I know one junior player whom is being encouraged to play frequent tournaments (19 sectional in addition to 9 districts in a very short season) before his technique is ready.
He’s relied on a two handed chip backhand, because his footwork was not good, so this way he could give himself more time to get back into the point (because the ball flight takes longer). He also “pushed” his serve with the wrong grip and major mechanical problems. He’s so addicted now to chipping he uses it frequently on the forehand.
These underspun shots have given the other players a lot of trouble simply because they are so different then the spin there used to getting in other rounds of the tournament.
Imagine Fabrice Santoro and you’ll get the idea of what I’m talking about.
Funny quote by “Marat Safin”..
“Being told I have to play Santoro is like being told I’m going to die”.
So, eventually he got good at “pushing” and plays so many tournaments that his ranking has gotten inflatedly high.
Unfortunately, even as coaches have tried to give him other skills, (this is apparent in warm up only) he will quickly revert to chipping whenever he’s under the slightest pressure.
He gets frustrated because his balls float out and he can’t hit any kind of aggressive shot in a pressure moment. He simply relies on the “junk” causing an error.
I feel bad for the kid, It’s not his fault.
It’s just bad planning of his development.
What should have happened is that the technique should have been established first, no question!
Then tournament play could have been increased while a coach monitored that he wasn’t resorting to these limiting habits in pressure situations.
This is a hard sell to parents however.
Parents usually don’t understand long term development and frequently put today’s ranking in the 12’s above anything else even if it kills their child’s chances in adult competition.
The reason I'm so upset about this, is that I actually coached him a few years ago and pushed for "skills first". The parents were seduced by a better sales job "I'm not much of a salesman" and now I see the hope I had for him being crushed before my eyes.
Hopefully, it’s not too late for him. I hope his parents will come around and realize that the skills must be trained and emphasised over 12's wins.
Does anyone have an alternative view on development or even the chipping strategy as a long term playing style? Anyone believe in tournaments first skills second?
Let’s talk about this.
He’s relied on a two handed chip backhand, because his footwork was not good, so this way he could give himself more time to get back into the point (because the ball flight takes longer). He also “pushed” his serve with the wrong grip and major mechanical problems. He’s so addicted now to chipping he uses it frequently on the forehand.
These underspun shots have given the other players a lot of trouble simply because they are so different then the spin there used to getting in other rounds of the tournament.
Imagine Fabrice Santoro and you’ll get the idea of what I’m talking about.
Funny quote by “Marat Safin”..
“Being told I have to play Santoro is like being told I’m going to die”.
So, eventually he got good at “pushing” and plays so many tournaments that his ranking has gotten inflatedly high.
Unfortunately, even as coaches have tried to give him other skills, (this is apparent in warm up only) he will quickly revert to chipping whenever he’s under the slightest pressure.
He gets frustrated because his balls float out and he can’t hit any kind of aggressive shot in a pressure moment. He simply relies on the “junk” causing an error.
I feel bad for the kid, It’s not his fault.
It’s just bad planning of his development.
What should have happened is that the technique should have been established first, no question!
Then tournament play could have been increased while a coach monitored that he wasn’t resorting to these limiting habits in pressure situations.
This is a hard sell to parents however.
Parents usually don’t understand long term development and frequently put today’s ranking in the 12’s above anything else even if it kills their child’s chances in adult competition.
The reason I'm so upset about this, is that I actually coached him a few years ago and pushed for "skills first". The parents were seduced by a better sales job "I'm not much of a salesman" and now I see the hope I had for him being crushed before my eyes.
Hopefully, it’s not too late for him. I hope his parents will come around and realize that the skills must be trained and emphasised over 12's wins.
Does anyone have an alternative view on development or even the chipping strategy as a long term playing style? Anyone believe in tournaments first skills second?
Let’s talk about this.
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