| | | Welcome to the April 2019 update from Tennis Server, http://www.tennisserver.com/  Greetings,  In his April column, John Mills discusses drill strategies if the level of your match play does not match the level of your play in practice. See: Play Great in Lessons/Practice But Not in Match.  And in his column in this newsletter below, Tennis Warrior Tom Veneziano teaches us the role of timing, judgment, balance and muscle sense to develop your own unique tennis "feel." See: "Training Your Internal Senses."  Have fun on the court!  Cliff Kurtzman Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Tennis Server   Please feel free to forward this newsletter to a friend, and suggest that they go to http://www.tennisserver.com/ to sign up for their own free subscription.  We will miss you if you leave, but if you should decide that you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, just click here to unsubscribe.   The Tennis Warrior - Exclusive to Tennis Server Newsletter Â
 The Tennis Warrior is brought to you by Tom Veneziano (tom@tennisserver.com). Tom is a tennis pro teaching at the Piney Point Racquet Club in Houston, Texas. Tom has taught thousands of players to think like a pro with his Tennis Warrior System.  April 2019 -- Training Your Internal Senses  As many of you know I teach tennis strokes by feel and not mechanics. Think about how a child learns to ride a bicycle or learns to walk. The child may be performing daily mechanics as he or she learns to walk, but they cannot walk or ride a bicycle until they develop a feel for walking or riding through repetition. You can walk today because you feel a sense of timing and a sense of balance from that repetition. And that sense of timing and balance allows the mechanics of walking to work. A tennis lesson should be no different. Just because you can perform a stroke mechanically does not mean you have a functional stroke. Without a feel for that stroke you may look pretty as you hit, but your results will be dismal.  This is where conventional tennis lessons go astray. Pros are preoccupied with the exact mechanics of the stroke, giving the impression to the student that the mechanics performed properly is the stroke. You may be thinking, "Well, isn't it?" Not even close!  I have seen thousands of players hit the so-called perfect stroke and send the ball sailing miles out! Meanwhile, the pros who do not have the so-called perfect stroke are hitting the balls in the court consistently. They do this by feel. Unless you have developed a feel from training the internal skills or senses you will have a superficial stroke that will inevitably break down under pressure.  You must learn to execute all your strokes by feel. How do you develop this feel? You develop this feel by training four internal senses by massive repetition. Those senses are: Timing Judgment Balance Muscle sense All four of these internal senses combine together to form a whole, creating a 'feel' for a given shot. And that 'feel' allows the mechanics to work correctly. If you have a feel for a stroke you can improvise to make a shot. When you are all mechanics the ball had better be in the exact spot necessary to make the shot or YOU'RE IN TROUBLE! If you have a feel for a stroke you will identify with the stroke as a whole unit. If you are all mechanics you will identify with the stroke as individual parts, which can be mind boggling.  What I just explained about developing the four senses is why all pros have different styles and different form. Everyone has a different sense of timing, judgment, balance, and muscle sense. There are a million ways to swing high to low for slice and a million ways to swing low to high for topspin. No two pros are the same. Once a pro's internal senses are developed as a junior, his or her own individual style is revealed. This is accomplished by hitting thousands and thousands and thousands of balls. They may not look like the books explain or illustrate, but the results speak for themselves.  As juniors, pros may have had some lessons on the technical skills, but it was not until their internal senses were developed through repetition that their own individual style was revealed.  I remember reading about Bjorn Borg and his big looping forehand with the western grip. Even though coaches tried to change his forehand, Borg just kept hitting it because he said it just felt natural. As you know, the rest is history. The big looping forehand has become a common shot on the pro circuit and has changed tennis forever!  You too should learn to develop your own style through massive repetition. Yes, it's fine to take lessons, but do not rely on the technical to make you a good player. Instead rely more on training your internal senses, your sense of timing, your sense of judgment, your sense of balance, and your muscle sense to the point where you begin feeling the stroke, even if the stroke is not book perfect. Who knows, maybe you will change the face of tennis again!  When you train with emphasis on mechanics you become more robotic and rigid. When you train with emphasis on feel you become more natural and automatic... just like a pro! Eliminate from your mind this notion of the perfect mechanical stroke. That notion will hamper your freedom on the court to express your own style and form and to just be you. Instead, learn to develop your internal senses through hours and hours of practice on the tennis court.  Let me leave you with a response from Bjorn Borg in his book "Borg by Borg." Below is the interviewer's question and Borg's answer exactly as it appears in the book.  Question: You are the best player in the world and lots of people try to imitate your style. It has been said you don't like to be imitated. Is this true?  Bjorn Borg - "I know lots of players try to imitate me and I'm not sure that's a good thing for them. I think it's better to find your own personal style, as Mr. Bergelin [his coach] has said, rather than imitating someone. Playing like me might go right against the personality of the player who's trying to do it.  I think it's difficult to play as I do. You have to be very quick if you have a two-handed backhand, because you have to be nearer the ball when you hit it, so you have to get to it sooner. I see lots of young people trying to put on top-spin like Vilas and myself. I have nothing against it. It might even be a good idea, because it's difficult to play against opponents who put a lot of top-spin on the ball. But the most important thing is to feel at home playing your strokes. Everything else, slice or top-spin will follow naturally. Find the style that suits you best."  How do you like those last few lines? "But the most important thing is to FEEL at home playing your strokes. Everything else, slice or top-spin will follow naturally. FIND THE STYLE THAT SUITS YOU BEST."  This information was from a book written in 1979. It's now 2019! Do you think the tennis world will ever get it?  Your Tennis Pro,  Tom Veneziano  Previous columns from Tom Veneziano are archived online in the Tennis Server's Tennis Warrior Archive six months after publication in this newsletter.       In Tom Veneziano's book "The Truth about Winning!", tennis players learn in a step-by-step fashion the thinking the pros have mastered to win! Tom takes you Step-by-step from basic mental toughness to advanced mental toughness. All skill levels can learn from this unique book from beginner to professional. No need to change your strokes just your thinking. Also available at a discount as an E-Book.  Audio CDs by Tom Veneziano:  The Refocus Technique: Controlling Your Emotions in Tennis.  Think Like a Pro -- 2 Audio CDs. Three minute free sample (real audio): http://www.tenniswarrior.com/audio/sample_audio.ram  Training for Pressure Play -- Audio CD. Four minute free sample (real audio): http://www.tenniswarrior.com/audio/pressure-play-sample.ram   Becoming a Tennis Server Sponsor/Advertiser  Our readers continually tell us they are hungry for information on tennis-related products, equipment, tournaments, and travel opportunities. There is no better way to reach the avid online tennis audience than through the Tennis Server. For information on advertising through our web site or in this newsletter, please contact us by using this form or call us at (281) 480-6300.  We have a variety of sponsorship programs available, and we can connect you with a highly targeted tennis audience at rates that are lower than many web sites charge for reaching a general audience.   Linking to the Tennis Server   We frequently receive requests from people for a graphic to use in linking from their site to the Tennis Server site. We've created a graphic at:  http://www.tennisserver.com/images/button.gif  that you are welcome to use in conjunction with a link to http://www.tennisserver.com/. You are welcome to copy this graphic and use it on your site for this purpose. Please be sure to include an ALT tag with the graphic: ALT="Tennis Server".   Newsletter Ground Rules  The Tennis Server and the Tennis Server Newsletter are copyrighted publications. "Tennis Server" is a registered trademark and "Center Court for Tennis on the Internet" is a trademark of Tennis Server. This newsletter, along with the editorial and photographs on the tennisserver.com web site, are copyrighted by Tennis Server and its contributors.  Our newsletters cover updates to the Tennis Server and other tennis information of general interest. Mailings occur approximately once a month, usually by the end of the first weekend of the month. The newsletter sometimes contains commercial tennis-related content from Tennis Server sponsors.  We keep the addresses of mailing list subscribers confidential. If someone asks us to distribute tennis- related materials to the mailing list, we might do so for them, and we might charge them for doing so if there is commercial content to the message.  See you on the courts,  --Cliff Kurtzman for Tennis Server  | | |
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