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Maria Sharapova (RUS) – Player Profile

Maria SharapovaName: Maria Yuryevna Sharapova
Country: Russia
Birthdate: April 19, 1987
Birthplace: Nyagan, Soviet Union
Residence: Bradenton, Florida, U.S.
Plays: Right-handed with a double handed backhand
Height: 188 cm or 6ft 2in

Website: www.mariasharapova.com

Scouting: What can you say about Maria Sharapova? Maria has some of the best ground strokes in the game and on a good day is pretty much unbeatable from the baseline. Both her forehand and backhands have great power and she loves to really go for her shots.

Maria’s first serve is top notch and she really likes to hit it hard, but this can also lead to not a very high first serve percentage. However, her second serve is the opposite, its quite weak and doesnt really do too much. When tired or tight Maria tends to really slow down her second serve which either ends up in double faults or falls short in the court.

Approaching is a very strong point for Maria as her ground strokes lay a good path to net. However, when at net she isnt too assured of herself. Normally, her racquet head drops which causes her to lose control and try to feel the ball over the net instead of moving forward into it.

Maria also plays a very slow game so be prepared to wait and take your time.

Gabriella Sabatini (ARG) Player Profile

Gabriella Sabatini

Country: Argentina
Lives: Argentina
Birthdate: May 16, 1970
Born: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Height: 175 cm or 5ft 9in
Career:1985 – 1996
Righthanded
Career prize money: $8,785,850

Highest Ranking: 27
Best Results:
Winner US Open 1990
Finalist Wimbledon 1991
Semi Finalist Australian Open 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994
Semi Finalist French Open 1985, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992

View the full profile here on Wikipedia

Flashback – Remember Gaby?

Novak Djokovic and Gabriella Sabatini

Gabriella sabatini

Wimbledon Olympic Venue 2012

Mr Ian Ritchie, CEO of The All England Lawn Tennis Club, holding  the Olympic Handover FlagYes, the 2008 Olympic closing ceremony has just finished and we are talking about The 2012 Olympic Host London !!.

Of particular interest to tennis fans is that the Tennis Venue for 2012 Olympics will be The All England Club, Wimbledon! On the 24th of August My Ian Ritchie who is the CEO for The All England Club officially accepted the Olympic Handover Flag.

“We are thrilled to have marked the return of the Olympics to Wimbledon in 2012 with the raising of the Olympic Handover Flag.”

Wimbledon raised the London Olympic Handover Flag simultaneously with other regions around the UK who are also hosting 2012 events.

What an exciting time for The All England Club, Wimbledon and UK !!

Roger Federers Journey

On the 18th of August 2008 we are all going to witness Roger Federers number one ranking being handed to Rafael Nadal.

By no means is this the end for Roger, however here is a quick summary of his journey to number one.

1996 – 15 Year Old Roger was a pupil at the Swiss National Tennis Centre

1997 – Swiss Junior Champion

1998 – Junior Wimbledon Champion

1999 – Started the year ranked 302

2000 – Started the year ranked 64

2001 – Started the year ranked 29

2001 – Beat Pete Sampras

2002- Started the year ranked 13

2003 – Started the year ranked 6

2003 – Wimbledon Champion

2004 – Started the year ranked 2

2004 – Tennis Masters Cup

2004 – Australian Open

2004 – Became number 1 player in the world

Federer has dominated the sport for many years. The sign of a true champion. History shows us that these champions come along and change how the sport is played. They take the sport to a new level and rewrite the books.

Coaches and players have studied how Federer changed the game and needed to create a plan to conquer this dominant force. Being such a champion must be stressful. The focus is entirely on you and people want to crack the code.

Rafael Nadal and his team has proven they created a plan and trained for many years. Tested and modified  their strategy where appropriate, persisted and executed it.

They had one single goal in mind to create a game which would take them to number one in the world. In this generation that meant conquering the game that Roger Federer owned and played on his terms.

Every champion owns a piece of the game. They created a moment in time. Thanks to them the game of tennis evolved to a new dimension. Tennis will be forever grateful to Roger for the impact he has had on the game.

Being number one for such a long time must be a lonely place. He would be very much be in a defensive mindset while others try and crack him open. Well done to Rafael Nadal.

Rafael Nadal has brought a new dimension to replace the previous one created by Roger Federer.

I would love to see what Roger does over the next few months. Does he relax, reflect and himself work out how to change his game to become number one in the world again.Becoming number one again would be his first goal – then the elusive Grand Slam. I personally would love to see Roger win all 4 Grand Slams. I would love to watch that piece of history unfold. I honestly think he deserves it.

Whatever the future holds – tennis is the winner having had Federer in the sport.

Michael

Enhance Coordination and Awareness

Ok, I heard about this last night and tried it. This is a great little test and skill enhancer. We are not working on improving any stroke in particular however your whole game will improve.

The drill goes like this.

What you need – 2 players. One Serving and the other Receiving. 2 balls – one for the server and one for the receiver.

  1. The Receiver starts the drill by bouncing a ball on their racquet, not letting it touch the ground.
  2. The server serves another ball whenever he or she is ready. – Second Serve speed – about 80% serve.
  3. The receiver must continue to keep bouncing the ball on their racquet, hit the ball the server served and continue bouncing the ball on their racquet.

It sounds difficult however you work it out after a few serves. What I worked out is – tap the ball gently only leaving the racquet about 1 foot. Just after the server makes contact with the ball tap the ball higher (not sure how high I was not watching the ball in the air – I was focussing on the return- maybe 3 meters)

This really trains you to work on your peripheral vision and after a while you are actually become quite relaxed and confident you can make the return and keep bouncing the ball on your racquet.

After you have finished that drill try hitting normal returns… How easy are they now !!!

By overloading your system you work on all your senses. An advanced version of this would be to have people throwing balls at you, random noise next to you, or obstacles you need to step around. When all these distractions are taken away and ‘all’ you have to do is hit a return it much easier !

What do you think? Leave a comment or let us know another drill you like and use :)

Michael

Hit The Ball On The Rise

Make life easy for yourself and hit the ball on the rise. One of the challenges with tennis is that every ball we hit will come to us differently. Different height, speed, spin, distance from our body etc. Our challenge it to try and move ourselves into position to execute as close to the same shat as possible each time.
Let me give you a tip that will make a massive difference to your groundstrokes. Hit every ball on the rise OR at the top of the bounce.

Hitting The Ball On the Rise and Fall

As soon as that ball starts to drop your whole stroke needs to change to get the ball up and over the net. The stroke becomes much more difficult and you will hit the frame of your racquet more especially if you are trying to apply topspin.

The first picture shows how closed the racquet face can be if you hit the ball on the rise. The key is that you can hit the ball very hard and it will stay in the court. You are changing the direction of the ball. In the picture the ball changes direction by about 90 degrees. Lets see what happens with a dropping ball.

With a dropping ball you need to open the face of the racquet, and hit up to get exactly same ball direction. However in this case the harder you hit the ball the further over the fence the ball will go. In which case most people then back off the power and they let gravity bring the ball down onto the court.

Now you can picture in your minds 2 different pictures. High level players strike across a rising ball and other players tap a dropping ball back up and over the net.

High level players use mainly the wind resistance of a heavily spinning ball to make it land in the court, while other players rely on gravity for it to land in the court.

To see another compact explanation of this look at or think of people playing ping pong. The ball is hit with a closed bat, as the ball is coming off the table. They can generate massive power and still keep it in that little area.

Anyway I hope that has got you thinking. Move those feet, move forward, hit the ball on the rise and WATCH YOUR GAME IMPROVE !!.

Enjoy your tennis !

Managing Anxiety and Nerves

Ok, firstly anxiety and nerves are slightly different things.
Anxiety is where you are looking forward to achieving a particular outcome in the future. The frustrating part about anxiety is that you are basically waiting for a ‘time’ to achieve it. For example a match on the weekend, in a few hours etc. Usually anxiety goes away once the match has started and you are able to do something about the outcome.
During a match or just before anxiety is usually replaced by nerves. So, what are these nerves? A definition of nerves is: ‘the gap between what needs to be done and what you believe you can do’.

Nerves are good – it mean that you care about the outcome !
Again, ‘what needs to be done’ – beat this opponent, play strong, volley well, work out how to beat someone.
The next part – ‘what you believe you can do’ – can you beat this opponent, play well etc. The closer your ‘belief’ on your ability to ‘achieve’ what needs to be done the less nerves you should have…. Never thought about it that way? The nerves are proportional to the size of the gap! Examples
If you are confident you can beat someone you might be slightly anxious to do it – but not nervous.
If you think you are going to loose, and are sure you can achieve loosing well you wont be nervous. (being negative – but proving a point)
If you are playing a good player of similar standard however you are feeling a little rusty, well you might feel nervous about how you will perform on the day.
How do you reduce nervousness?? Increase confidence. How do you increase confidence? Be confident in your preparation leading into the match. Your fitness, technique, routines etc.
If you are well prepared, confident with what you have done before the match you should be less nervous.
Preparation is something you can work on to reduce anxiety ! It makes you already in control of the outcome – preparing yourself. Now do you see how they fit together?? Interesting…
There also other tips for confidence like strategy and mental rehersal – that is going to be in another article!!
Have a great day !! Michael

Want more power? Loosen your grip

Loose GripFirstly, welcome back to the week! I hope everyone had a nice weekend and played some tennis.

Yes, sounds weird. Most peoples first reaction is, “Shouldnt I hold the racquet tighter if I am going to hit it harder?”

Do a little experiment for me. While you are reading this squeese your hand tight. With a tight hand, try and flap your arm, elbow and wrist around loosely. Hard isnt it ?!!?! Now, loosen your hand and try it again, much easier.

Having a loose grip does a few things. With a looser grip your wrist, elbow and shoulder will be 10 times more relaxed – as you just noticed. In addition with a relaxed shoulder you can rotate your upper body, leading to your hips etc.

Upon impact with the ball just give your hand a little extra squeese then relax it again after impact to have a loose follow through.

The forehand today is much different to the old traditional style forehand. Hitting the ball harder must be accompanied by more topspin, to keep the ball in the court. The current racquet head size allows us to apply heavy top spin, not possible with older racquets.

By focussing on your hand your whole arm will loosen. Experiment with lifting your little finger off the racquet. See how lightly you can hold the racquet.

Another tip – change your overgrip regularly – keep it sticky and moisture free..

Remember to subscribe for the free daily tip.

Thanks to everyone who have contacted us with thanks and suggestions. Keep them coming !!

Michael

Hit Your Volley As Early As Possible

As Early As Possible. Yes, go out after your volley. Do not wait for it to come to you.

This does a few things.

Firstly it gets you moving forward to the volley. With your body momentum going forward you will use your body weight as the main power in the volley. Most people who stand very flat footed tens to swip and slap at their volleys in an attempt to generate power.

Secondly, it forces you to take an attacking approach to the volley which really threatens the opponent.

Thirdly, the earlier you hit the ball the higher over the net the ball is at contact. The longer you let the ball come to you, the lower your volley will be hit. So, with a lower volley you will then need to hit up on the ball to clear the net and are forced to play a softer shot.

Forth, with your momentum going forward you will continue to get closer to the net on the next volley – therefore closing out the point at the net.

Fifth, you will naturally hit the ball out in front of your body which is essential for good volleys.

Wow – all these results just by thinking about hitting it as early as possible !

Volley positive, go forward and close the point out.

Michael

Winners Don’t Hit Winners

Well the title is not entirely true. However, the point is that winning tennis matches is not about hitting winners. Yes, hitting a winner feels great ! I think it is one of the most exhilarating feelings. The more difficult the shot, the greater the feeling when you make it. Personally, being pulled wide on my backhand, then executing a winner down the line feels fantastic ! You have such a small thin slice of court in which to land the ball – high risk and high reward. Anyone watching loves it and the opponent will be impressed.

However, does that win matches? Unfortunately the answer most of the time is no. The chances of hitting winners all match is very low. The risk of these attempted winners becoming unforced errors is very high. Some players, sometimes will hit winners shot after shot, however usually that will only last a few points or games. Maybe they can keep it up for a set, but not likely for a whole match.

I am considering a winner to be one where you have executed a shot at about 95%, it would need to be close to the lines and unreachable by your opponent.

So when is the best time to go for a winner? Hmmm, tough question..

Some would think – when you have a decent lead on the opponent. However you should never change a winning game. You should be closing the match out not handing points back to them.

Maybe, if you have little or no chance of winning the point so it is ‘do or die’. Clean winner or loose the point. However if you dont go for a winner and give the opponent another shot – they might make an error on their shot or play a weak shot so you can recover. So really you MAY still win the point.

If you have a short ball and maneuvered your opponent out of court, a high percentage winner is a good shot selection !

Maybe the secret is Winners in Moderation..

Let me know your thoughts… Winners feel great, they get the crowd excited but do they win matches?

Something to think about !! Sign up to ensure you do not miss the Daily Tennis Tips. Please contact us with comments, suggestions, topics etc.

Until Tomorrow !! Michael

Develop a Consistent Ball Toss

One of the most challenging parts of tennis is that nearly every ball is going to come to you differently. In most other sports there are not as many variables. This is one of the great parts about tennis, the challenge!

Ok having said that, the shot with the LEAST number of variables is our serve. We can PLACE that ball anywhere in the air, we can decide WHEN to toss the ball up. Two big variables !!

So why do people server inconsistently, or continually chasing their ball toss? The answer, an incosistent ball toss ! Sure a bit of wind might alter it slightly but really not that much.

What can you do? Practice your ball toss. Practice placing the ball in the air in the same spot over and over. Dont hit the ball practice the toss only.

Your ball toss – if you dont hit it – should land in the same place on the court. When I was young we used to place the racquet flat on the ground. Racquet handle butt against our front toe, strings toward the net. When we tossed the ball up it should land on the strings. We would practice landing our ball toss over and over, landing it on the same spot on the ground.

Only with a consistent ball toss, can build a consistent serve. Many people grip the ball too hard on the ball toss, ‘chuck’ it up then worry about it afterwards.

The ball toss should be a very gentle, gracefull placement. Start by holding the ball gently with your fingers. Nearly with your finger tips. Turn your hand so your palm faces your body. Gently release the ball with the tips of your finger, place it up there. Are you thinking about your ball toss differently now?

Work out where your toss should be for your different servers and practice placing them up there. Get the height right and how far forward or behind your head etc.

Enjoy ! Michael

Respect Your First Serve

Respect Your Serve

It happens all too often. Before we know it we are about to serve a second serve. What happened to the first one? Did we just throw it away? Is it because we have a second chance that we treat the first serve with less respect? We might just have a slap at it, go for a big hard flat serve and not really think about it. Then, if it goes in, well that is a bonus.

If you look at the statistics of elite level matches usually the winner has a higher first server percentage. Is this just a coincidence OR are we looking at something obvious here?

Lets think about it. In theory, when you are service your first serve you are in a stronger position than the returner. They do not know how conservative you are going to be, in actual fact they expect you to be attacking your first serve. Therefore most of the time the receiver in defensive mode, just trying to hit a decent return to neutralise your server – then you both can fight for the point.

Now the interesting thing, on the second server the attitude changes. As the server, you must get this one in. You are more conservative. The returner is more attacking than what they were on the first serve.

The receiver steps up into the court and is ready to attack your potentially weaker second serve. The receiver is more positive and more prepared, which you do not want.

The point is that you have so much more advantage on the first serve than the second serve. Treat it with respect. How?

Work hard to increase your first serve percentage by really thinking about it before you hit it. Treat the first serve like you do not have a second serve. Maybe back the pace off a bit from 95% to 85% and add a little spin to increase the margin for error.

The first server already has ‘natural pressure’ associated with it. Let the natural pressure of the first serve work in your favor!

A great way to practice this is play a set only using a single server per point. Pretend second serves do not exist. Sounds scary doesnt it !! Yep, miss the first serve, its the oppontnets point. As I write this t makes me nervous !!

Look forward to your serve !! Until tomorrow !

Michael

Wear a Wristband

Wristbands, they sometimes are a little forgotten. Well here is an insight, they are not a fashion accessory – they are a performance enhancing tool !! Ok, why?

They are used to do a few things. Firstly, to wipe your forehead to stop sweat dripping into your eyes and secondly to stop sweat running down your arm, hand and onto your grip.

Remember in a previous article I talked about keeping a loose grip for more power?. I also talked about keeping your grips fresh and moisture free to keep the grip sticky.

Getting the picture? Yep, wristbands increase the life of your grips, keep moisture away from your hand and grip, therefore allowing you to continue to grip the racquet lightly!

Most people would never think of wristbands having an effect on their strokes – but indirectly they do !!

Having said all that – some top players dont wear them. See the articles pictures. You can now make up your own mind if they will help you!!

Exciting news readers !! All I will say is check out The Tennis Times. http://thetennistimes.com

More on that tomorrow !!!

Michael

Serves Going Into The Net?

During a match we tend to tighten up in pressure situations. Serving is where these pressures can mount up. Why? Well, we are expected to win our serve AND we are in control of when the point starts. (Here also lies the opportunity to become a very sold server – more about that another time) If you find yourself pulling your serves into the net it is usually due to you dropping your ball toss shoulder too early. Right handers – your left shoulder. Left handers – your right shoulder. (if ball toss shoulder wasnt clear enough :) )

This is definitely the case IF you find you are looking at the ground after serving. Some people are hunched over after the serve with little forward momentum.

So what to do? A very easy cue to remember in the match – is ‘keep your front shoulder up high’. I mean, really keep it up high for as long as you can. In actual fact it will be forced down eventually as you make impact and follow through the serve.

See the example of the picture in this article. Federer has his left hand and shoulder reaching high. His front shoulder is much higher than the back shoulder.

‘Keep your shoulder high’ is the simple cue in the match to get your serves back on track.

By forcing this action you will stay very tall during the serve and it will force you to go ‘up’ and ‘out’ to the ball.

Stay tall, feel strong, and build a solid serve you can rely on in any situation.

Enjoy the tip? Checkout our previous tips http://dailytennistips.com

Signup – until tomorrow !!

Different Shoes for Different Surfaces

Elite level players will use different shoes for different surfaces. The main 2 differences are hard courts and ‘slippery’ courts. (eg clay, dirt and synthetic grass)

There are 2 main things to look for when deciding what shoes to wear when. Cushion and grip pattern.

On a hard court surface the pattern does not matter as much as the cushion. Having extra padding, cushioning, gel, air – whatever the technology – is important.

Read the full article at The Tennis Times http://thetennistimes.com

Talk to Your Towel

Talk to your towelFor singles players The Tennis Court can become a lonely place. There are so many things going on out there and it is left to you to process them all and work out what to do.

Well here is a tip. Pretend, in your mind that your towel is your new best friend and coach. Take him or her with you all over the court. Your towel follows you down each end of the court and every time you need a chat do it! (You can actually wipe your face and forearms with it too !)

It may sound strange, but by talking to your towel – probably not too loud – you are actually talking to your self, and having to construct your thoughts in a coherent way. Therefore the jumbled ideas in your head become clearer. Listening to yourself or asking yourself questions, you WILL give your self answers.

There is a great book called ‘The Inner Game of Tennis’ and early in the book it talks about Self One and Self Two. You become the player and the coach. Talk about what to do next, if you are feeling tired etc. IT is also a way for you to ‘vent’ and become more relaxed afterward.

By talking to the towel you start to ask the coach in you clear questions and YOU WILL get answers. Remember not to talk too loud, maybe you dont need to actually say anything out loud, but just go through the process and see how that goes !

Thanks for listening and keep the feedback coming in.. It is great to hear !!

Michael

Win the Warm Up

Clay CourtIt is important to get off to a quick start in a match. Why not start with the warm up! The best part is you make the rules and start controlling what is happening on the court. I am not talking about hitting winners or junk in the warm up. It is unsportsmanlike and you should always respect your opponents needs to warm up. Tennis is one of the few sports where you actually warm up the person you are about to try and beat.

Focus on making no unforced errors. In the warmup you should be looking for your opponents weaknesses and not letting them see any of yours. Focus on not having any balls sitting on your side of the net.

After warming up your ground strokes be the first to come into the net to warm up your volleys. This shows that you are happy with your ground strokes and are moving on. You are already starting to control the match.

After you have practiced your serves to first court be the first to change sides and serve to second court.

Finally, when you are practicing your serves to second court offer to start the match before the opponent. “Are you Ready?”

This is what I call win the warm up. You are already focusing your attention to the job at hand AND you are already appearing like a solid opponent who is already in control and knows what they want.

Keep that momentum going and win the first game, serving or receiving, it sets a nice tone for the match !!

Enjoy and keep improving. Dont forget to Sign Up to ensure you do not miss a Tip!

You never know, the next tip could be the difference between winning and loosing your next match!

Respect Your First Serve

It happens all too often. Before we know it we are about to serve a second serve. What happened to the first one? Did we just throw it away? Is it because we have a second chance that we treat the first serve with less respect? We might just have a slap at it, go for a big hard flat serve and not really think about it. Then, if it goes in, well that is a bonus.

If you look at the statistics of elite level matches usually the winner has a higher first server percentage. Is this just a coincidence OR are we looking at something obvious here?

Lets think about it. In theory, when you are service your first serve you are in a stronger position than the returner. They do not know how conservative you are going to be, in actual fact they expect you to be attacking your first serve. Therefore most of the time the receiver in defensive mode, just trying to hit a decent return to neutralise your server – then you both can fight for the point.

Now the interesting thing, on the second server the attitude changes. As the server, you must get this one in. You are more conservative. The returner is more attacking than what they were on the first serve.

The receiver steps up into the court and is ready to attack your potentially weaker second serve. The receiver is more positive and more prepared, which you do not want.

The point is that you have so much more advantage on the first serve than the second serve. Treat it with respect. How?

Work hard to increase your first serve percentage by really thinking about it before you hit it. Treat the first serve like you do not have a second serve. Maybe back the pace off a bit from 95% to 85% and add a little spin to increase the margin for error.

The first server already has ‘natural pressure’ associated with it. Let the natural pressure of the first serve work in your favor!

A great way to practice this is play a set only using a single server per point. Pretend second serves do not exist. Sounds scary doesnt it !! Yep, miss the first serve, its the oppontnets point. As I write this t makes me nervous !!

Look forward to your serve !! Until tomorrow !

Welcome to Daily Tennis Tips

Welcome to Daily Tennis Tips. The goal of this web site is pretty clear – Enjoy and Improve Your Tennis.

How? We will be discussing techniques, strategies, fitness, stretching, equipment and preparation. Our target audience is for tennis players from 5 years old to 105 years old. Yep that should cover it !!

Things to look out from our team are:

Equipment Discussion about strings, shoes, racquets, clothing and what variations are good for different surfaces and conditions.

Mental discussions. Topics like routines, mental imagery and identification of turning points. We will also point out how people like Nadal control their mind and routines they use. There were some great examples on Sunday night in the Wimbledon doubles final !

Strategy tips. Discussions on how to beat a base line players, players with big serves, etc.

Tips about technique. Improving your game from serves to volleys, ground strokes and drop shots.

Enjoy the site, please feel free to contact me with any feedback, any suggestions and anything you would like to discuss.

Also, subscribe to the free newsletter to never miss a tip !

Thanks and have a great day !