Ivanisevic helped Cilic with his serve and it improved.
Again we are back to the issue of why coaches don't work to help players hit rhythmic serves.
I remember playing at a club in Frankfurt in 2015 in the mornings.
There was a coach out there teaching a really good junior to serve. The junior was whacking the serve.
But it seemed less fluid than I thought it should be.
I am sure at some point Cilic though he needed to hit the ball hard. And so he practiced this for hours.
Had he been taught to practice really slow and rhythmically in order to build speed, I think eventually it would have been a better outcome.
I know its easy for me to say because I just coach my own kids and none of them are pros or even college players.
But the emphasis on power and speed in the juniors is what eventually leads to bad serves on the pro tour.
His whole game is not fluid. But it could be. It would just require a coach to teach fluidity and incorporate that into the training.
Is this idealistic?
Again we are back to the issue of why coaches don't work to help players hit rhythmic serves.
I remember playing at a club in Frankfurt in 2015 in the mornings.
There was a coach out there teaching a really good junior to serve. The junior was whacking the serve.
But it seemed less fluid than I thought it should be.
I am sure at some point Cilic though he needed to hit the ball hard. And so he practiced this for hours.
Had he been taught to practice really slow and rhythmically in order to build speed, I think eventually it would have been a better outcome.
I know its easy for me to say because I just coach my own kids and none of them are pros or even college players.
But the emphasis on power and speed in the juniors is what eventually leads to bad serves on the pro tour.
His whole game is not fluid. But it could be. It would just require a coach to teach fluidity and incorporate that into the training.
Is this idealistic?
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