December 8, 2011

NEW FREE 3 DVD Package

(Click here to see FREE 3 minute serve training video, "Correct Trophy Position")

Click here to see the 3 minute FREE training Video by ATP Serve Guru Phil Dent ("Building a Worldclass Serve: Correct Trophy Position") and details and how to order this FREE 3 DVD Christmas set. Two of these DVDs are new and none have been on sale before. This is limited time offer, and once it's over, the prices go back to $150. Don't miss out.

How to Select a Tennis Coach

Joe Dinoffer

How do most parents select a tennis coach for their children? The usual answer is out of convenience. Who can blame them? Adding an extra few hours of driving time each week to get to the “right” pro for your child is often not only unattractive but downright difficult.

Unfortunately, all tennis coaches are not the same and never will be. They are all different and not all of them will be a match for your child’s specific needs and nature. Consider selecting a teacher or coach for your child in two phases.

Phase One: Start-Up

No matter what age your child starts playing tennis, the start-up phase or first year is arguably the most critical part of their career. Why? If their experience is not positive they may never pick up a racquet again! Although this may sound extreme and the exception rather than the rule, consider that industry insiders say that at least 90% of those who start playing as children will stop playing by the time they finish high school. Case closed. Remember that although a tennis program is conveniently located, it doesn’t mean much if your child only plays for a month or two and then quits.

Here are five key components of tennis classes to look for before enrolling your beginning child:

Click photo: For younger players, design exercises that ensure success.

Key #1 Peers — By the time children are in school, the influence of peers, both good and bad is tremendous. For tennis, look for a facility that has a group of children of similar age and ability to your child.

Key #2 Fun — If you are watching a group lesson to see if your child will fit in, be sure to look at the faces of the children at the beginning of the class and at the end. If they are smiling and look happy, you’re in good shape. You can also test the “fun” component by sitting near the court and closing your eyes. Try to listen for the laughter. If you can’t hear it, something’s wrong.

Key #3 Creativity — The 490 feet of lines on a tennis court just do not create a visually interesting environment. Since the interest in tennis is generated by a moving ball and beginners cannot hit a large variety of shots, it is up to the teachers to create visual interest. Make sure your child’s potential teachers uses different types of visual training aids in each and every lesson.

Key #4 Cooperative Learning — Instead of a group tennis lesson with the pro feeding balls and giving long-distance instructions across the net to four students standing in a line, look for a cooperative learning environment with the students feeding balls to one another and the pro roving freely from student to student, encouraging them and making corrections. In this scenario,  the students will hit more balls - one out of every two, instead of one out of every four if they stand in lines (if there are four children in the group). Some line drills are fine, but not as a consistent pattern.

Click photo: Hand racquets and foam balls work well with the younger players and more success is guaranteed.

Key #5 Self-esteem — The final large issue to keep in mind when selecting a teacher for your child is the issue of self-esteem. Simply put, we must understand that a child will only consider continuing to play tennis is his or her self-esteem increases by playing. Do they feel good about themselves? Do they see and feel a chance of becoming a success through playing. To quantify this for your consideration when observing a lesson, just look at a child’s success to failure ratio. In other words, is each child in the class succeeding more than failing in most tasks and activities?

Phase Two: Competitive

Once your child enters the competitive phase of junior tennis, you are among the elite number of parents with another set of considerations in selecting a coach. It is a much more complex world than when you were merely selecting a “start-up” teacher for your child.

Click photo: The ladder is a great way to introduce footwork and balance.

First, you have to consider the same four points discussed above in the start-up phase.  Then, add the fact that the coach will typically be working with your junior player through his or her teen years, a phase that creates a whole different set of unique demands for both girls and boys. Here are some other considerations for you to keep in mind in your selection process:

  1. Success Breeds Success — As simple as it sounds, look for a coach with a track record of keeping students in his or her program for a long time. However, this can be more difficult than it appears, since many successful tennis coaches graduate into administrative positions, leaving less experienced coaches without track records to deal with the day-to-day needs of the players. Therefore, just because a particular club or facility has a lot of players and a good reputation does not necessarily mean it will continue. Try to catch a good coach who both has a track record and will continue their hands-on involvement for years to come.
  1. Mentor Program — I have seen the dynamic effect of mentor programs too many times not to mention it here. Successful junior programs have many levels of players and a mentor program means that the older and more skilled players will spend some supervised time each week working with the younger players. This creates an environment of high motivation and inspiration for the younger players and propagates a wonderful mood of cooperation and team spirit.
  1. Effort Over Results — The final point to remember is that only a small percentage of junior tennis players will go on to compete at the high school level, and an even smaller percentage will play collegiate tennis. Look at tennis as a healthy vehicle in which children can learn real life skills that will stay with them through the entire course of their developmental years and well beyond. The best coaches set performance goals for the child and let the results follow. The point is that if effort and attitude are rewarded, your child will have a solid foundation on which to succeed. But, if too much emphasis is placed on winning and losing, the chance of truly winning is practically nonexistent.

The tips in this article are designed to make your tennis teacher selection more scientific and less coincidental. The final question to ask yourself in observing your child’s potential teacher or coach is whether or not he or she is having fun themselves? If they are, chances are the students will also. You’ll hear it in the pro’s voice, see it on his or her face, and know it by how quickly everyone picks up balls after a drill. They will also pass the “watch-your-watch” test. If they are having fun they will not be watching their watch to see if the class is almost over. And, most importantly, if they’re excited and having fun, chances are your child will be excited as well.

As always, we would love to hear from you! Questions, comments, personal experiences all create helpful dialogue for everyone! Please click here to send us your email.

Current Features

Keys to Contact

Go to any club or public court and you will quickly realize there are many ways to hit a tennis ball, not all of them very effective. You see players pushing the ball, slapping at it, and coming off the ball or pulling away at the moment of contact. In this insightful piece, Doug King talks about three keys to solid contact — meeting the ball, turning the ball, and hitting through the ball. Blending these three feelings is not that easy but it may just make you a much better ball striker.

The Law of Intent

In baseball, often when an infielder makes an error, the commentator will often say, "he let the ball play him." That is, he was indecisive, so, in a sense, the ball dictated play. This is even more common in tennis, where, at the club level, players often hit the ball at whatever height or position it gets to them. But at higher levels, players always seem to contact the ball in the strike zone and this has everything to do with the "Law of Intent." Ken DeHart explains.

ProStrokes 2.0 – Andrea Petkovic, Forehand

Andrea Petkovic is a Bosnian born German who has risen the #9 spot on the WTA tour this year.  Andrea didn’t join the tour until 2006, the year she graduated from high school. She loves her forehand and uses it to set up points with depth, pace, and angles. She does not hit her two-handed backhand with as much authority but consistently keeps the ball deep waiting for opportunities to attack with her forehand. Her serve can be a weapon, not so much for pace but for her ability to keep serves deep and placed well. Not afraid to attack, Petkovic will follow shots to the net and she covers it well.

TennisOne Writers Store

One of your many new benefits as a TennisOne membership is your ability to purchase selected instructional DVDs at 20% off ($7.50 off each) in our new TennisOne Writers Store (login in first to access members links):

  • "All-Court Game and the Volley: Keys to Modern Tennis Technique," by Doug King PublicMembers
  • "TennisOne's Stroke Secrets: Keys to Better Groundstrokes," PublicMembers
  • "Building Your Serve from the Ground Up," Jim McLennan Members Public
  • "Building Your Ground Game," Jim McLennan MembersPublic
  • "Building a Kick Serve," Jim McLennan MembersPublic
  • "Underspin Backhand - Weapon," Jim McLennan Members Public
  • "Achieving Peak Performance the Wholistic Way: The Mental Game," Happy Bhalla MembersPublic
  • "Building a World Class Serve," Phil Dent MembersPublic
  • "Building a World-class Volley," Dave Smith MembersPublic
  • "Keys to Modern Tennis Technique: One-Handed Topspin," Doug King Members Public
  • "Best of Ken DeHart," Ken DeHart MembersPublic
  • "Corrective Techniques & Myths," Ken DeHart MembersPublic
  • "Defeating the Monsters in Your Mind," Ken DeHart MembersPublic
  • "Skills, Drills, and Games for Beginning Players," Ken DeHart MembersPublic.
  • "Drills for Intermediate Players," Ken DeHart MembersPublic
  • "Drills for Advanced Players," Ken DeHart MembersPublic.
  • Click here to see all the benefits of a TennisOne Membership.
  • Click here to sign up for a risk-free, TennisOne 30 day free trial membership.

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