Tennis Fundamentals
I hope that this article will prove useful for both novices and experts alike in the tennis world. I am striving
to arouse interest in the student of the game of tennis by a somewhat lengthy discussion of match play, which I
hope will cast a new light on the game of tennis.
Tennis Fundamentals
I will turn to the tennis beginner in my opening and write of certain matters which are second nature to the
skilled player. The best tennis equipment is not much good to the beginner even if he really is trying to
succeed.
However, one has to buy good quality; it is a saving in the end, as good quality equipment far outlasts poor
quality gear.
It is important to always dress in tennis apparel when playing tennis. The question of choosing a tennis racquet
is a much more serious matter. I do not advocate forcing a certain racquet upon any player. All the standard makes
are excellent.
It is the weight, balance, and size of handle that allows you to hold a tennis racquet properly, while good
stringing is essential to obtain the best hitting techniques and serving results.
After having bought your racquet, make a firm resolve to buy only quality tennis balls, as a consistent bounce
is a great aid to advancement, while a "dead" ball is of no use at all.
If you really desire to improve your techniques and tennis drills rapidly, I strongly recommend that you watch
all the good tennis you can.
Study the techniques and serving drills of the top players - the serve, the volley, the forehand and the
backhand - and strive to emulate their strokes. Read all the tennis instruction manuals you can get your hands on.
They are a great help in studying technique.
It is surprising to many people that more tennis technique can be learned off the tennis court in the study of
theory and in watching the best players in play, than can ever be learned in one's own actual play.
I do not mean that you should miss opportunities to play tennis, far from it. Play tennis whenever possible, but
try when playing to put into practice the theories and information you have read about or the strokes you have
watched.
Never become discouraged by slow progress. The trick of playing some stroke you have worked on over weeks
unsuccessfully, will suddenly come to you when you least expect it.
Good tennis players are the product of hard work. Very few players are born geniuses at the game. Tennis is a
game that pays you interest all your life. A tennis racquet is a letter of introduction in any town.
The fellowship of tennis is universal, for none but an athletic sportsman can succeed in the game for any
lengthy period of time. Tennis provides relaxation, excitement, exercise, and pure enjoyment to the player who is
bound fast to his business until late afternoon.
The following order of development produces the quickest and most lasting results: 1. Concentration on the game.
2. Keep the eye on the ball. 3. Foot-work and weight-control. 4. Strokes. 5. Court position. 6. Court generalship
or match play. 7. Tennis psychology.
Concentration. Tennis is played primarily with the mind. The most perfect racquet technique invented will
not suffice if the directing mind is erring. There are many reasons for a wandering mind in a tennis match.
The chief one is loss of interest in the game. No one should play tennis with any hope of real success unless he
cares enough about the game to be willing to do the spadework necessary to learn the game properly.
Pack it in immediately unless you are willing to work very hard. The weather, conditions of play or the noises
in the gallery usually confuse even experienced match-players playing in new surroundings.
Utter concentration on the game is the only remedy for a wandering mind, and the sooner that lesson is learned
the quicker the advancement of the player.
The surest way to keep a match in mind is to play for every set, every game in the set, every point in the game
and, finally, every shot in the point.
A set is merely a conglomeration of made and missed shots, and the man who misses the least is the ultimate
victor.
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