Originally posted by johnyandell
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HS,
And that's fine. You disagree. It doesn't mean he can't have his opinion--or that necessarily it has no validity or isn't worthy of respect. Maybe if you encountered more of the parents we see every day in this country you would have a different or moderated reaction. But that was one of about 20 points.
"Parents are the same in every country in the world. The Russian, Ukraine, etc, much more motivated I am sure you can understand they have rather limited options."
Is there something "invisible" about the person, the spirit, the physicality of players like Graf?
There is nothing "invisible" about Graf. I once heard a story about a good pro, who decided they would be dedicated and get up early in the morning to play at an unheard of time at 6:00 (meaning they had to be up at 430 or 5:00 to eat, travel and get to the courts. They show up at 545 am, and Graf is finishing up a two-hour practice. Not much invisible about that - she is like every law student, mom - dad with a screaming three-month-old and single mom trying to run a business, make a living and feed some mouths with no dad around the house in a single parent family. John, some players are just going to put the work in necessary to make it, and do the things no other athlete in the world is willing to do.
Practice--the idea that playing "better" players has limited value.
"Disagree. Sensitivity, you need to learn to lose and deal with emotions that come with not succeeding. Some can do that, and many can't. Fake it until you make it. Sport, business, life - a young businessman doing a project that is over his head, you trying to run a sophisticated web portal with no experience in IT technologies and a young player trying to surpass their peers. We want to coddle players, and it's important they learn to lose and take it on the chin for years and years. As don_budge says, don't get bagelled, and see how far you can go."
The idea that the feeling of the warm up dictates the rest of the day. Ever seen Novak warm-up in person--so slow and deliberate.
It call it dynamic activation. Activating an athlete is tough. I generally see coaches and players doing the same warm-up over and over. Not sure that works - you need to activate a lot of muscle groups, and see what is firing, and what isn't. That is a one hour job or so before you can even hit a ball or spar. The better an athlete you have the more neurology you need to start up, and get firing on the activation front. Guys like Novac warm up, and then they activate down after the match. This is clearly getting more and more sophisticated, and the older you get the more you need to do it. Young fighters look at my oldest fighter doing all these strange exercises, and using many tools in the process and never doing the same thing ever in the activation phase (we go by feel, and follow a testing baseline protocol before we jump to warm-up) and say, "What the hell?" Well, when they are 24-30, they will get it. Generally if you have an imbalance or something that is not activated properly, you will not be able to install the skillset that is required. My young athletes are all very healthy, but the older ones are tougher to deal because you have a lot of bad neurology, concussions (in the fighters), aches, pains, past surgeries and you've got to work through a lot of things in unique ways and pay super close attention to food so the athlete is always in a good position to recover, and grow.
We have this idea that there is some formula--and the USTA just has it wrong and that's why there are no American champions. I don't think so. The USTA might have it wrong or right and that still might not be much of a factor either way. Remember the last great generation of American players weren't in any real system.
Very interesting.
And that's fine. You disagree. It doesn't mean he can't have his opinion--or that necessarily it has no validity or isn't worthy of respect. Maybe if you encountered more of the parents we see every day in this country you would have a different or moderated reaction. But that was one of about 20 points.
"Parents are the same in every country in the world. The Russian, Ukraine, etc, much more motivated I am sure you can understand they have rather limited options."
Is there something "invisible" about the person, the spirit, the physicality of players like Graf?
There is nothing "invisible" about Graf. I once heard a story about a good pro, who decided they would be dedicated and get up early in the morning to play at an unheard of time at 6:00 (meaning they had to be up at 430 or 5:00 to eat, travel and get to the courts. They show up at 545 am, and Graf is finishing up a two-hour practice. Not much invisible about that - she is like every law student, mom - dad with a screaming three-month-old and single mom trying to run a business, make a living and feed some mouths with no dad around the house in a single parent family. John, some players are just going to put the work in necessary to make it, and do the things no other athlete in the world is willing to do.
Practice--the idea that playing "better" players has limited value.
"Disagree. Sensitivity, you need to learn to lose and deal with emotions that come with not succeeding. Some can do that, and many can't. Fake it until you make it. Sport, business, life - a young businessman doing a project that is over his head, you trying to run a sophisticated web portal with no experience in IT technologies and a young player trying to surpass their peers. We want to coddle players, and it's important they learn to lose and take it on the chin for years and years. As don_budge says, don't get bagelled, and see how far you can go."
The idea that the feeling of the warm up dictates the rest of the day. Ever seen Novak warm-up in person--so slow and deliberate.
It call it dynamic activation. Activating an athlete is tough. I generally see coaches and players doing the same warm-up over and over. Not sure that works - you need to activate a lot of muscle groups, and see what is firing, and what isn't. That is a one hour job or so before you can even hit a ball or spar. The better an athlete you have the more neurology you need to start up, and get firing on the activation front. Guys like Novac warm up, and then they activate down after the match. This is clearly getting more and more sophisticated, and the older you get the more you need to do it. Young fighters look at my oldest fighter doing all these strange exercises, and using many tools in the process and never doing the same thing ever in the activation phase (we go by feel, and follow a testing baseline protocol before we jump to warm-up) and say, "What the hell?" Well, when they are 24-30, they will get it. Generally if you have an imbalance or something that is not activated properly, you will not be able to install the skillset that is required. My young athletes are all very healthy, but the older ones are tougher to deal because you have a lot of bad neurology, concussions (in the fighters), aches, pains, past surgeries and you've got to work through a lot of things in unique ways and pay super close attention to food so the athlete is always in a good position to recover, and grow.
We have this idea that there is some formula--and the USTA just has it wrong and that's why there are no American champions. I don't think so. The USTA might have it wrong or right and that still might not be much of a factor either way. Remember the last great generation of American players weren't in any real system.
Very interesting.
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