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Post Info TOPIC: The LTA


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The LTA


Logically to me, the learning to hit the ball properly rather than increasingly ingrained pat the ball in habits makes a lot of sense, and by association the "good miss" arguement.

But then I'm just trying to think logically as to what may be the best way to the end goal of winnung matches by hitting the ball in with an ingrained full shot, and have zero experience within tennis, so pethaps may be totally dismissed ...

It is though an age old riposte of the football pundit when essentially losing an arguement to a fan in a phone-inn to come out wirh "but you've never played the game".

Experience counts a lot, so does good logical thought. And if you have both, all the better. 



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Unfortunately Coup, parents and umpires are probably the two biggest sinners when it comes to desperately trying to get involved and make things about themselves somehow. With little or no consideration for the consequences of their actions on others. My opinion is very much different to yours, whilst being behind a desk technically is "part" of the real world and their blunders have such repercussions that they won't even know or begin to understand, its still very different from actively being out in the field, the cashier who sells me lettuce at the local supermarket has no influence on how my salad will turn out tonight, but my girlfriend might, so maybe the cashier should keep their opinion to themself about how I like my salad rather than offering it to me as gospel, you know what I mean?

Of course people are allowed opinion with or even without appropriate knowledge, my opinion is that the New Zealand prime minister has handled the whole situation better than Boris, but I could be wrong, I don't live in either country. Maybe Boris might also have a valid opinion on the current government the UK, probably doesn't think its a shambles though.

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Indy,

 

I could have a good, long and logical thought about how I'm going to bake a cake with total ingredients of 6 crayons, an old sock and unicorn hair. Would probably turn out better if I had eggs and flour just saying



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Interested to know where, from experience, the hit the ball full and steadily aim to get it closer aporoach may break down, including wirh continuing this approach in match situations, if taught not that it totally doesn't matter if it is in or out but with a shared understanding of the end goal so in that context there may be a 'good miss'.

I imagine it can depend on the particular individuals, the coach and player involved, and the buy-in. But to me, it certainly seems an aporoach that could work for some, and not one just to be dismssed



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Although I personally won't acknowledge it as an actual approach, any validity there is to a "hit the ball out and then in" approach is supported by a governing body that has failed for such a long time to make tennis players, and a country full of juniors who all look amazing but can't play a match for twopence 

 

Not to mention they have little or no knowledge how the body works and/or biomechanics, or perhaps even the physical well-being of their players/people

 

 

 

 



-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:20:12 PM

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Goodness, junior. You do seem to have got het up

Yes, your opinion on the nz pm might be not hugely informed. But your opinion about tennis coaching is only based on your personal background. As mine is based on mine. Neither is wrong nor right, both have limitations. But they give perspectives. Which is probably what people on the forum are interested in. If they haven't lost the will to live by this point biggrin

(and, yes, I know all about tennis parents, having dealt with a huge number, good, bad and ugly. I guess under your rationale your opinion on parents is not relevant unless you are one?)


Logic goes a long way, Indy. A sorely underrated skill







-- Edited by Coup Droit on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:24:32 PM

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That's good to hear coup, My personal opinion is this: if everyday I make salad and everyday you watch me make that salad, who has the experience of making the salad? Me or you? Me, because I made it, you watched me make it even if you think you now know how to make the salad, I still made my salad and can make it again. It's the same principle with real life on court experience.

I'm sure a lot of people on this thread perhaps have bosses who they might consider they can do the job of, or that they themselves are in a position of solely "making money" for the boss.

 

Also I'm sure there's lots of parents who think like that, but then again I've had to educate children in morals way beyond those of a normal coach and their job due to parents being unable and unwilling so no that's not really my opinion, although I wouldn't claim to have the experience of a parent either



-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:25:52 PM



-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:35:48 PM

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indiana wrote:

Interested to know where, from experience, the hit the ball full and steadily aim to get it closer aporoach may break down, including wirh continuing this approach in match situations, if taught not that it totally doesn't matter if it is in or out but with a shared understanding of the end goal so in that context there may be a 'good miss'.

I imagine it can depend on the particular individuals, the coach and player involved, and the buy-in. But to me, it certainly seems an aporoach that could work for some, and not one just to be dismssed


 It's an interesting point. And, yes, is strongly based on psyche. Players' natural default modes are very difficult to modify. You see it right up to the top level. We had identical twins in one county selected group - completely different default mindset. 

And the approach can also depend why the ball is out - I.e. technique not quite in place (cant really do it consistently in practice) or technique fine (can do it 99% in practice) but tenses up in a match. 

lots of coaches will also distinguish between matches. And want the player to. Some matches are perfect practice matches. 

 



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junior wrote:

Although I personally won't acknowledge it as an actual approach, any validity there is to a "hit the ball out and then in" approach is supported by a governing body that has failed for such a long time to make tennis players, and a country full of juniors who all look amazing but can't play a match for twopence 

 

Not to mention they have little or no knowledge how the body works and/or biomechanics, or perhaps even the physical well-being of their players/peop

 


-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:20:12 PM


 So the practical issues that would be pointed out by those with more knowledge are ... ? 



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The technique folk forget the biggest obstacle in sport/tennis, the person up the other end, never mattered how good Federers technique was unfortunately when he never hit one ball below shoulder height on the backhand due to Nadal's relentless punishment

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indiana wrote


-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:20:12 PM


 So the practical issues that would be pointed out by those with more knowledge are ... ? 


 The practical issue is..... First and foremost the objective of tennis is to hit the ball over the net and inbetween the lines. Anyone who tells a person (child, adult, alien whatever) to just hit the ball anywhere willynilly is wrong. One to the parking lot, one at an old lady walking her dog, one backwards. But some people apparently would try and tell swimmers to breathe underwater too so......



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junior wrote:
indiana wrote


-- Edited by junior on Thursday 4th of February 2021 03:20:12 PM


 So the practical issues that would be pointed out by those with more knowledge are ... ? 


 The practical issue is..... First and foremost the objective of tennis is to hit the ball over the net and inbetween the lines. Anyone who tells a person (child, adult, alien whatever) to just hit the ball anywhere willynilly is wrong. One to the parking lot, one at an old lady walking her dog, one backwards. But some people apparently would try and tell swimmers to breathe underwater too so......


 And to my mind you still aren't giving any convincing reasons  ( well much real reason at all beyond sound bites ) as to why the hit hard/full approach and aim to get closer as opposed to the just get it in and more ensure you win points in the here and now approach won't work in the long term, at least for some. 

Let me try and help you, you mentioned "how the body works and/or biomechanics" but didn't enlarge.

Pretend I'm a young player ( or one of these gruesome parents ). Buy me in to not just continuing to hit it hard but out. I'm sure I'm geting closer, coach, I reckon I'll be beating Cuthbert Patitback soon. 



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Not sure how much simpler I'm able to make it for you. I've met many others who also are unable to understand the very very basic that the objective of tennis is for one to hit (using the racquet not the shoe) the ball over the net and in the court not out. I often think that; to be completely oblivious to this is requirement number 1 to be involved of the LTA, get your CV ready ;).

It's that simple, the objective when playing catch is not drop kicking ones son in the face, you throw the projectile towards them for them to catch, hence the name (no matter how hard you might be able to kick).



-- Edited by junior on Friday 5th of February 2021 06:58:08 AM



-- Edited by junior on Friday 5th of February 2021 07:01:10 AM

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Cuthbert Patitback - brilliant biggrinbiggrinbiggrin



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Coup Droit wrote:

Cuthbert Patitback - brilliant biggrinbiggrinbiggrin


 Made his Davis Cup debut last year... 



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