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#21 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 92
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#22 |
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New User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 92
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Sorry for all of the back to back posts!
JR is right also about having the confidence to go for more each time. |
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#23 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,002
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#24 | |
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Hall Of Fame
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But each match, I worried less about winning or losing and was able to loosen up and play bettertennis - each match I new I could go for a bit more and didn't have to hold back as much. I definitely don't win all the time, but building on wins and also losses - helped me bring my game along. Looks like smiley has all the tools to be good, he just has to loosen and realize that these wins indicate that he can play the type of tennis his pro is talking about. I have to sympathize though, looke like smiley is facing a bit of presure to win to get on the USTA and travel teams - it's not always easy to loosen up under those conditions. I don't advocate pushing, but sometimes being able to grind it out, retrieve balls, get the ball back into play, and stay consistent can be a great tool to pull out of your bag when your "A" game just isn't on.
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#25 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: South Florida
Posts: 1,938
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I agree with your coach.
Pushing will get you so far even if you win a lot at lower levels. Confidence he may have shot down now is better than going up a level and not understanding why you are always on the defense. I know this all too well, cause ever since i came back.. i tend to get trapped playing lower level peeps,.. and just need to keep the ball in play to win. I later go to nationals and have my hands full. Wasn't like that back in the day where I went for my shots. Invest in your shots. I'm not saying bang it, but step in.. go for the shot.. don't just chip it in and be tentative. If you feel you are holding back.. then you are definetly not improving. You are being safe and comfortable. If thats what you like.. I suggest to me that the public park weekend play is your ultimate goal.
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"[Luke:] I can't believe it. [Yoda:] That is why you fail." |
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#26 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: South Florida
Posts: 1,938
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"If you are not moving forward.. you are moving backwards"
"The most important thing you can do to achieve your goals is to make sure that as soon as you set them, you immediately begin to create momentum." Anthony Robbins
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"[Luke:] I can't believe it. [Yoda:] That is why you fail." |
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#27 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 14,084
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I understand the confidence argument, but I can't get behind it.
Smiley now has two good push wins under her belt. So does that mean it is time to stop pushing? If so, then I guess we're all in agreement that now is the time to stop pushing. Also, I lived this nightmare myself. I pushed at 2.5, and it worked great because I could push better than the next person. Oh, I was confident, all right, bordering on the cocky. I only met one person all year who could beat me. I then pushed at 3.0. All that 2.5 confidence evaporated and I was left with nothing but crummy strokes. Confidence achieved through pushing your way to a win evaporates on you at very predictable times: Whenever you start losing.
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#28 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: NC
Posts: 654
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I believe we are all agreeing that 'pushing' or more specifically inadequate strokes will only take you so far in tennis. With that in mind, it is important to determine what your goals are for tennis before deciding what you should and shouldn't do.
In my own case, I'm still trying to get better and have an idea of how far I would like to develop in my abilitiies that would negate a 'win at all cost' strategy. That said, there are many people playing tennis that don't give a hoot about advancing and want to just win matches, so perhaps the advice for them would be different. |
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#29 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Posts: 4,404
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I disagree with your pro. He should not take your confidence away from you so early in your competitive career. Winning at lowest levels means learning how to keep the ball in play. You are doing that. To continue to improve, you will want to focus on better technique placing the ball deeper, etc. but that all will come with time. You know how to win. He seems to want to teach you to learn how to lose. Losing with great technique has few rewards. Keep practicing and working on improving your technique but don't try to change your current game too much or too fast. Keep doing what works but improve on what you are doing.
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#30 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,348
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- its an effective strategy against players who have poor legs, conditioning and it works against over hitters who are inconsistent at generating their own pace (lots of players 4.0 and under). - all of us need to develop our defensive game not just our offensive game - everyone benefits from improving their touch, feel, range of power, and all the good things one can do with enhanced hands - it teaches patience and improves one's shot tolerance I would be a better player and win a few more matches if I used more push skills against certain players at the right time because as we all know simply handing someone pace and power often feeds right into their game plan. A pro with a clue would respect a pusher's game for what it is without all the negative judgments and evaluate their students objectively helping them develop pusher skills just like they should be teaching the all court, baseline, serve and volley game too. A teaching pro who believes the only game worth mastering (especially at lower levels) is the aggressive baseline game, is a clown. |
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#31 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 92
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No one ever said pushing was not effective at lower levels, especially for beginners. As far as I'm concerned if people are happy pushing all of their tennis lives, fine. I'm not one of them. |
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#32 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 14,084
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Only Smiley can tell us what she wants out of tennis and something about her potential to progress.
Oh, wait. She already has! She wants to become a ranked player in her area. She is fast and quite fit. After just a few months, she can hang with good players. She takes a boatload of instruction, which is something people do when they want to improve and improve quickly. Yet it's OK to push and *not hit the way she has been taught to hit?* Hey, her pro saw her in the push victory. He didn't think much of it. That says a lot. I mean, any pro who said to me, "Hey, I saw your match, and although you didn't hit any of your shots the way I know you can, you outlasted that inferior player, so I'm good with it!" would get the boot.
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#33 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 8,129
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Yup yup- I am actually surprised that people are disagreeing with her pro. How many of us have the luxury to have a teaching pro watch a match of ours that counts and then critique us? If I were to start a beginner on tennis, I would have them work on strokes, serves volleys, ect. until they have reasonable technique and only play out practice points. Only when they have reasonable technique start playing real matches. Of course that would be an ideal situation, most people don't have the patience to wait that long! |
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#34 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Scottsdale, Az
Posts: 1,113
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#35 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,133
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However, in a match situation you do what you need to do to win. If you practice correctly, as you improve in practice, what you learn will slowly start to naturally appear in your matches.
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yessssiirrrrrrrr |
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#36 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: NC
Posts: 654
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Anyone ever take a golf lesson with a good pro? The first thing they (usually) will say is, 'do you want to get better with what you got or do you want to get a lot better?' The implication is that they can work with what you have to make it as good as it can be or they can change it drastically - which generally makes you worse initially, but if you work at it will make you improve dramatically.
I believe the same principles apply here. If you want to achieve what you can with what you got - that's one thing, but if you really want to get better.... So as Cindy pointed out - Smiley wants and has the potential to get a lot better - so listen to the pro! BTW - agree that it is awesome to have a pro watch your match. Not only is it great that they did it, but it gives them an opportunity to look at the whole game - not just a stroke. Kudos to your pro! |
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#37 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,133
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yessssiirrrrrrrr |
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#38 | ||
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,348
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If by push the OP did whatever she needed to stay in points, then I consider it a useful skill (since all tennis players at all levels do so from time to time rather than hit low percentage shots), if by push she meant abandon fundamental skills, stroke mechanics, etc. then that's undesireable. Yet I don't consider push, pushing, or pusher to be someone who has abandoned fundamental skills or good stroke mechanics. I know plenty of pushers whose mechanics are flawless and it shows in their consistency, placement, and depth, whether they "push" the ball or not. So, like I said, its an easily misunderstood overloaded term. Why would any instructor put down a student who won a match? Why not be positive, creative, and encouraging and talk objectively about the match with a critical eye both positive and negative of actual skills demonstrated. |
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#39 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 14,084
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It depends on the student and the instructor.
Me, I don't want happy talk and encouragement that was not earned. "Push" at the lower levels means pretty much what Smiley described: failing to finish the stroke. Just dinking it back. Believe me, it works fine at 2.5 and low 3.0. I'd guess the pushing is what annoyed the pro. Cindy -- who rarely gets positive evaluations from her pro that don't have the words "for your level" attached to the end of them, and who doesn't mind the qualification because it's true
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#40 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 482
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from what i have seen it is once a pusher always a pusher, so i think your pro is kind of right. It is one thing to play good defense and hit safe shots. It is another thing to hit everything with some kind of crap slice or underspin just to keep the ball in play. I think is better to hit 'real' shots so that as you get better you will be in the practice of doing that. It is easy to push if you need to if you, but it is not easy to hit good shots when you are not used to doing that. I think I would take enough lessons that i felt confident in my strokes so that when i went to play a match I was comforatable. Play some ntrp tournaments with people who are your level so that you can practice using the proper technique and still have the chance of winning and gaining confidence.
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