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Your Link to Professional Thinking!

Learning to play badly well!

Strange title isn't it? It will all make sense in a moment. When you are in a match you will always experience cycles from good to bad, bad to good, back to bad again. This is the nature of sports and it's your responsibility to be mentally prepared for these cycles. Once you learn to adapt effectively to these cycles life on the tennis court can become wonderful. For 15 minutes you are playing well then all of a sudden you begin playing poorly (and you thought it only happened to you!). Maybe you are a little tired or maybe your opponent is playing spectacular tennis. What ever the reason you are definitely in a down cycle fighting to stay in the match. When this scenario occurs here is a mental tip that your top pros have mastered. YOU MUST LEARN TO PLAY BADLY WELL WHEN YOU'RE IN A DOWN CYCLE!

For example, on a scale of one to ten (ten being the up cycle and one being the down cycle) you're playing poorly at level four. When you are in a bad cycle the trick is to understand that this is normal and part of the winning process. You must fight to stay at that level until momentum begins shifting back in your direction. In other words you learn to play poorly better than most. How? By mental toughness! What happens to most players in their down cycles is they lose their mental fight, become frustrated, develop a negative mindset, and plummet into the three, two, or one level. Instead of fluctuating between ten and four in their match play they are now fluctuating between ten and one!

Now you tell me, if everything is equal and one player is fluctuating between ten and one and the other is fluctuating between ten and four who will win?

Everyone fluctuates in match play, but it should be obvious that your mentally tough competitors MINIMIZE their down time by MAXIMIZING their mental skills. The top pros are well aware that part of winning is an inner desire to own that extra intangible inch that catapults their game onto victory.

The only question that remains is when you are confronted with this predicament will you posses the mental skills necessary to play badly better than most? Since reading this quick tip, you should!


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Copyright © 2001 Tom Veneziano. All rights reserved