That guy with a "winning plan" - I think his name was Nate, well he raised a good point. He asked in kind whether or not I read any of the articles here. Well, yes, I do.
So, I ask,
(1) why do you use this site?
(2) I want to see what you guys think about the way I use it, and comment.
Everyone on this site is always talking about watch the strokes, see how pro's hit the ball, etc.
And, I think thats not the best use of the site.
I watch every stroke here, and every instructor, and I think, "how this info and visual video by used defensively" to get to position and to teach players on the court in that specific match to make the best read 9 out of 10 times before the opponent.
Hitting the ball - everyone can do it.
Ball feed players, and there everyone is great.
Teach a player to read the opponent, get him to the ball properly under control and I think you will have a world beater in all scenarios.
So, the task of tennis from a coaching perspective is get your player to read the game, and understand what the other player is doing technically.
If you can get to the ball 9 out of 10 times better than your opponent on the defensive read department, and have an extra millisecond, that is the difference in any match.
When I watch the slow motion videos here, and the instructors sharing there thoughts, I tend to think:
- This is not what I teach (A) - what I do is anti-technique (maybe I am right, maybe not, we will see).
- But, (B), and most important of all, how can I use teaching methodology of every coach on this forum and main site (plus all the videos) to find a way to understand the stroke the way they teach it, so I can guide a defence against it?
So, when I watch these clips or see an article my goal is to sort out a plan to use what they preach against them (and force them to follow there own set out rules with the hope they are dogmatically based, and fixed in stone if I am lucky).
I want to know:
- what giveaways is the player showing?
- when does this player sell out?
- what can be done to make a quick read?
- how can you use a player technique and tendencies against them?
When a coach talks here, I think, how can I beat them at that game they are teaching (everyone is teaching something that some player will buy into, and of course you need to play that player one day).
I love goalies in soccer and hockey. Think about it. They know what shooters will do. They make great reads, and they react on instinct. Imagine a site that explained how athletes shoot, and how coaches teach them to do it? That would be invaluable.
Thats kind of where I see this site as useful.
This site is a blueprint for how to play against an opponent, and learning how to read opponents before the ball hits the strings of the racket (that millisecond, which Roger reads so wonderfully I might add).
What do you think?
I read a book once by the great Russian hockey goalie Vladislav Tretiak and it was truly amazing how he understood everything a shooter would do, and could envision and read everything they did. Shooters said he'd literally take over there mind, and they'd lose there mojo.
One thing I don't see here at all is, how to read your opponent, how to detect giveaways and sell-outs.
We should discuss that a bit!
Thoughts?
So, I ask,
(1) why do you use this site?
(2) I want to see what you guys think about the way I use it, and comment.
Everyone on this site is always talking about watch the strokes, see how pro's hit the ball, etc.
And, I think thats not the best use of the site.
I watch every stroke here, and every instructor, and I think, "how this info and visual video by used defensively" to get to position and to teach players on the court in that specific match to make the best read 9 out of 10 times before the opponent.
Hitting the ball - everyone can do it.
Ball feed players, and there everyone is great.
Teach a player to read the opponent, get him to the ball properly under control and I think you will have a world beater in all scenarios.
So, the task of tennis from a coaching perspective is get your player to read the game, and understand what the other player is doing technically.
If you can get to the ball 9 out of 10 times better than your opponent on the defensive read department, and have an extra millisecond, that is the difference in any match.
When I watch the slow motion videos here, and the instructors sharing there thoughts, I tend to think:
- This is not what I teach (A) - what I do is anti-technique (maybe I am right, maybe not, we will see).
- But, (B), and most important of all, how can I use teaching methodology of every coach on this forum and main site (plus all the videos) to find a way to understand the stroke the way they teach it, so I can guide a defence against it?
So, when I watch these clips or see an article my goal is to sort out a plan to use what they preach against them (and force them to follow there own set out rules with the hope they are dogmatically based, and fixed in stone if I am lucky).
I want to know:
- what giveaways is the player showing?
- when does this player sell out?
- what can be done to make a quick read?
- how can you use a player technique and tendencies against them?
When a coach talks here, I think, how can I beat them at that game they are teaching (everyone is teaching something that some player will buy into, and of course you need to play that player one day).
I love goalies in soccer and hockey. Think about it. They know what shooters will do. They make great reads, and they react on instinct. Imagine a site that explained how athletes shoot, and how coaches teach them to do it? That would be invaluable.
Thats kind of where I see this site as useful.
This site is a blueprint for how to play against an opponent, and learning how to read opponents before the ball hits the strings of the racket (that millisecond, which Roger reads so wonderfully I might add).
What do you think?
I read a book once by the great Russian hockey goalie Vladislav Tretiak and it was truly amazing how he understood everything a shooter would do, and could envision and read everything they did. Shooters said he'd literally take over there mind, and they'd lose there mojo.
One thing I don't see here at all is, how to read your opponent, how to detect giveaways and sell-outs.
We should discuss that a bit!
Thoughts?
Comment