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Your Link to Professional Thinking!

A bad decision

One of the most important aspects of match play toughness is to understand some of the subtle but match breaking decisions a player must make. To be aware of these subtle moments and to make correct choices is the key to winning a higher percentage of your matches. When closing out a set or a match there are many mental traps a player can fall into. In this quick tip I will explain one match costing trap that has deceived me, in hopes that you will not do the same. I will also explain my rationale behind my bad decision.

I was just about to close out a match. I was up a break and serving at 5-4. I had been holding my serve by simply serving down the middle to the backhand on the deuce side and wide to the backhand on the ad side. I was in a battle, but everything was going according to my game plan. It was now my serve to close it out. All of a sudden this crazy thought came over me. I had been serving to the same spot the whole time, maybe I should change my serving placement and surprise my opponent. My rationale was that it seemed too predictable and obvious to continue serving to the same spot.

It’s funny what often happens when you are about to win. In essence, the importance of the moment made me change my thinking! Nevertheless it cost me the game, set and match. The strange thing is that I knew not to change a winning game, but did it anyway! I remember at the time something inside was telling me to not do this. I learned from that situation to not be afraid of doing the obvious when you are about to close out a set or a match.

The painful lesson I learned was to not let the importance of the moment deceive your mind into thinking that this moment requires something special, something complicated to win. If the obvious is winning STAY WITH IT!

Tom Veneziano

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