Playing Tennis Matches
Rober Lansdorp about the importance of playing matches.
I think that playing tennis matches and tournaments is very important. Maria Sharapova, however, did not play a lot of junior tournaments. Some parents will send their kids all over the place to play tennis tournaments.
Be very careful, because junior tennis players don’t improve their technique when playing tournaments, besides stopping their getting stronger and quicker, their physical fitness in other words. Yes, they improve mentally but the technique will go down fast. After all when you play tennis matches you don’t worry how you hit the ball.
I was the first coach to travel on the tour with a player. I was the only one, traveling with Tracy Austin when she was 13. She would come home after a good two weeks and she was mentally fine. She was always mentally fine, but her technique got worse.
So I started traveling with her to keep her fine tuned, and it worked. Quarter finals of US Open at 14 and winning US Open at 16. When you send kids, say 13, 14, 15, to Europe for a month you are asking for trouble, especially if you do this often. See that’s why the European tennis players have the advantage. Short distance to all countries and all countries have ITF tournaments. Lots of them.
The US is lacking behind. When they play tennis tournaments you child has to beat the kids they are supposed to beat and beat kids they have no business beating. They have to win 3 setters, not always lose 3 setters. Not mentally tough enough. Lets face it, when your girl is 15 or 16, she better do well in the junior grand slams, or you will have a difficult future in the pros.
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Thank you. Positive and constructive! I have been inspired by this;copied and shared with my coach during planning/goals meeting. Very helpful. More of this from (this) seasoned coach and other coaches would mean so much to ‘us tennis moms’ etc.–my girl is 11 and so far loves the game yet some pitfalls and crummy stuff are upon us now. Stayin’ positive, with joy of improving until ‘ugly’ comes ( does it have too?)
How very true. Unfortunately too many parents and coaches are primarily focused on a child’s ranking rather than their development. Over the years I haven’t seen too many children who have had high rankings in their younger years progress to becoming competitive players on the tour. Unfortunately, children who learn to win at a young age don’t learn to lose well as they get older.