New Tennis Racquets from Wilson, Head & Prince! Tuesday, February 27, 2007
MidwestTennis.net |
01/15/2007 | |||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
Visit the Liquidation section of our site anytime for the best deals in tennis!Feel free to forward this message to family and friends! |
||||||||||
posted by Brandon Schenz @ 10:22 AM,
,
![]()
Regions Morgan Keegan Championships Results from Midwest Tennis Sunday, February 25, 2007
Midwest
|
02/25/2007 | |||||
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
| Defending champion and No. 2 seed Tommy Haas steamrolled through the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships in Memphis without facing a break point in five matches, capping it off with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over top seed Andy Roddick in 61 minutes on Sunday. A record crowd of 72,957 attended the 2007 tournament at The Racquet Club of Memphis, and more than $380,000 was raised for the St Jude Children's Research Hospital. |
|
|||||
|
Venus Williams capped a triumphant return to the WTA Tour Saturday night when she defeated top seed Shahar Peer 6-1, 6-1 in the final of the Cellular South Cup at the Racquet Club of Memphis. Williams clinched her 34th WTA Tour title in her first tournament since October last year. | |||||
Visit the Liquidation section of our site anytime for the best deals in tennis!Feel free to forward this message to family and friends! |
||||||
posted by Brandon Schenz @ 6:31 PM,
,
![]()
Perception of Performance Tuesday, February 20, 2007
If you were surrounded by a thousand people and nine hundred of them, like yourself, could only speak one language, then you probably would consider yourself an average linguist. However, would you consider the ten percent of the people, who could speak at least one other language, gifted human beings? Of course not. You would, most likely, consider those people who took the time tomaster a second language as having the desire to pursue that skill; not a suggestion that they are the only ones capable of speaking more than one language or that any one of the other nine hundred people were incapable of adding a second language to their communication abilities.
Yet when discussing tennis with people all over the world,the perception often is that advanced tennis isonly achievable by a select group of "gifted" individuals. On one tennis forum, I read a passage like this: "90% of the people in this forum will never become advanced tennis players."
My response was this: "90% of the people could become advanced tennis players." From my experience in teaching individuals as well as coaching literally thousands of players, from high school aged juniors, to seniors in their 80’s, I have found that at least 90% of those who decide to play tennis can indeed reachlevels associated with advanced play. And yet, if we look at the vast majority of tennis players, less than 15% reach the 4.5 level and less than 10% get to 5.0. So, it is easy to see where people presume that 90% of any tennis-playing public can't reach advanced levels of play.
This perception made me think of the reasons why someone would label so many people as incapable of reaching higher levels. And, why would my perception of the potential of individuals be 180 degrees in the opposite opinion?
Perception of Performance
Since so many people are of this opinionI started looking at the excuses that people make for themselves to set in motion this self-fulfilling prophesy. Here's what I came up with:
- They started too late.
- They are not athletic enough.
- They enjoy the social play at the levels they are currently at and don’t care to improve.
- They are too old.
- They believe that advanced play requires advanced hand-eye coordination or quickness or great anticipation.
There are probably many more excuses thanthese; however, my thoughts were not focused on what the excuses are, but what influenced a player to create a particular excuse or perception of limited ability.
Obviously, perceptions are formed from experience and it is through ourexperiences that we create the perceptions of our limitations. On a side-note, other experiences can produce confidence, cockiness, and even arrogance! However, once a perception is ingrained, it is often very difficult to change. So, if experiences are the root of eitherlimitations or confidence, what kind of experiences are contributors to one or the other?
In watching many thousands of playersin competitive environments, it is obvious that the players who play at lower levels don’t have the same stroke patterns, footwork patterns, and strategic understandings that are observable among players at higherlevels. Yet, these lower level players have plenty of hand-eye coordination, enough foot-speed and mobility, and are able to swing the racquet with enough speed to impart ample pace and spin to most shots.
Social Circles
Certainly, playing tennis with friends and regular hitting partners brings a sense of enjoyment. There is absolutely nothing wrong with wanting to play at the same level with these people. Yet Ifind it amusing that each player in any social match still wants to play well andwin. Those people who use the excuse that they want to stay at a certain level because of the social element seems at odds then. (As if the act of improvement would suddenly dissolve any and all relationships!)
If anything, when students improve, they seek out additional players to compete with, enlarging their social circle of tennis players. I won’t deny that some players may get jealous of a player who improves dramatically and may be intimidated by that player’s new skills and abilities. However, in most cases, an improved player is able to make rallies more interesting, last longer, and create success for any given partner. We almost always hear about players who others love to be partnered with. However, there are many inferior players who almost no one wants to be stuck with as a partner! Which partner are you?
Bottom Line: The Good News
In reality, if you are reading this newsletter or if you are a subscriber to TennisOne,then you really would like to improve. And, as I have shown, there really is no excuse for younot to seek higher levels ofplay nor should you expect to fail at reaching those levels.
Bottom Line: The Bad News
If you have been playing tennis for a long time at the same level there is no quick fix or simple, secret procedure that you can do to play better. You need to change elements of your game; maybe not all elements, but some. Ask yourself these questions: Do you have an effective, offensive second serve? Can you volley from all parts of the court including angle volleys and, high and low volleys from deep in your own court? Do you havea repeatable swing pattern on groundstrokes? Do you know where the optimal places are to hit in singles and doubles?
If you answer yes to all of these, then chances are you not only are a skilledplayer already, you have the game to play more competitive tennis as you improve the aim of these advanced strokes. However, if you are uncomfortable with certain shots, if you are inconsistent or unable to perform each of these advanced stroke and strategy patterns, if you don’t understand advanced strategies and how certain shots prevent or improve your chance of winning or losing a point, then you will need to seek ways to improve them. This usually involves some element of change, and this is where more bad news comes in.
Change is difficult. This is why I teach beginners the "Advanced Foundation"—a method of learning that does not require change for players as they advance. But for those who have been playing for years, your task will be to find what parts of your stroke or game needs to be changed, how to change it, employ tools to practice it in many settings, and engage the changes in competition for a sustained period of time.
Good news: this can be done!
If it is more comfortable to stay at the level youthan it is to make changes in your game,then I have already supplied several excuses you.
For the rest of you, stay tuned! I will be outlining a specific program in coming months to help you successfully make the changes you need to advance.
(Click link to purchase Dave Smith's Book Tennis Mastery.)
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.
posted by Brandon Schenz @ 2:17 PM,
,
![]()
Midwest Tennis - Getting Ready for Spring
Midwest
|
01/15/2007 | ||||||
|
|||||||
Midwest Tennis Dynamic Search ToolbarOur Toolbar offers the unique ability to update in real-time to offer you information about the sites you visit. Safer Surfing!Foil the phishers and scammers with one-of-a-kind real-time site information. You won't be fooled ever again! Smarter SurfingWith patented real-time Related Links you will search less and find more on the Web. Try it and see. |
|||||||
The Betula Sole"A healthy foot needs hold, guidance and support in the right places, without being restricted. That is what is special about the Betula sole, the basis for all our shoes. Developed from 225 years of experience at the House of Birkenstock, we make the sole in its unmistakably correct anatomical shape. The sole is carefully produced from selected materials, in an environmentally-friendly manufacturing process. The standards of German quality set the benchmark for our products. We have charged ourselves with making the correct sole available, in the form of Betula shoes, as a tool for general well-being. This requires a company which can think and operate globally. At the forefront of our thinking is always the consideration of the most diverse interests and requirements of our customers. We value them. And we constantly maintain the highest quality, a large range of products, a reasonable price range and products which protect the environment. All this is consistent with our motto "best contact to earth". These requirements all stem from our philosophy, a philosophy which we live each day in all its meanings. This is the philosophy which we have brought into life in our core Word Universal series." |
| ||||||
Visit the Liquidation section of our site anytime for the best deals in tennis!Feel free to forward this message to family and friends! | |||||||
posted by Brandon Schenz @ 1:44 PM,
,
![]()
