Free Practice Design Guide For Tennis Coaches
Stop running sessions that look busy but fail to transfer when players compete.
Download a free guide that helps you check whether your practice design supports real decision-making, adaptability and match performance.
Your players look good in practice, then struggle when the match starts.
Practice looks clean
Players can repeat shots in training, but the same behaviour disappears when pressure, scoring and opponents return.
You add more drills
The session gets busier, but the real problem remains: the practice may not represent the demands of performance.
Transfer is unclear
You are not always sure whether the practice is helping players adapt, decide and compete more effectively.
Five principles to redesign your sessions.
The guide gives you a simple way to check whether your sessions are representative, information-rich and connected to the problems players face in matches.
Representative Learning Design
Preserve the information-action relationship found in matches.
Repetition Without Repetition
Repeat the intention, not the same fixed movement.
Affordance-Driven Tasks
Create tasks that invite action instead of prescribing answers.
Constraint Manipulation
Shape behaviour by changing what the task makes possible.
Intention-Led Design
Give every practice a clear tactical purpose.
Score your session out of 10.
The guide includes a scorecard that helps you assess whether your session is traditional, partly representative or strongly designed for transfer.
0–4 Traditional Practice
Low representativeness, poor transfer and too much reliance on instruction or repetition.
5–7 Partly Representative
Some good ideas, but constraints need refining and the task may collapse under pressure.
8–10 Strong Design
Information-rich practice where adaptable behaviours can emerge and players solve problems.
See a real practice design in action.
The guide includes an example practice called “Tramline Unlock”, designed to help players earn spatial advantage, recognise when width becomes available and use it intelligently during live point play.
This is not a random drill. It is a representative task with live serves, scoring, tactical movement and decision-making.
Start designing practices that actually transfer.
Get the free Practice Design Guide and start building sessions that help players perceive, decide, adapt and compete.
Download The Guide