HomeTennis coachDoes Anyone Really Know How to Produce a Champion? Part I

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Does Anyone Really Know How to Produce a Champion? Part I — 5 Comments

  1. Oh why did yo have to mention the big headed Swiss.Novak is now a far superior player,not a particular fan but accept the fact

  2. Mr. Mullins,

    Great insight into your thoughts, and observations. No-one can explain why you have the tiny nation of Switzerland produce the best player ever or a 2 time grand slam champion who lived down the road from him, in a country that doesn’t get much in the way of financial support.
    so many people are hung up (often the people that run national governing bodies) on
    “producing champions” as they feel thats their mission. You can lay foundations especially with LTAD, you can nurture mindset (mainly set from parents) but ultimately once you reach the echelons of the sport it comes down to the mental fortitude that one individual possesses. As the saying goes, you often become the 5 people you are around the most, and thinking about how different people are, this is a huge undertaking. You cannot really know how to “wire” a champion, you don’t know how they process/absorb information and whether it gives them ultimate drive. You can only open the door for them but its ultimately down to the individual whether they want to walk through it.
    People talk about talent. what is talent? “Oh Federer has natural talent, thats why he’s so good”. Well i propose this, what keeps him going, arguably in todays modern fast paced physically outrageous game world, how does he compete and stay in the top 4? Natural talent? Wrong… its his mental fortitude, desire, and if he still has that now after everything he’s accomplished, imagine his will to win, his drive to succeed back when he was starting his legacy!

    National Governing bodies especially US, UK, France and Australia that receive large amounts of financial resources from the biggest tournaments in the world feel pressured that because they get all this money they should produce champions.
    WRONG!
    Their focus should be to use those resources to do exactly what you mentioned in your blog. Create large amounts of opportunities to grow the base. Then you very well may blossom a champion somewhere?! how long will that take? who knows could be a decade, could be over 7 like the UK. Governing bodies should be judged by their depth of players in the world rankings not by a champion, and they should be judged by their level of support of those players, not financial but other means that open the door to ultimate sacrifice and the will to win attitude! Anyways, thank you for your blog, very thought provoking. Look forward to the next one.

    • Thanks so much for the feedback Johnny. Love the insight and couldn’t agree with you more.

  3. Great article, love the stuff about grassroots and getting more people to play. Not really sure whether many of the top athletes have had a lack of resource or opportunity?

    • Thank you Gareth. Yes, I think a lot of our top athletes may have not had the resources but they were able to find and take advantage of any opportunity that was presented to them. Getting a scholarship to an academy, winning a wildcard, finding a sponsor who believed in them etc. My roommate in college came from a very simple background but took advantage of the few opportunities he had and made it to # 60 in the world. That may not sound all that impressive but it is all reletive. My home country would give anything for a top 100 player winning rounds at grand slam events! Obviously each sport is different but when you hear about some of the struggles many of the worlds greatest athletes have had to overcome in their childhoods, it is not surprising that they can handle pressure and adversity on the sports court/field better than their peers. I guess that’s my point, each story is different and there doesn’t seem to be any one way otherwise there would be 10 Novak Djokovic’s!