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#1 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 2,037
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My 10YO son is starting to get seeded in 12U tournaments and up until now, I would just sign him up and let him play without telling him who else is in the tournament (outside his training friends), who is seeded, who he plays, how old they are, etc, etc. I just wanted him to play without any mental clutter.
Do you think knowing they're seeded helps a kid's confidence going in or puts pressure on them? Curious to hear thoughts and experiences.
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Pro Kennex 7G, Head Rip Control 17 @ 58lbs, rubber band dampener, Tourna Grip. Last edited by BMC9670 : 01-31-2013 at 10:43 AM. |
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#2 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2010
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#3 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 452
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You shouldn't tell him about his opponents though. However, if you and him could scout the opponent while he was playing on another court, that can be helpful....may be not at 10 yr old but when he is older or playing higher/harder tournaments. |
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#4 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 863
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You can explain to him how it is results based etc if he doesn't understand but it only reflects sometimes how much the other kids have played. They have had more opportunities to win. A seeding is by definition a number's game but let him know there will always be somebody better...somewhere. Having the seed doesn't mean he is any better or is guaranteed a win. |
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#5 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 773
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I think it depends on the kid too. Tennis is much more difficult for my older son. When he was younger he would automatically think he was going to lose if he knew he was playing a seed. My younger son is always seeded at his age level and now is getting seeded is many tournaments in the next age level. He looks at the draw sheet at the tournament, asks me who he is playing and on and on. For him it does not make much difference.
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Wilson 6.1 95 |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 139
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My philosophy is don't tell him anything. Only to control what he can control, to play the right way, no to push, bounce before serving, that kind of thing. If you say you are playing a good player, he'll over think it and will lose the moment you tell him that, no point in showing up at all. If you tell his his opponent is easy and has no clue you risk your player playing at a horrible level, since why play good? Kids will see the draw and soon enough know who is who, and who beats who, but if you avoid giving too much information in the beginning when they are new to tournaments they will play better and have a mental advantage. After a few months of playing they'll will know who is how, but if they don't know in the beginning it can give them wins that they might not have if they got too much info. I am not sure if this makes sense, sorry.
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#7 | |
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#8 | |
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| chalkflewup |
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#9 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Near a tennis court
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Trust me that even a 10 year old knows how to get onto Tennislink to find out who he/she will play, unless this kid doesn't want to know. I always print out the draw and talked to my son about how to play a kid before the match. Tennisrecruiting.net is the best tool to find out how his opponent did if we don't know him already. However, one of my son's friends never wanted to know who she would play. She could not sleep well if she saw the draw. One can usually blame parents for giving our kids too much pressure for winning.
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#10 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 1,584
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Agree.... Sharapova is a perfect example she doesn't care who she plays because she is gonna play her game and hit her targets.
Last edited by ga tennis : 01-31-2013 at 06:34 PM. |
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#11 |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2012
Location: The Land Down Under
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In my son's first ever U10 tournament his last match of a round robin (where he'd lost the previous 4 matches) was against the eventual winner. He and I had no idea who was who so I just said go out there, play your best and have some fun.
Turns out he gave this kid the toughest match of the tournament taking him to deuce in all but one game, mainly because my son can handle pace very well. A big lesson in not making assumptions as different playing styles can throw up weird results. 5 months on he now knows who is who but I take the approach of not telling him what to do but what are the right questions to ask. Even though I got beaten last time by this kid, was there anything I thought they were weak on? Where have I improved since I last played them and can I use this? What about the conditions? For a new opponent are they left or right handed? If I've seen them warm up what shots did they hit more sweetly? What is their 1st/2nd serve like? |
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#12 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 773
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I tell my son very little on match day. 6-8 feet over the net, wait for the short ball and put it away. If my son asks about the opponent and how I think he will do, I always say well if you move your feet and play tough you should do fine. Remember winning the day and winning the match are two different things. A winner comes off the court knowing he did his best with what he brought to the court on that day. Some days he can bring more or less than others. The score of the match does not matter. It is the journey not the day. Hopefully 30 minutes later he is saying, "Where is everyone going to eat tonight?"
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Wilson 6.1 95 |
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#13 | |
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#14 | |
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#15 |
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It's her strength for sure. But she lost a few big matches because she only knows or is willing to play one type of game. Serena can overpower her and Li Na can also make her run corners and miss her targets.
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#16 | |
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#18 |
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Play the ball is right, but looking ahead on the draw can sometimes give you an idea of what kind of ball they should be expecting to play. For instance, this weekend my girls playing a girl who hits a pretty good slice back hand, which is not normally the case with 11 year old girls, not something she has to deal with a lot, so she spent a little extra time focusing on that in practice this week, and that helps her confidence going into the match, she knows she is ready.
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#19 | |
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#20 |
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Join Date: Sep 2012
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Yes, he has a relatively strong arm (throws a lot of balls around while playing cricket) and good timing, though overall he is pretty small for his age. As for the opponent coming to the net, isnt a flat close to the net more difficult to volley back? I will have to observe more on his X-court returns but I think he uses a flat out shot there as well but he does lack consistency there. Maybe its because of the reason you stated. Having said that is there a need to hit way above the net (4-6 feet) to get good spin or one can add good spin even when hitting relatively flat shots (1-2 feet above net) especially if the player is only 52 inches tall?
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