The current Eye Coach product is necessary but not sufficient
I was coaching my daughter for 10 years before she got her tennis scholarship. Let me share with you my observations. I wanted my daughter to be a power player. We developed array of drills to focus on the powerful final shots. The ball machine was producing between three and six long shots that my daughter could not attack followed by what we considered to be weak shots that she was supposed to attack and win. There were three week shots in a row delivered by the ball machine. It appeared that she was missing two out of three powerful shots. I started to videotape her and run the recordings in slow motion to discover that she started to open up too early and her eyes were no longer looking straight at the ball. It turned out that something was impacting her desire to produce the anticipated victory strikes. The very thought she was going for a kill seemed to disturb her killer instinct. We were researching the footage of the lions and tigers during their hunting to notice that the animals with the built in killer instinct could miss their targets. It did not look like the misses destroyed their confidence. It is not known what they tell themselves after the miss, but the way the tail was moving indicated they were trying to relax like tennis players are taught to closely examine the rocket strings while moving from one corner to another. I strongly believe if we had the Eye Coach device at the beginning of the tennis fundamentals learning my daughter would be more successful player. However, the currently available device needs two more features: an alert suddenly issued to demand a hard shot and some kind of attached measurement of the ball RPM.
I was coaching my daughter for 10 years before she got her tennis scholarship. Let me share with you my observations. I wanted my daughter to be a power player. We developed array of drills to focus on the powerful final shots. The ball machine was producing between three and six long shots that my daughter could not attack followed by what we considered to be weak shots that she was supposed to attack and win. There were three week shots in a row delivered by the ball machine. It appeared that she was missing two out of three powerful shots. I started to videotape her and run the recordings in slow motion to discover that she started to open up too early and her eyes were no longer looking straight at the ball. It turned out that something was impacting her desire to produce the anticipated victory strikes. The very thought she was going for a kill seemed to disturb her killer instinct. We were researching the footage of the lions and tigers during their hunting to notice that the animals with the built in killer instinct could miss their targets. It did not look like the misses destroyed their confidence. It is not known what they tell themselves after the miss, but the way the tail was moving indicated they were trying to relax like tennis players are taught to closely examine the rocket strings while moving from one corner to another. I strongly believe if we had the Eye Coach device at the beginning of the tennis fundamentals learning my daughter would be more successful player. However, the currently available device needs two more features: an alert suddenly issued to demand a hard shot and some kind of attached measurement of the ball RPM.
Comment