How to Build Fruitful Cooperation Between Tennis Coaches and USTA Player Development
I received an interesting opinion on the post “Can American Tennis Coaches Develop New Champions With Help of USTA Player Development?” from Ray Brown, PhD. I found his view very thoughtful and decided to publish as a separate article. Read it carefully.
America has always been the country of the rugged individualist, and we still are.
Great players, scientists, artist, coaches, educators, writers, engineers, managers, etc. are rugged individualists who come out of nowhere; they always have. The exact origin of champions will always be a bit of a mystery because of the intangibles of the human personality. To find champions in any field, we must cast a wide net that allows for intangibles to make their mark. The next great tennis champion may be a ragamuffin from nowhere, USA, but only if they are able to find their way into the “system”.
Of particular note is that the corporate culture of the USTA only invites the nice polite parents, players and coaches to participate in their bounty. The thorny personalities, common to great achievers, are immediately eliminated by bureaucracies because the bureaucrats have a very thin skin and cannot endure frankness of the ilk of Robert Lansdorp. But frankness is essential; blunt appraisals are essential for discovery and to facilitate the entrance of gifted individuals into tennis or any enterprise. Great thinkers, and players, are thorny, like Robert, and thus do not fit into the amicable mold required to be a part of the thought process of a bureaucracy. They are unwelcome in the peace-loving, don’t make waves USTA.
Because of their hubris, bureaucracies justify replacing the collective minds of millions with the thought process of a few like-minded individuals. In this action, a bureaucracy becomes a filter that is more likely to obstruct the emergence of talent than to facilitate its emergence because it cannot consider intangibles, think outside-of-the-box or avail itself of serendipity. From where does this hubris arise? It arises from individuals who assume that they are the all-knowing “tennis gods” entitled to legislate behavior rather than facilitate creative thinking. The USTA’s legislative point-of-view justifies obstructing parents and coaches from developing players by excluding them from financial support and facility support.
Hubris always justifies a bureaucracies’ desire to a dictator rather than a facilitator.
But dictators do not inspire cooperation, especially from highly qualified individuals. This is yet another reason why the USTA should be a facilitator, not a legislating dictator. By dictating how player development will proceed, not only do they lose the benefits of more minds, the creativity of the thorny individual, the energy of volunteers, but they the lose cooperation of capable individuals, engender antagonism, diminish their goodwill and spawn public confrontation and condemnation. This is never good for an organization’s public image.
The bottom line: We must cast a wide net (that may even include some degree of randomness) in order to account for the intangibles of the human personality and spirit in our search process, unlike what the USTA Player Development does today; we must include thorny, disagreeable and diverse personalities in the development process unlike what the USTA does today; we must include many minds in the search process, not just a chosen few, unlike what the USTA does today; and, be a facilitator, not an all-knowing self appointed “tennis god” as the USTA Player Development is today.
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That is so true. USTA acts as the all knowing tennis god; if you don’t fall under their guidelines you’re automatically eliminated. They do not like individuals that bucks the system. USTA really do not reach out to identify those kids that actually have potential; kids that have the extra special talents and natural abilities. The best way to get in with USTA is probably knowing someone high up in the system. USTA is not training kids that actually have the best abilities but of better then average players. That is why they have no success in their development program.
So very true! If only the all-knowing USTA leadership would take heed. Not
Likely…
America as the country of the rugged individualist is a complete myth. That’s certainly part of the American catechism whether it be the “rugged cowboy” or the Horatio Algier myth of America or today’s version of the soaring entrepreneur. However it’s all a lie but that’s for another discussion I suppose.
In any case the central point that the USTA bureaucracy inhibits growth of tennis in this country is spot on and it’s not just nice, polite folks cluttering the USTA it’s the consistently incompetent.
Of course with all dysfunctional bureaucracies you have to look first at the top. And there we see….well we know whose running this thing into the ground. And sycophants? Is there any organization out there that has more per capita? And why are they all so damn bumbling?
It is in fact not a mystery as to what makes champions. There are intangibles but there is always a constant. Here’s a recent quote by Federer that sums it up nicely.
“I feel most important is the work ethic and making sure that the kids you are training with understand that it’s not just the coach’s job to motivate them or that if you win a junior tournament you’re actually great. You’re far away from it. You have to keep working hard. … [Y]ou can’t have the parents and the coaches make you feel good all the time. You have to make sacrifices. I left home at 14 years old, stopped school at 16 and went on tour. I had a hard time understanding what hard work was, but eventually I figured it out, thankfully, early enough. If the kids don’t understand and don’t want to put in the hard work — I’m not talking about just hanging around the courts and playing for four hours a day; it’s about working well and quality — they will never get anywhere. It’s just very simple.”
– Roger Federer, when asked about youth tennis and how the U.S. men can re-establish their dominance.
That is so true. As a player, they must possess incredible work ethics. The desire to make themselves better. It is not just the coaches job. The coach can only do so much. For most part, it is up to the individual. My question to the American players is ” DO YOU WANT IT BAD ENOUGH “. USTA now needs to rethink their selection and training of the US players, otherwise we will have a short fall of great players for a long time.