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#1 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 164
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I wish more people would self-reflect this question to themselves after a loss: Did you play poorly, or did your opponent make you play poorly?
There's a big difference between the two (of course, sometimes it can be a combination of both, that can happen too). I just see so many league-teammates and tournament players I know always try to chalk it up to having a bad-day out there when they lose. But I've seen many of these matches and know these guys were playing just as fine as normal....instead, their opponents were able to make them play badly (whether giving shots they don't like, neutralizing attacks, bad match-ups, or just simply being a better player). I highly recommend players honestly ask themselves this question, before just throwing out excuses of having a "bad-day." Who knows, it might even make us better players in the long run... |
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#2 |
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saigonbond
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Posts: n/a
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Whether you played poorly or your opponent made you play poorly... you still played poorly so the distinction is irrelevant no?
(you can put lipstick on a pig but its still a pig) If your point is about people making excuses, then I get your reference. I often hear the "bad day" excuse at our club and out at USTA tourneys. Its a favorite of ages 5 to 85... CHEERS! |
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| saigonbond |
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#3 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 14,191
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The only time I think it's correct to say I "played poorly" is when I play people (or certain types of players) I can and should beat. If I am missing shots I routinely make or tighten up because of the pressure, I could lose by playing poorly.
When I lose, it is usually because the other player is as good as I am or better.
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| Cindysphinx |
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#4 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Austin, Texas
Posts: 182
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Quote:
I personally love it when my opponents fail to comprehend just why they are losing when they play against me. If they don't recognize the patterns I prefer to run, how I'm countering their patterns, which shots I'm giving them on purpose, etc., they're not going to figure out an efficient way of playing and the odds of winning remain in my favor. Sure, if they simply play out of their minds or are significantly better than me to begin with, none of that matters too much, but otherwise they'll be making winning very difficult for themselves by not recognizing why they're missing or how I'm exploiting their weaknesses. But not everyone is an analytical thinker on the tennis court. Some are better at just focusing on hitting the ball -- usually really hard -- and that's what they do. If they do it well enough they can simply overpower their opponents in many cases. But when they stop to think about things usually they start second guessing themselves and their shots begin to falter. No doubt they'd be better players if they could be more strategic and analytical while still hitting the crud out of the ball, but they just can't do it. Anyway, these are typically the type of players who will say they were hitting poorly when they lose, failing to understand that their opponents might have had a lot to do with it.
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| NoSkillzAndy |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 176
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Losing SUCKS...but I always hit the practice courts much harder and learn more from my losses. I hate the PAIN of losing...tonight is going to be a tough one for me...I got "schooled" 6-0, 6-0 in a tourney today. He was BETTER than me, but I will be better than him in 12 months.
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#6 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 1,768
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I totally agree with this post.
When I'm playing people in the early rounds of tournaments that I know aren't the best, I usually just play smart and use a bunch of spins. I rarely go all out unless that'll finish the match faster. I hit a few groundies at about 60%, mix in some short slices, approach, dropshot, all that jazz, and they're flustered by the end of the first game. Consequently, nearly everybody I play in the first round says "Oh god, I played terribly." No, you didn't, you just can't handle variety and I gave you variety. Another person I know says this after literally 95% of his matches... The only time he doesn't say it is when he's on fire. That gets a bit annoying.
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Stereotypical Teen Player Babolat APDGT, Vamos Rafa, all that jazz. |
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#7 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 2,047
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Excuses are human nature. Many people just don't want to admit that the player on the other side of the net was better, either today or in general. I think this holds many people back. As another poster mentions, suck it up and learn from it. Learn from them - they just beat you.
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Pro Kennex 7G, Head Rip Control 17 @ 58lbs, rubber band dampener, Tourna Grip. |
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#8 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Central Florida
Posts: 15,133
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The best is when you beat a player way more than they beat you. That player will then claim that your lucky shots were why you won.
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#9 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 631
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it's --always-- the opponent that makes you play poorly. Always. Why - because if it was only you I'm sure you could play safer and not make errors. but you do not because you know the opponent will just finish the point. So you take risks, etc.
That's why the Unforced Errors statistic is, in my opinion, the silliest thing ever. How is it Unforced? The opponent forced you to hit volley closer to the line and miss by returning previous three or four. he forced you to no go with even more power and overhitting by getting back everything hit softer for the last half hour. I mean if it is Unforced you should have as many playing someone two levels below as two levels above - and that is definitely not the case. |
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#10 |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Austin, Texas
Posts: 182
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I kind of agree that sometimes unforced errors can be an indirect result of the other player being very consistent, a good counter-puncher, or a relentless attacker, and thus putting pressure on you (whether real or imagined) to go for more on your shots.
But it's really important IMO to distinguish between forced errors where you are consciously trying to just get the ball in but can't because of how good your opponent's shot was, and unforced where you have options and chose to go for too much or select the wrong type of shot. The better players recognize this need for consistency on make-able balls and not giving up free points due to over-hitting or poor shot selection. I often play a groundie game with my students called Plus or Minus, where we both start off at 0 and for every unforced error we hit we get -1 to our score. Our winners or forced errors on the other hand add +1. The game ends when one of us gets to +5 or -5. Guess which one most people get to first?
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USPTA Certified, NTRP 4.5 Yonex RQiS1 Tour XL 95 with RPM Blast 16g |
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| NoSkillzAndy |
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#11 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 631
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Quote:
I like your example of the drill, I do it too, and I agree that most often you lose because you make fewer errors then your opponent rather than you hit more winners than the opponent. But that does not change the fact that you are still being forced to choose bad shot. Again, if you play with someone way below your level you are never forced to go for too much, you very rarely chose a bad shot - because you know the opponent can't hurt you. Last edited by jmnk : 08-02-2010 at 10:11 AM. |
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#12 |
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Professional
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,142
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Lol when ever I play someone and lose to him knowing that I shouldnt have, I say: "He didn't beat me, I beat myself and lost."
And by "someone knowing I shouldn't have lost to" I mean like tap-second-serving, lobbing, pusher.... |
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#13 | |
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saigonbond
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Quote:
Analysis and strategy (before, during, and after) doesn't really even come into play until a player reaches 4.0-4.5, nor should it even be much of a focus for players below that level of skill. Mastering technique, mechanics, and footwork is more than enough to work on to improve their games and improve their matchplay results. "Hitting the crud out of the ball, but they just can't do it," as you say highlights my point. CHEERS! |
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| saigonbond |
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#14 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 300
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I think the distinction comes from asking the question, "Why did I play poorly today?"
I agree with the OPs implied premise that too many people just spout out "I played like crap," but they don't consider what caused them to play that way, and that isn't going to lead to improvements in their game (not to mention it can come across as less than sportsmanlike if said to the person who just beat you). It is important to understand if you played poorly because you aren't feeling well, didn't get enough sleep the night before, didn't eat right that day, weren't hydrated properly, sat too long in front of your computer before getting on the court, because your opponent forced you into mistakes, or something else entirely. |
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#15 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 649
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the better player on that particular day ALWAYS wins. everything else is just excuses.
there's an art to winning when you are not playing your best tennis. we are not machines that perform at 100% at all times. a good player will find ways to win a match. a dumb player will try and hit harder. this goes with the assumption that winning is the most important thing. for many players - it's not the most important thing. some players place more emphasis on hitting the ball hard which they equate to playing great. or they'll only remember hitting a handful of amazing winners that should wind up on sportscenter but forget about the 3 dozen stupid errors that cost them the match. |
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| tennismonkey |
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#16 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 631
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#17 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Florida
Posts: 633
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I always tell people, "If I play bad, I'm going to make you play worse."
If I lose, then I wasn't able to do that.
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#18 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,507
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Quote:
I'm also interested in why you think you lost and what you need to improve? |
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| nickarnold2000 |
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#19 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,507
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Quote:
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| nickarnold2000 |
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#20 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 176
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Quote:
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