The Value of intensive Practice...Bill Tilden (Match Play and the Spin of the Ball)
Roger Federer may just have taken a page out of Bill Tilden's book..."Match Play and the Spin of the Ball".
The book is William Tilden III. The model is Richard Gonzales with the Don Budge backhand. Harry Hopman is the coach. Roger Federer is the Living Proof. The teaching paradigm of the fictitious character...don_budge.
Chapter VII from Match Play and the Spin of the Ball...The Value of Intensive Practice
One becomes very weary of copy book epigrams in the days of one's youth because they drive down one's throat many true but uninteresting (at the moment) facts. We have all written many hundred copies of the good old standby, "Practice makes perfect." One does not need to become actually antique to discover that nothing, not even practice, makes anything, or anyone, perfect.
Yet hidden in the dear old fossil of a copybook bromide is a bit of sound tennis advice. Practice may not make perfect, but believe me it has made many a good tennis player. I am a great believer in practice, but above all in intensive practice. My idea of intensive practice is to pick out one stroke and hammer away at that shot until it is completely mastered. This is the system I have used with marked success in working with my proteges.
My greatest success with the system was the development of my own backhand from a feeble defense chop to an offensive attacking drive, through the intensive practice of one winter and at the cost of many lickings. any player who seriously dislikes to accept defeat should never try intensive practice on one stroke.
It is no easy job to learn a new stroke in three or four months, particularly when it is a new trick for an old dog, yet it had to be done. My first step was to work out a sound grip, swing and footwork, not a very difficult thing to do in theory and once worked out to put it in practice.
Roger Federer may just have taken a page out of Bill Tilden's book..."Match Play and the Spin of the Ball".
Originally posted by stotty
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Chapter VII from Match Play and the Spin of the Ball...The Value of Intensive Practice
One becomes very weary of copy book epigrams in the days of one's youth because they drive down one's throat many true but uninteresting (at the moment) facts. We have all written many hundred copies of the good old standby, "Practice makes perfect." One does not need to become actually antique to discover that nothing, not even practice, makes anything, or anyone, perfect.
Yet hidden in the dear old fossil of a copybook bromide is a bit of sound tennis advice. Practice may not make perfect, but believe me it has made many a good tennis player. I am a great believer in practice, but above all in intensive practice. My idea of intensive practice is to pick out one stroke and hammer away at that shot until it is completely mastered. This is the system I have used with marked success in working with my proteges.
My greatest success with the system was the development of my own backhand from a feeble defense chop to an offensive attacking drive, through the intensive practice of one winter and at the cost of many lickings. any player who seriously dislikes to accept defeat should never try intensive practice on one stroke.
It is no easy job to learn a new stroke in three or four months, particularly when it is a new trick for an old dog, yet it had to be done. My first step was to work out a sound grip, swing and footwork, not a very difficult thing to do in theory and once worked out to put it in practice.
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