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I Phases of learning tennis
The process of learning involves
many phases. You do not just practice something one day and
the next day you have it mastered. You must learn a little at a time,
building learning experience upon learning experience, to
eventually master a skill. This concept can be found at Audioblox.com, a website for learning
programs, one of the universal learning principles is that learning is a
stratified process:
"Human learning does not take place on a singular
level, but is a stratified process. The way in which school systems
throughout the whole world are organized and structured is an
acknowledgment of this. A child cannot be sent to a university first. He
must start in the first class and then progress year after year to
the higher levels of education. A child must learn to count before
it becomes possible to learn to add and subtract. This means that
there is a sequence that is to be observed in teaching. Certain
things have to be taught and accomplished first, before it becomes
possible to teach other things."
When learning anything you must go through phases.
Learning tennis is no exception. But often players are so preoccupied
with the negatives, mistakes and failures that they do NOT
recognize signs of these phases. Let me cover a couple that you may not
be aware of.
HITTING EVERYTHING AN INCH OUT
Yes, this is a phase of learning that I have seen often.
Your game has been improving, but you are not quite winning enough.
You are playing matches that you could have won, but many of the
balls you hit were only an inch out. What should you do? The answer
- nothing! This is just a phase of learning that will take
care of itself. To your conscious mind there is no discernable
difference between hitting a ball one inch out and hitting a ball
one inch in. So stop trying to consciously correct the problem. The
slight change in the racket face cannot even be seen by the eye,
it has to be felt. Resume your normal practice regime and give your subconscious a chance to master this problem...it will!
Here is the irony that always fascinates me. A player who
is consistently missing by an inch should be happy that his
shots are only going an inch out. Months earlier I guarantee that
same player was hitting the same shot way out! I have noted over the
years that players simply never appreciate the level of play they
have reached. Instead their mindset is always, "but I'm
still missing." As if there will ever come a time in tennis that you stop
missing. Just for a little while will you enjoy the level of play
you have reached?
BECOMING TENTATIVE WHEN YOU HAVE THE OPEN COURT.
During a point you have worked your opponent skillfully
to open up the court, but instead of going for the shot you play
cautiously. As a result your opponent runs down the shot, returns the
ball and you eventually lose the point. This phase of learning
tennis does take some time to eliminate, but it is a phase. The
problem is all mental. When you have out-maneuvered your opponent and
you have the open court you become tentative because you are afraid to
make a mistake and lose the point. Ironically you often lose the
point anyway because you give your opponent a chance to stay in
the point. You must learn to close the deal when the
opportunity arises...even if you fail. Will you just HIT THE BALL and
not worry about the consequences...just hit it! Keep yourself on
'go' in these situations over and over and over again to master
this phase of learning. STOP giving your opponent a chance to win a
point he should have lost. It's better to go for the shot and win
or lose the point on your terms than to allow your opponent a
second chance to get back into the point and begin dictating the point
on his terms. YOU must make the decision to NOT be tentative to
overcome this phase of learning.
Learning tennis is truly a stratified process with many
different phases of learning within that process. If you can learn
to stop thinking of your mistakes as some kind of permanent
crisis you will begin to see many of these phases clearly. But, if you
become preoccupied with the problem you will never see the solution!
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