Saturday, September 27, 2014

The Most Difficult Stroke to Learn

Which stroke do you think is the hardest for people to learn? A lot of club players will say their backhand is their weakest stroke and that it is the hardest for them to learn. Then their are club players and juniors who say the serve is the most difficult stroke to master. Rarely do you ever hear the forehand is the hardest stroke to learn. One reason is that it is using your dominant hand and there is a level of comfort.

The truth is the forehand is the hardest stroke for a person to learn. The serve is next. I have heard it said the forehand is the hardest for adults to learn and the serve is the hardest for children to learn. That means, biomechanically, the backhand is the easiest stroke to learn. Most beginning children will have a better backhand than their forehand. One reason many people complain about their backhand is they do not practice it enough.

Why is the forehand so hard for people to learn? The reason is that you must learn how to control your wrist and forearm. If you watch most children who start to hit a forehand they will often try to hit down on the ball by bending the wrist or they will try to hit it too hard by winding up and opening the racket face.  Instead, the student should be taught to lift the ball from low to high by starting with the racket at the thigh. To teach the student to control the wrist have the student start with the racket face closed or having the right palm to the ground and keeping that position all through the swing. Believe it or not, the racket face will turn flat all by itself. 

I believe that if you learn to master control of your wrist you will see a more solid hit on your forehand. 

Free Lessons!

Remember, when you refer a friend to one of our lessons you get a FREE thirty-minute private lesson!

Thursday, September 25, 2014

A Pro Serving Like We Teach

This player turns his racket the way we teach our students to hit a serve.He also follows through with his left arm the way we teach our students.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

What a Success

Our tennis program at Encanto Park is amazing even me. I never thought we would have such few spots available after just a year and half in existence. I am blessed beyond belief and grateful for the opportunity to help build a program at such a historic place as Encanto Park. It is a real privilege to be able to bless the City Of Phoenix Parks and Recreation.

My first lesson is the forehand volley.

Every teacher, from tennis to school to another activity, always has a particular way they like to start their students to introduce and progress.  I was originally taught to introduce the serve as the first lesson and for adults, I would still do that. However, the younger I started to teach, I began introducing the forehand and the backhand in order that the student would be able to do what they want to do, hit balls, and hit them like a pro. 

Now I have taken it one step smaller. My first lesson is the forehand volley. In this lesson the student can have immediate success with technique. They can also learn to keep one ball in play in a mini-rally, and they can learn tactics. I usually introduce them to the art of poaching which is an advanced tactic in doubles. The kids love to learn a miniature version of doubles. They are the net person and they learn how to go make the winning shot. I took the winning shot quote from Dennis Van Der Meer of the Professional Tennis Registry. I like that and so do the kids. They all look forward to making the winning shot!  

Rockin' Refuel

Thanks Rockin' Refuel for the promotional coupons. It was a great welcome gift to all the children at last nights opener.

Update

Amazing start to our Encanto tennis lessons last night. We had eleven students in between two classes. While I always expect good things, last night had an energy that was beyond my expectations. Anyway, thanks to all who came out and want to continue to grow. 

Thursday, September 11, 2014

The Parent's Power Half Hour

With the start of the school year schedules often become increasingly busy. Sometimes parents are taking their children to so many activities to keep them engaged and enhanced that they themselves forget to take time to slow down. It is not always rush, rush. Make sure you set aside at least thirty minutes in the morning and thirty minutes in another part of your day to get some rest or exercise. That thirty minutes always works for me. My power half hour is what recharges my creativity and strength. 

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Update

How awesome! We had five students for our free clinic on Monday night. One of the students was a new student and the rest were there for their second or third time.
An update on our tennis clinics starting next week: the Monday Learn to Rally class has four spots remaining, the beginner class at 6:00 has two spots remaining. Our Thursday Learn to Rally class at 5:30 is full! Our Thursday 6:00 beginner class is spots remaining.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Encanto Park Tennis

September 15 - October 20, 2014 (Mondays)
Learn to Rally 5-7 years 5:30pm.-6:00pm. Cost: $35.00 
Barcode: 109153
Beginner Tennis 8-12 years 6:00pm.-7:00pm. Cost: $45.00 Barcode: 109154

September 18 - October 23, 2014 (Thursdays)
Learn to Rally 5-7 years 5:30pm.-6:00pm. Cost: $35.00 
Barcode: 109155
Beginner Tennis 8-12 years 6:00pm.-7:00pm. Cost: $45.00 Barcode: 109156

https://online.activecommunities.com/phoenix/Start/Start.asp

Controlling the Racket Face

The first thing our students need to do in order to learn to rally is to be able to control the racket face. They need to know that it is the angle of the racket face that directs the ball. To help the student learn to control the racket face and get a picture in their mind we use a progression. The progression that we use is to have the student hold the racket at the throat of the racket (we call this the BIG HAND). The student will drop the ball and bump the ball up on the bounce. They need to touch it so soft they can catch it. You can use this technique to help show them because their racket handle should point at their belly button and not to the sky. 

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Free Lessons

We are doing it one more time. The free tennis clinics at Encanto Park are coming up. This Monday evening 9/8,  you can bring your little ones to a Learn to Rally Clinic at 5:30 or a Beginner Class at 6:00-7:00. It a great opportunity to see our teaching method that has helped so many kids learn to hit like the pros.

Bar Code 109186
                109187

Register at  www.phoenix.gov/parks

For more info please call: (602) 261-8443

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Seth's Blog: The wasteful fraud of sorting for youth meritocracy

I thought this article was very interesting.

"Sorry, you didn't make the team. We did the cuts today."
"We did play auditions all day yesterday, and so many people turned out, there just wasn't a role for you. We picked people who were more talented."
"You're on the bench until your skills improve. We want to win."
Ask the well-meaning coaches and teachers running the tryouts and choosing who gets to play, ask them who gets on stage and who gets fast tracked, and they'll explain that life is a meritocracy, and it's essential to teach kids that they're about to enter a world where people get picked based on performance.
Or, they might point out that their job is to win, to put on a great show, to entertain the parents with the best performance they can create.
This, all of this, is sort of dangerous, unhelpful and nonsensical.
As millions head back for another year of school, I'm hoping that parents (and students) can call this out.
When you're six years old and you try out for the hockey team, only two things are going to get you picked ahead of the others: either you're older (it's true, check this out) or you were born with size or speed or some other advantage that wasn't your choice.
And the junior high musical? It's pretty clear that kids are chosen based on appearance or natural singing talent, two things that weren't up to them.
Soccer and football exist in school not because there's a trophy shortage, not because the school benefits from winning. They exist, I think, to create a learning experience. But when we bench people because they're not naturally good, what's the lesson?
If you get ahead for years and years because you got dealt good cards, it's not particularly likely that you will learn that in the real world, achievement is based as much on attitude and effort as it is on natural advantages. In the real world, Nobel prizes and Broadway roles and the senior VP job go to people who have figured out how to care, how to show up, how to be open to new experiences. Our culture is built around connection and charisma and learning and the ability to not quit in precisely the right moments. 
But that's not easy to sort for in school, so we take a shortcut and resort to trivial measures instead.
What if we celebrated the students who regularly try the hardest, help each other the most and lead? What if we fast tracked those students, and made it clear to anyone else willing to adopt those attitudes that they could be celebrated too?
What if you got cast, tracked or made the cut because you were resilient, hard working and willing to set yourself up for a cycle of continuous improvement? Isn't that more important than rewarding the kid who never passes but still scores a lot of goals?
Before you feature a trumpet prodigy at the jazz band concert, perhaps you could feature the kid who just won't quit. No need to tell him he's a great trumpet player--the fact is, none of these kids are Maynard Ferguson--just tell him the truth. Tell him that every single person who has made a career of playing the trumpet (every single one of them) did it with effort and passion, not with lips that naturally vibrate.
We're not spending nearly enough time asking each other: What is School For?
Since I first published Stop Stealing Dreams to the web, it's been shared millions of times. My hope is that as we go back to school, you'll forward this video and this manifesto (screen edition) to every parent and teacher you know. (Here's a printable edition if you want to print it out and hand copies out).
Let's talk about school and figure out what we're trying to create.

Roger Federer - Super Slow Motion Flat Serve

Monday, September 1, 2014

US Open

The US Open is going on right now. I can remember this was a happy and a sad time. One, the summer was coming to an end. It was a happy time because for these two weeks the energy in the tennis community and at the US Open is unlike anything you will ever experience. One of my favorite US Open's is when Andre Agassi, number 25 in the world, unseeded, upset Michael Stich in 1994. He played out of his mind in that tournament and captured the hearts of people from all walks of life. We miss you Andre.

Fall Saturday Classes are Here

Stay tuned for our schedule as we return to Encanto Sports Complex. Here is our 2021 Schedule for Saturday Mornings. Register