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Learning strokes from the inside
out
A couple of weeks ago I was reading an excellent book called
"Coaching Tennis" by Chuck Kriese. Chuck Kriese is the tennis coach at
Clemson College. I'm always checking out different coaches, their style
of teaching, and where we agree or disagree. There is always more to learn.
Occasionally I run into some information that is so similar to my methods
that I'm shocked.
On page 40 of Chuck Kriese's book he writes about his experience
studying under Harry Hopman. Harry Hopman was the Australia Davies Cup
coach for 20 years and developed the talents of Rod Laver, Ken Rosewall,
Roy Emerson and many others in the 50's and 60's. Here is some of what
Kriese had to say when he first stepped on the courts to study under Hopman.
"In the fist month of working for Hopman, I was shocked,
surprised and somewhat disappointed to find out that I was not learning
all the fancy schoolbook techniques of the great players that I had heard
so much about. Hopman was working with current junior players John McEnroe,
Peter Fleming and Vitas Gerulaitis. He would put them on workout courts
and make them hit THOUSANDS of balls as he ran them from side to side
and up and back, the whole time encouraging them to push themselves physically
beyond their limits. Very seldom did I hear Hopman talk about certain
shot techniques, and when he did, it was always in a way that gave leniency
to the player's INDIVIDUAL FORM AND STYLE ALLOWING THE PLAYER TO IMMEDIATELY
ADAPT."
Hit thousands of balls! Leniency to the individual form
and style of a player! I'm loving this stuff! A few paragraphs later he
explains that it took him three months to understand Hopman's approach
and how Hopman thought it was much more important to TRAIN THE INNER PART
OF THE ATHLETE than it was to just TRAIN THE ATHLETE'S TECHNICAL SKILLS.
Kriese went on from there to write.
"I started asking myself questions about teaching and playing
styles. Why were the strokes of the top players in the world so completely
different? Why were some players baseline players, and why were others
net rushers? Why did almost all the players use different grips to hit
the ball? I thought of all the coaches who were teaching structured styles
and forcing their pupils to play in certain ways. Then I would watch Hopman.
I saw how he could coax the inner part of a player to produce the results
that he wanted, but always in a unique way, suiting each players's personality."
"I realize that although certain fundamental skills are
important to deliver a ball with the right force, spin and direction,
a player's strokes are developed pretty much according to his individual
temperament and his own style."
I love it! With all this is mind I had a question from
one of my readers about how they could stop swinging on the volleys. Here
is the way I approach this problem for most players.
In the first lesson I Immediately begin working on their
thinking. I ask my student to slow down and hit the ball easier. I explain
that most players hit the volley fast (an anxious swing) and then recover
slowly for the next shot, instead of hitting the volley slowly (less swing)
and then recovering fast for the next shot. Players actually reverse the
process! They hit fast and recover slowly. After the explanation and a
demonstration the student begins to volley with a slightly reduced swing.
Since I have a hitter that hits for me while I teach I can stay on the
sideline encouraging my student to volley easy and then recover fast.
Hit easy, recover fast, hit easy, recover fast, hit easy, recover fast
is the concept I try to instill in them through repetition.
Notice I'm not trying to force the block volley, or giving
them excessive technical information. However, I am laying the foundation
for them to think better about how they hit the volley and eventually
mold the volley according to their own style. Every once in a while I
remind them to relax. This too, helps to reduce the swing.
Next, either in this lesson or the next lesson as they begin
improving and automatically reducing the swing, I begin to teach them
the concept of working the racket face, not the swing. Again, I'm working
on their thinking in regard to volleys. I explain you do not make a ball
go where you want by swinging, but by how you gently adjust the face of
the racket. I demonstrate by holding the racket and moving the racket
face so it points in different directions. Slight movements of the racket
face determines the direction of the ball, not the swing. Work the racket
face, not the swing to develop a good controlled volley. I harp on this
concept for a number of lessons until I eventually mold them into a block
volley. In time the correct volley begins to happen naturally and they
still have their own style and personality involved in the process.
Rarely do I even say block the volley. Although sometimes
a few words about blocking the ball or just letting it rebound off their
strings works like a charm. This is up to the teacher and what he/she
feels will work with that particular student. THUS, THE ART OF TEACHING
IS A MOLDING PROCESS COAXING A PLAYER IN THE CORRECT DIRECTION WITH A
VARIETY OF MENTAL AND PHYSICAL TECHNIQUES - all with the students personality,
style, form and instinct as part of the learning process.
This is called learning from the inside out. Try it!
Tom Veneziano
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Copyright © 2001 Tom Veneziano. All rights reserved
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