Category: Practice Design & Session Ideas

At the My Tennis Coaching Academy meet-up, coaches discussed reimagining serve coaching by moving away from rigid technical instruction. Emphasizing natural skill emergence, they advocated for adaptive learning environments and focusing on functional outcomes instead of aesthetics. The session underscored the importance of patience and innovative practice designs to improve player performance.

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The backhand in tennis is often undertrained compared to the forehand, despite its importance. To build backhand confidence, practice should focus on intentional volume and decision-making. A constraint-style drill, allowing players only backhands, helps them develop defensive skills and better control, ultimately preparing them for real match situations.

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Steve reflects on 18 years of coaching tennis focused on rigid techniques, realizing it fails under pressure. A transformative moment at a national camp led to adopting ecological dynamics, promoting adaptability instead of scripts. This shift improved player performance and highlighted the need to educate parents and colleagues about this new coaching approach.

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Steve reflects on a pivotal coaching experience that led them to abandon traditional drills like basket feeding. They emphasize that such methods often hinder skill transfer and reduce enjoyment. By adopting ecological dynamics and constraints-led coaching, players became more adaptive, problem-solving, and fulfilled, while the coach found greater satisfaction and effectiveness.

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This guide emphasizes the importance of early competition for players, encouraging play as a learning tool. It advocates for adaptable training, focusing on behavioral goals and managing pre-match nerves rather than perfect technique. Competition should be viewed as an opportunity for growth, resilience, and enjoyment in the game, fostering player confidence.

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Coaching kids requires balancing fun and skill development. Overemphasizing enjoyment can hinder meaningful progress. Coaches face challenges like ensuring skills transfer to match play and maintaining engagement. Effective strategies include game-based activities, representative drills, and blending autonomy with constructive feedback, ultimately fostering both enjoyment and real skill growth in young players.

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Steve Whelan explains why footwork ladders fail tennis players and what coaching methods work better

Footwork ladders are ineffective for tennis training as they promote predictable movements, lacking the chaos of actual gameplay. Instead, players should engage in situational footwork training that emphasizes unpredictability, decision-making, and dynamic movement. Effective alternatives include live ball drills, decision-making footwork drills, and match-simulated recovery patterns for game-ready skills.

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Many coaches focus primarily on technique while neglecting players’ mental challenges. Signs indicating a need for mental training include discomfort in competition, poor body language after mistakes, a tendency to play it safe under pressure, externalizing blame, and struggling with momentum shifts. Integrating mental training into regular sessions is essential for developing resilient players.

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Many coaches confuse delivering tennis activities with effective coaching. They often rely on technical jargon and structured drills instead of adapting to players’ actual needs. Focusing on biomechanical techniques over real-time observations neglects the game’s dynamic nature. True coaching involves flexibility, encouraging players to find organic movement solutions that improve match play outcomes.

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Mid-season challenges coaches to manage player intensity effectively to prevent burnout while maintaining performance. Key strategies include assessing daily readiness, balancing recovery with intensity using a 2:1 ratio, adjusting practices around match schedules, monitoring motivation, and reflecting weekly on player engagement. Adaptability is essential for sustaining optimal player performance.

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