went if it was lost (and did my best if it hit the net
to chart where it went on the net)
- I charted where the feet were in relation to the ball
- I charted the pathway of the feet
- I've charted time, and obviously I can chart the running patterns, sort out the times in the running patterns, and work with Olympic sprint coaches and NFL coaches to better run these specific movements in all phases (and truly activate the correct muscle activation pathways needed to move properly).
- When I get this entered into a computer I will create a serious of chess cards for my athlete to look at (like chess players do), so they can learn to see the game in their head. I read Agassi's dad would play tennis in his head, so he was likely doing some very specific placement in certain zones, and teaching young Andre in a different sort of manner.
So, now my questions for all of you.
I need to expand this research. I will add the following to it (forehand, backhand, slice, pace, stances, angles of shots, mechanical errors etc, and I am get the wife who coaches running to figure out the technical non racket reasons for an error without even looking at the racket.
So, the million dollar question, if you had a dream of mapping things out what would you map out? In addition to what I am doing? How would you make our raw to the bone, underdeveloped and badly funded analytic program better?
The second million dollar question, what are some links to this type of research. I have had a hell of a time finding it? I found one guy was doing zones, but the tennis ball was small, and his zones were the size of the Atlantic ocean to me! People must have this data with hawk-eye now at the professional level yes? Does Hawk-Eye know spin rate, speed and velocity, man that would sure be useful to have, and my map charts would be a hell of a lot more accurate!
Regardless, I think when I am all done, and run some analytic data on it I will have a few more concrete solutions on how the game should be played from a pure numerical standpoint. It will be interesting when I get it put into a computer program, as it'll show me what needs to be trained, and what doesn't.
If I can chart a match correctly, over the long term I believe I can create a developmental pathway. I'm also going to love comparing the work - physical load outputs of a tennis player to a hockey, basketball, football and MMA player.
My best regards:
worldsworsttennismentorwhoknowsnothingaboutgripsan dwillhaveashortshelflikewithcoaches
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