The Inner Game Approach to Changing Technique
Sean Brawley
This article is for all coaches and players who wish to better understand change and the change process in the hopes of learning a more effective way to change, whether that be improving your volley or serve or grandstrokes, or any other type of change that you feel might improve your tennis or your life.
In previous articles, I've written about the primary way go about change—the giving and receiving of critical technical instruction—and some of the inherent challenges that tennis teachers and players face when employing this method. Giving technical instructions is, of course, not wrong or bad. It's been used for over a hundred years as a way to impart knowledge and improve performance in every sport and beyond.
Interference
But giving technical instructions can interfere with the learning process. It can create self-doubt in the player since an instruction is inherently judgmental, it can cause the player to think too much about what they are doing, and it can cause them to focus on their form instead of more important things like reading the ball and where they intend to hit the ball, both of which help to shape technique.