Subscribe Today
Sign up now and start receiving the most recent and exclusive content in our free weekly email
Categories
Advertisement
Tennis and Martial Arts
- 12-24-2008
- Categorized in: Additional Strategies
“Art is the expression of the self. The more complicated and restricted the method, the less the opportunity for expression of one's original sense of freedom.”
"Though they play an important role in the early stage, the techniques should not be too mechanical, complex or restrictive. If we cling blindly to them, we shall eventually become bound by their limitations. Remember, you are expressing the techniques and not doing the techniques."
Furthermore, the first things you learn in a sport (or in life) are the most marking, affecting future computations. Typically, tennis beginners are taught restrictive procedures and movements to be adhered to systematically. For example, players are taught to move in a certain pattern and assume certain positions for hitting, rather than letting the person accommodate to what they feel most comfortable. Another blight is preparing early, while pros stalk the ball. These techniques are significantly different from the style of the pros. Tennis is perhaps the only sport where teaching the way the pros play is shunned by teachers. The end result is that most people end up limiting their tennis performance.
". . He is actually becoming a slave to a choice pattern and feels that the pattern is the real thing."
"One must be free. Instead of complexity of form, there should be simplicity of expression."
"Do not be tense, just be ready, not thinking but not dreaming, not being set but being flexible. It is being "wholly" and quietly alive, aware and alert, ready for whatever may come."
The goal of a Tennis Coach, whether coaching professionals or teaching beginners, is not to add more to the complexity of the tennis technique. Your goal should be to simplify it, have the student appeal to the his or her instinct, move less, and still achieve the same or even better effectiveness of the student’s shots.
"Each one of us is different and each one of us should be taught the correct form. By correct form I mean the most useful techniques the person is inclined toward. Find his ability and then develop these techniques."
Overall, this is what Oscar Wegner’s Modern Tennis techniques are all about. Efficiency. Natural, powerful moves and strokes, a delicate guidance of the student to help him or her find out, by themselves, what feels good and what does not.
Article Options
Featured Videos
The Forehand with Nick Bollettieri
- Video
- February 22, 2010
- Forehand Instruction
- No comments
Tennis Drills: Recover and Get Back to the Middle
- Video
- February 17, 2010
- Speed Drills, Training and Drills
- No comments
Tennis Lesson: Serve Step 8 - Follow Through
- Video
- February 17, 2010
- Serving Instruction
- No comments
Quick Search
Featured Site
Tennis Oxygen offers exlusive membership based lessons and an extensive library of lessons. Members can submit tennis videos for personal help. Sign up with TennisOxygen, or learn more about Tennis Oxygen.
Advertisement
Advertisement


