We seldom talk about female players on the forum. No one seems to have any interest. auturohernanadez and hockeyscout have shown interest in the past because they both have daughters who play tennis, but by and large, forum members seldom discuss women’s tennis.
I have been watching tennis all my life and never seen anything like the rise of Emma Raducanu.
Before the US Open Emma had figured in just a handful of WTA main draws, and only as a wild card at that. At Wimbledon she was given a wild card entry and went on to reach the fourth round, which was amazing in itself.
Emma seems to have since gone on and leapfrogged the whole shebang. She’s bypassed all the seasoning a player is supposed to go through before being deemed capable of of any kind of grand slam success. She won the US Open on her first attempt without dropping a set.
I think it was hockeyscout who felt a player could bypass the whole system and still succeed. Emma certainly didn’t bypass the system but her extraordinary ability has seen her leapfrog the norms of player-development like no other before her.
Emma trains at Bromley, in Kent. Three years ago I had to shadow the performance coaching at Bromley and stood in on the lessons and training of various performance players. Emma, then around 15, was one of those players. Three things stood out about Emma. She struck the ball extremely well, she moved extremely well, and she was extremely confident, confident in the right way…self-assured confidence.
All the coaching that takes place at Bromley is excellent and Emma has been well coached and fitness trained in a conventional way, with nothing out of the box or unusual going on that I witnessed.
How a player leapfrogs like Emma has done takes some fathoming. She spent 7 months locked down like the rest of us before all this success. She has hardly played any significant tournaments whatsoever. Yet all of a sudden, out of the blue, Emma rises above all around her and leaves them in her wake. How she has transcended the norms is striking and surpasses everything else I have witnessed in tennis.
I have been watching tennis all my life and never seen anything like the rise of Emma Raducanu.
Before the US Open Emma had figured in just a handful of WTA main draws, and only as a wild card at that. At Wimbledon she was given a wild card entry and went on to reach the fourth round, which was amazing in itself.
Emma seems to have since gone on and leapfrogged the whole shebang. She’s bypassed all the seasoning a player is supposed to go through before being deemed capable of of any kind of grand slam success. She won the US Open on her first attempt without dropping a set.
I think it was hockeyscout who felt a player could bypass the whole system and still succeed. Emma certainly didn’t bypass the system but her extraordinary ability has seen her leapfrog the norms of player-development like no other before her.
Emma trains at Bromley, in Kent. Three years ago I had to shadow the performance coaching at Bromley and stood in on the lessons and training of various performance players. Emma, then around 15, was one of those players. Three things stood out about Emma. She struck the ball extremely well, she moved extremely well, and she was extremely confident, confident in the right way…self-assured confidence.
All the coaching that takes place at Bromley is excellent and Emma has been well coached and fitness trained in a conventional way, with nothing out of the box or unusual going on that I witnessed.
How a player leapfrogs like Emma has done takes some fathoming. She spent 7 months locked down like the rest of us before all this success. She has hardly played any significant tournaments whatsoever. Yet all of a sudden, out of the blue, Emma rises above all around her and leaves them in her wake. How she has transcended the norms is striking and surpasses everything else I have witnessed in tennis.
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