The Art of Returning Big Serves

The Art of Returning Big Serves

Yesterday, Mpetshi Perricard fired the fastest serve in Wimbledon history – 153 mph (246 km/h) – and Taylor Fritz simply blocked it back deep.

On the women’s side, imagine Leylah Fernandez facing Aryna Sabalenka, who looks like she’s serving out of a tree. The ball explodes off Sabalenka’s racket from a towering contact point, giving Fernandez fractions of a second to prepare.

At our local Badge level, you’ll often face players with serves that feel uncomfortably big. Just ask Howie, Pam, or Coach Tim.  Back in my playing days, the record – with a wood racket – was 140 mph, and most of us could still get enough returns back to break serve from time to time.

Sure, the game is faster now with modern racket and string technology, but the principles remain the same.


Out of Your Comfort Zone

When facing big serves:

  • You’re slow to react

  • You struggle to move to the ball

  • Your eyes can’t adjust quickly enough to the extra pace

The result? You start guessing, and panic sets in.


How Do Better Returners Handle This?

Because the serve is so fast, the best returners don’t overreact.  Fritz simply moved his body out of the way and put his racket on the ball, absorbing the pace and giving it right back.

But to do this effectively, you need to read the ball, not just react. That has nothing to do with your racket – it’s all about anticipation. And yes, it can be taught.


Lorenzo Musetti, after facing Novak Djokovic, said:

“It seems like he knows minutes before where you are going to serve.”

This isn’t just talent – it’s reading ball tosses, body cues, patterns, and executing split-second decisions.


Keys to Returning Big Serves

  • No inertia
    Start moving with the ball toss to prime explosive first-step movement.

  • Reduce swing length
    Use block returns with soft hands, meeting the ball out in front without swinging.

  • Stay balanced
    Small, rapid prep steps keep your body aligned and ready to pivot or extend at the last moment.

  • Train anticipation
    Watch toss cues, shoulders, and racket face to pre-commit subtly.

  • Rehearse under pressure
    Simulate serve speeds in practice with coaches or partners to acclimate your visual and reaction speed.


Learning Progression

The first variation of developing these skills is learning how to poach in doubles.

That’s what you’ll often see us teaching on most Sundays – poaching at the net, before progressing to learn how to read volleys and serves.


Wrap

Returning the fastest serves isn’t about having faster hands.  It’s about anticipating before impact, staying balanced, and using the server’s power against them.

Because in tennis, as Wimbledon 2025 showed, the ball may travel at 153 mph…but the game is won by the speed of your mind.

Alcaraz: The Science Behind Turning Defense Into Attack

Alcaraz: How the Crossover Step Flips Points

What really sets Carlos Alcaraz apart from his peers isn’t just his explosive power or creative shot-making. It’s his balance, and in particular, his mastery of the crossover step when defending in his backhand corner.

Why It Matters

A few times each match, Alcaraz finds himself deep in his backhand corner, defending against an opponent’s aggressive approach shot. In these moments, here’s what he does:

He turns his shoulders to the left, extends his right arm, and curves his racquet down and around the outside of the ball, slicing it crosscourt. But it’s not just the slice that makes this effective – it’s how he gets to the ball.

Source: Getty Images

Balance: The Secret Weapon

Most players use what’s known as “crabbing” to reach wide balls. They shuffle sideways, keeping their chest facing the court. While this feels safe, it comes with serious drawbacks:

  • It reduces speed, limiting how quickly they reach the ball.

  • It prevents proper weight transfer, weakening power production.

  • It disrupts balance, making it harder to recover or transition forward.

In contrast, Alcaraz uses a crossover step. He rotates his hips and steps his outside leg across his body line. This small technical difference has massive strategic impact:

  • He moves faster to the ball.

  • He maintains rotational force through the shot.

  • He recovers balance immediately, allowing him to explode forward into the next shot.

How It Flips Points

His defensive slice floats low from his opponent’s right to left. As it travels, Alcaraz regains his balance using the crossover step and charges forward.

In a split second, the point flips. His opponent, who was in full control, now faces a low, skidding ball with Alcaraz rushing in. Against most players, an average volley would win the point. Against Alcaraz, only an extraordinary volley keeps them alive.

Why It’s Devastating on Grass

On grass courts, this dynamic is amplified:

  • The ball stays lower, skidding through.

  • Movement requires exceptional balance and precise footwork.

As Alcaraz describes it:

“The movement is really tough, but when you get it, it’s kind of like you’re flying.”

Key Takeaways

The crossover step beats crabbing for:

  • Speed to the ball

  • Maintaining balance under lateral stress

  • Effective recovery for aggressive transitions

Alcaraz’s footwork isn’t just technical mastery – it’s a strategic weapon that transforms defense into attack within seconds.


Wrap

Next time you watch Alcaraz, focus on his crossover steps when he’s pushed wide. Notice how this single footwork choice sets up his devastating forward transitions.

It’s footwork that wins matches.

The Warm-Up Protocol

Winter tennis requires smarter preparation.

The Warm-Up Protocol is a 9-minute dynamic routine built specifically for competitive tennis players. This isn’t just about injury prevention — it’s about unlocking your full range of motion and court movement from the very first point.

No equipment. No fluff. Just efficient, targeted movement to help you perform at your best.   Access the full routine here

Breath—The Final Frontier

Breath: The Final Frontier

For the experienced tennis player, mastering endurance starts with mastering breath.

At a certain point in your tennis life, you stop chasing perfection and start chasing sustainability. Your strokes are reliable. Your instincts are sharp. You know the angles, the tempo, and the wisdom of a well-timed lob.

But here’s the quiet truth most players miss—especially those of us playing well into our 60s, 70s, and beyond:  It’s not your legs or even your heart that usually gives out first.  It’s your breath.

We spend decades perfecting our serves, footwork, and equipment, but very little time tuning the one system that touches every shot, every point, and every rally—the respiratory system. And that’s a missed opportunity.


Why You Feel Winded So Soon

Ever notice how you can start a match feeling great—resting heart rate in the 50s, legs loose—and yet just a few games in, you’re gasping for air at what seems like a modest 110 bpm?

That sensation isn’t random. It’s your body hitting VT1—the first ventilatory threshold. It’s the moment your breathing shifts from automatic and quiet to something more labored. It’s when oxygen demand suddenly outpaces supply. In tennis, this is where your rally length drops, your footwork gets lazy, and your partner starts carrying more of the load.

The problem? As we age, this threshold comes sooner.  The solution? We can train it.


Rethinking Breath: It’s More Than Inhaling

To manage this transition, you need more than strong lungs. You need breath awareness. You need a system that works with you, not against you.

Try thinking about your breath like this:

  • Before VT1, you’re in candle mode—burning clean, controlled energy.

  • At VT1, you’re shifting to a blowtorch—hot, powerful, but hard to sustain.

  • When you hear yourself breathing during a point, or can’t string five words together between serves, you’ve likely crossed that threshold.

Most players don’t recognize this line—let alone train to move it. But with a few simple changes, you can.


On-Court Tactics to Expand Your Breath

  1. Warm up slower than you think you need to.
    Try 5–10 minutes of hitting while breathing only through your nose. It’ll feel awkward—but it tells your heart and lungs to sync up before the match gets hot.

  2. Listen to your inner coach.
    Can you mentally or quietly talk yourself through shot selection during points? If not, your breath is ahead of your brain. Ease back.

  3. Reset between points.
    Walk slowly to the baseline, inhaling for 3 seconds, exhaling for 6. This trains your nervous system to recover like a pro.


Breath Training Off the Court

The work doesn’t stop at the net. Here’s how to improve your breath system away from matches:

  • CO₂ Tolerance Walking: Exhale fully, hold your breath, walk a few steps. Repeat. It builds breath control and resilience.

  • Box Breathing: 4 seconds in, 4 hold, 4 out, 4 hold. Trains focus under fatigue.

  • Pursed-Lip Exhales: Like blowing out a candle slowly—helps strengthen your diaphragm and calm your system.


Wrap

Breath isn’t the backup plan. It’s the baseline.
Train it. Trust it. Tune into it.
Because breath is the difference between burning out… and playing out your full game.
And if tennis has taught us anything, it’s that the long game always wins.

The Grind Pays Off

The Grind Pays Off: Why Spaun’s U.S. Open Win Matters

There are sporting moments that stretch beyond the trophy, and J.J. Spaun’s U.S. Open win is one of them.

On a drenched Oakmont Sunday, the grind told its story. Not the flash of a superstar, but the relentless rhythm of a journeyman. Spaun—stocky, unassuming, once nearly jobless on the PGA Tour—took on the game’s cruelest major and walked away a champion. Not by dominance, but by determination.

He Wasn’t Supposed to Win. That’s Why It’s So Powerful.

  • Spaun started golf hitting balls into a garage net.

  • He walked onto his college team.

  • He spent four years grinding on mini tours.

  • In 2024, he was missing cuts and nearly lost his card.

And then came the shift—not in swing, but in spirit.

No longer trying to “protect” his career, he just played. He embraced the “let the golf be golf” mantra, stopped chasing validation, and started swinging freely. What followed? Three top-10s, a secure tour card, and on June 16, a 64-foot putt that sealed a two-shot victory in the U.S. Open!

Why This Win Resonates

This wasn’t about being the best. It was about being brave enough to stay in the game. About weathering 10 missed cuts, soul-sucking self-doubt, and the pressure of feeding a family. Spaun’s win reminded us:

  • You don’t need to be the chosen one. You need to keep showing up.

  • The difference isn’t in talent. It’s in the refusal to quit.

  • Growth is non-linear—but grit is exponential.

The Agassi Grind: A Legend Forged in Pain

Andre Agassi once described his early years as “hell in paradise.” Trained relentlessly from childhood, Agassi burned out by his early twenties, only to fall to No. 141 in the world in 1997. But instead of walking away, he went to the minor leagues—the tennis equivalent of the mini tours—playing in remote Challenger events with no fanfare. And from that lonely grind came a second career. He climbed back to world No. 1, winning five more Grand Slams and proving that greatness isn’t just talent—it’s the ability to rebuild when no one’s watching.

The Tennis Echo Chamber: More Champions of the Grind

  • Stan Wawrinka was 28 before winning his first Grand Slam. Once a perennial quarterfinalist, he broke through by outlasting legends—claiming three majors by beating Djokovic and Nadal in finals.

  • Simona Halep lost her first three Slam finals, often criticized for being too fragile. But she doubled down on fitness, tactics, and mental strength. Her reward? Wimbledon and French Open titles built on persistence, not privilege.

  • Francesca Schiavone wasn’t on anyone’s list of Slam favorites. But at 29, she stunned the world by winning the 2010 French Open with grit, creativity, and fearless self-belief.

These stories show us something real: grinders may not win often, but when they do, it hits deeper.

Lessons for Any Competitor

Spaun’s story is a blueprint for anyone chasing long odds:

  • Embrace setbacks as lessons, not defeat.

  • Detach from outcomes and recommit to process.

  • Find joy in effort—even when results aren’t immediate.

As James Clear would say, “You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” Spaun’s system became about freedom, family, and letting go of fear.

Once You’ve Ground Long Enough—Magic Can Happen

That 64-footer wasn’t luck. It was every rep, every missed cut, every lonely hour on the range. It was a symbol that the journey doesn’t forget those who honor it.

So, keep swinging. Keep grinding. Because Spaun just proved—if you stay in the game long enough, your moment might just come.

The Science Behind Why We Play Not to Lose

The Science Behind Why We Play Not to Lose

Something odd happens in competitive tennis matches.  Even experienced players—those who have drilled for years and won countless points with bold play—suddenly change. They stop playing to win and start playing not to lose. It’s easy to assume this is just nerves, but there’s more to it. There’s science behind that shift.

When the pressure builds, the human brain instinctively seeks out what feels certain, safe, and simple. We back away from risk not because it’s the wrong play, but because our brains are overloaded and looking for shortcuts. The bold strategy that felt automatic in practice suddenly seems too complex to trust.

In those moments, it’s not just your forehand that’s under stress. It’s your mental wiring.


The Oprea Study: Why Simplicity Feels Safer

Economist Ryan Oprea of UC Santa Barbara explored this exact phenomenon in a 2024 study. He presented participants with two types of choices:

  • One involved a classic risk scenario: choosing between a guaranteed reward or a riskier, potentially higher payout.

  • The other involved no risk at all—just a little math. Participants had to compare two guaranteed outcomes, but one was more mentally demanding.

Here’s the kicker: people avoided the complex choice just as often as they avoided the risky one, even though there was no uncertainty involved. The conclusion was clear:

The brain treats complexity the same way it treats risk.

Citation: Oprea, Ryan. 2024. “Decisions under Risk Are Decisions under Complexity.” American Economic Review 114 (12): 3789–3811. DOI: 10.1257/aer.20221227


Why This Matters on the Court

In tennis, complexity is strategy.

It shows up when you change direction mid-rally, go after a tough serve target, or take control on a tight point. These are high-payoff plays—but they also require fast, deliberate thinking.

When pressure hits, your brain wants to simplify. So instead of attacking the second serve, you block it back. Instead of aiming to the corner, you hit down the middle.

You don’t lose confidence—you lose bandwidth. And with it, your ability to make good strategic choices in the moment.


The Weekend Warrior Factor

This is especially true for the majority of players—those who balance tennis with jobs, families, and everyday life. If you’ve spent your week in meetings, solving problems, and making decisions, your brain is already fatigued.

By the time Saturday rolls around, your cognitive tank is half-empty. When the score tightens, you’re not unprepared—you’re just mentally spent. And that’s when the brain looks for the easiest option.

It’s not poor preparation. It’s human nature.


Training to Think Clearly Under Pressure

James Clear, in Atomic Habits, explains that we default to what we’ve repeated most often—especially when we’re under stress. The goal isn’t to fight your instincts, but to train better ones.

Here’s how:

  • Automate your decisions. Practice your go-to plays until they’re second nature.

  • Simulate pressure. Train with tiebreakers, sudden-death points, or start games at 30–40.

  • Use calming rituals. Breathing techniques, routines between points, or even the left-hand tennis ball squeeze can help reduce mental clutter.

  • Redefine what feels safe. Safe should mean familiar and practiced, not tentative or defensive.


Match Day Mindfulness

Arrive early. Get away from the noise. Give your mind space to reset.

Back when I played, I’d spend 20–30 quiet minutes in the locker room before a match—no hype, no distractions. Just quiet.

Today, many players walk onto court with headphones on. It’s not just a playlist—it’s protection. A way to create mental boundaries and preserve focus.

Stillness sharpens clarity. And clarity gives you the best shot under pressure.


The Real Opponent? Cognitive Overload

When the match tightens, most players don’t choke because they’re afraid to lose. They choke because their brain is exhausted—and simplifying feels like the only option.

But the best competitors train themselves to stay strategic when others retreat.  Not because they’re fearless. But because they’ve rehearsed complexity until it feels familiar.


Wrap

If you want to play to win under pressure, don’t just train your shots—train your brain.  Learn to embrace complexity, even when it feels uncomfortable.

Because the science says: you can!

How to Change a Stroke

How to Change a Stroke

Changing a stroke is one of the toughest challenges in any precision sport. It’s not just about technique—it’s a complete shift in mechanics, mindset, and identity. The process is slow, frustrating, and often risky. Muscle memory resists, performance may dip, and the temptation to revert is strong. But when done right, the payoff can be game-changing.

Scottie Scheffler’s story is a blueprint. In 2023, the world No. 1 golfer couldn’t close tournaments despite being the best tee-to-green player on tour. His putting—once a fatal flaw—became a strength after he brought in Phil Kenyon, simplified his technique, switched to a mallet putter, and changed to a claw grip. By 2025, Scheffler was not just winning majors—he was dominating them.

Tennis has seen similar reinventions:

  • Roger Federer retooled his backhand in 2017 to counter Nadal’s topspin, leading to a career resurgence.

  • Rafael Nadal revamped his serve and return positioning under Carlos Moyá, extending his prime well into his 30s.

  • Carlos Alcaraz smoothed out his service motion before the 2025 season, improving pace and consistency.

  • Jannik Sinner adjusted his stance and preparation, unlocking more power and accuracy—key to his rise to world No. 1.


These stories all share the same process:

1. Diagnose the real issue — don’t guess or copy.
Use video and expert input to identify the actual flaw. Many players waste time changing what looks wrong rather than what affects outcomes.

2. Bring in expert help — adaptability and insight matter.
Work with coaches who tailor solutions to your game—not just general cookie-cutter mechanics. Their outside perspective helps you avoid chasing false fixes.

3. Simplify the change — focus on balance, timing, and feel.
Start with core fundamentals. Clean contact, balance, and fluid rhythm are the building blocks of every great stroke.

4. Modify equipment if needed — small tweaks, big returns.
A new racquet setup or grip adjustment can support better mechanics and feel. Like Scheffler’s switch to a mallet, or Federer moving to a 110 racket, equipment should match your new motion.

5. Rebuild identity and belief — use rituals and reinforcement.
You’re not just changing form—you’re changing how you see yourself. Use routines, cues, and positive self-talk to reinforce confidence in your new game.

6. Train under pressure — test it when it matters most.
Practice is just the beginning. To own the change, simulate match stress and play through it. That’s where new patterns get forged into reliable habits.


Wrap

Changing a stroke isn’t for the faint of heart. It demands clarity, commitment, and patience. But as Scheffler, Federer, and Sinner have shown, the reward isn’t just improvement—it’s transformation. Diagnose wisely. Train deliberately. Trust the process. That’s how players evolve—and how you can too.

How Do Deal With Losing

How Do Deal With Losing


Losing Isn’t Optional — It’s Part of the Game

At the highest levels of tennis, everyone loses. Often. Even legends. Roger Federer, across his storied career, won only 54% of total points. That means he was “failing” on nearly half the balls he hit — and he’s one of the greatest to ever do it.

So the question for competitive players isn’t how to avoid losing — it’s: How do you respond when you do?


What Pros Know That Many Players Don’t

1. Losing Doesn’t Mean You’re Broken

Michael Kosta — once ranked 864 in the world before becoming a comedian — put it best in his book Lucky Loser:

“I wasn’t some mediocre player learning to cope. I was a winner, and then suddenly I wasn’t. That transition? Brutal.”

The pros understand that losing doesn’t mean your game is worthless. It means you’re competing at a level where every point is a battle — and sometimes, the other guy just plays better.

2. Process Beats Postmortem

What separates the better players isn’t how deeply they analyze every loss — it’s how effectively they move on.

  • Novak Djokovic? He journals his thoughts post-match, then resets by the next practice session.

  • Rafael Nadal? He spoke bluntly about his performance, but never wallows.

  • Serena Williams? Known for saying: “I’m not going to beat myself up. I’ll be better tomorrow.”

They all follow the same principle: Short memory. Clear process. Keep moving.


Tactical Tools the Pros Use to Reset

  • Post-loss practice: Many pros schedule a light session within hours of a loss — not punishment, but emotional recalibration.

  • Lessons journals: Some players note one or two takeaways from a match — and then close the book. Literally.

  • Physical movement: Even a short run or hitting session can disrupt negative self-talk and re-engage the body with rhythm and flow.

  • Self-belief recall: The best actively remind themselves of past wins and tough matches survived. This fuels confidence for the next challenge.

And most importantly — they don’t obsess over how others are doing.

“Comparison is the thief of joy” — a truth every UTR stressing player must internalize.
Constantly measuring yourself against peers or rankings only distracts you from the real task: your own progress.


Performance Psychology: Reframing the Loss

At the heart of how pros handle defeat is performance psychology — the science of staying mentally agile under pressure. Elite players train their minds like their bodies: building routines, regulating emotions, and mastering recovery. Whether it’s breathing techniques, self-talk, or visualization, the goal is the same — to shift focus from outcome to process, from panic to poise. The best don’t avoid nerves or frustration — they manage them. And that’s a skill every competitive player can learn.


Wrap

Pros can’t avoid losing — they master the art of recovery.  They don’t see defeat as a dead-end. They see it as a brief detour that sharpens their edge.

So next time you lose? Don’t spiral. Reboot. Reflect. Get back on the court!

Protected: A Mental Metronome —How to Calm Your Mind on Court

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The Power of Belief: Alcaraz

The Power of Belief: Alcaraz

Carlos Alcaraz didn’t blow Lorenzo Musetti off the court in their French Open semifinal.  And he didn’t out-hit Jannik Sinner in the final either.

Sinner owned the short points, especially early. Through the first set and into the second, he led 32–14 in rallies of four shots or fewer—stretching that edge to 38–14. Even as Alcaraz mounted his comeback, Sinner controlled the quick exchanges, ultimately finishing with a 108–95 advantage in short points.

But Alcaraz didn’t need to dominate the stats.  What he showed instead was the most undervalued skill in high-performance tennis: belief.  Belief when you’re down two sets.  Belief when your rival holds match points.  Belief that your preparation and patterns will carry you—because they’ve been battle-tested when no one was watching.


1. Belief Replaces Panic

Let’s talk more data. Against Musetti, Alcaraz landed just 41% of first serves in the opening set—a red flag for any aggressive baseliner. But instead of forcing, he recalibrated. Upped his percentage to 65% in set two. Took control.

Against Sinner? He faced the abyss—down 3–5, love-40 in the fourth set, with Sinner serving for the title.  Three match points. Gone.  Alcaraz didn’t flinch. He played ball by ball, not scoreboard by scoreboard. A flicked backhand winner. A passing shot on the run. A 13-of-14 point surge.

Champions don’t panic—they adapt.  And belief is what buys you time to adapt under fire.


2. Strategic Belief Beats Emotional Tennis

There’s a rule I teach often:  If you lose the first set, get to 4–4 in the second.  Not 6–4. Not a miracle tiebreak. Just 4–4. That’s the inflection point. That’s where pressure flips.

Alcaraz lives this. In both the semifinal and final, he transformed pressure into performance—not through emotion, but through execution.  He didn’t play heroic tennis. He played pressure-conditioned tennis—ritual-driven, pattern-disciplined, anchored by belief.


3. Why We Train Tiebreakers

There’s a reason why our training sessions lean heavily on tiebreak scenarios—because tiebreaks are turning points.  In the second-set breaker against Musetti, Alcaraz played with surgical calm.
In the fourth-set breaker against Sinner, he trailed 0–2 and won seven of the next eight points.

From 0–40 down to a 7–3 breaker win—those moments weren’t just about strokes. They were surges, fueled by belief.  And once he seized that momentum, the match shifted from battle to procession.


4. Train Your Belief Like You Train Your Backhand

Belief doesn’t just show up. You build it. Like footwork. Like VO2 max. Like your first step.  Try this:

  • Start practice sets down a break

  • Play tiebreaks only after tough intervals or with heavy legs

  • Use your rituals—breath, bounce, cue word. Lock it in.

If you can’t hold belief in practice,  You won’t hold it at 4–5, 30–40, second serve. And definitely not at 4-6 down in a tie breaker.   Simple as that.


Belief Is the Edge

Belief is not a feel-good accessory.  It’s your edge.  Your answer when your serve deserts you.  Your fuel when fatigue tightens your chest. Your weapon when the opponent thinks it’s over.

You earn it in the shadows—When no one’s watching, When you’re losing in practice sets, When no one believes but you.


When Belief Ages With You

But what about you—the aging player who’s no longer 22, who feels the whisper of doubt more than the roar of confidence?  That’s where belief shifts. It’s not loud anymore. It’s quieter. More deliberate.

You don’t just doubt the score—you start to doubt your body.  Will it move when you ask? Will the legs hold up? At that point, belief becomes memory.

You remind yourself: I’ve been here before. You trust the odds—not because they promise victory, but because they’ve favored you more often than not.  And yes, probability teaches that sometimes you’ll come up short. But that’s not failure. That’s just reality.

You swing anyway—because belief, even in its mature form, still gives you your best chance to win.


Wrap: Belief Is Bigger Than Tennis

Alcaraz didn’t win because he was perfect. He won because when perfection failed, belief didn’t.

Next time you’re down—on court or off—don’t flinch.  Reset. Breathe. Play one more point.

Because belief, trained and tested, Beats talent that doubts itself every time.

Anchor Your Mental Game

Anchor Your Mental Game: Don’t Fight It, Don’t Feed It

The swirling winds on Court Philippe-Chatrier matched the turbulence in Aryna Sabalenka’s mind.

She made no effort to mask the sting of her French Open final loss to Coco Gauff, calling her performance “terrible” and lamenting it as “the worst tennis I’ve played in the last, I don’t know how many months.” As the gusts disrupted her rhythm, so too did the emotional storm unravel her composure—shaking confidence, blurring focus, and leaving her raw in defeat.

In her on-court interview, Sabalenka bypassed tradition and dove straight into self-reproach. No perfunctory congratulations, no hollow platitudes. After a grueling 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-4 defeat, she stood with tears brimming and said, “Honestly, guys, this will hurt so much, especially after such a tough two weeks, playing great tennis and in these terrible conditions playing such terrible tennis in the final — that really hurts.”

The Mantra: Don’t Fight It, Don’t Feed It

Her performance coach, Jason Stacy, offered a guiding principle for these moments:  “Don’t fight it, don’t feed it.”

“The stress, anxiety, the pressure, the mistakes, all those things are going to be there… you can’t pretend it’s not going to be a thing, but you don’t want to feed it either and give it too much energy or power.”

This isn’t a call for emotional repression. It’s a call for mastery.


Three Anchors to Steady Your Mental Game

1. Let It Pass — Don’t Fight the Weather
Emotions, like wind, come and go. Fighting them wastes energy. Accept them. Acknowledge the gust, then return to center.

2. Starve the Spiral — Don’t Feed the Inner Critic
When you dwell, you fuel the fire. Instead:

  • Breathe and reset before each point

  • Use neutral self-talk: “Next Point.”

  • Hold your posture as if you’re still winning:  No drooped shoulders.

3. Train Emotional Resilience Like a Skill
Mental strength is built through reps—just like your serve. Try:

  • Pressure drills that simulate match stress

  • Left-hand ball squeezes pre-serve to keep composure


Wrap: Calm Is a Competitive Edge

Whether you’re battling your opponent or battling yourself, the wind will blow.

You don’t have to fight it. But you must not feed it.

Anchor your mental game with presence, practice, and perspective. Storms will pass. What matters is the clarity you carry through them.

Stay sharp. Stay calm. Next Point!

The Science Behind Spins and Power

The Science Behind Spins—and Where Real Power Comes From

In tennis, spin isn’t just a style—it’s a tool. And power isn’t just about swinging hard—it’s about moving right. To play at a high level, you need to understand how spin shapes the ball and how your body transfers energy into it. Get both right, and you’ll hit harder, play longer, and stay healthier.


Topspin: Heavy, Safe, and High-Bouncing

Topspin makes the ball rise steeply, then dip sharply—thanks to the Magnus effect. That forward spin changes the air pressure around the ball, pulling it down into the court. It lets players swing hard and still keep the ball in, which is why it’s the base of most modern groundstrokes.

Topspin shots also bounce high, which can push your opponent back or jam them on the shoulder. But they travel slower through the court, giving opponents more time to react. That’s why players like Sinner flatten their swing when they want real pace—driving through the ball, like a cricket batter timing a clean straight drive.


Slice: Floating and Low-Bouncing

A slice uses backspin, which does the opposite—it creates lift. The ball stays in the air longer and lands flatter, then skids low after the bounce. It’s great for breaking rhythm, forcing awkward contact, or setting up net play. On faster or lower-bounce courts, it becomes even more effective.


Flat Shots: Direct and Fast

Flat shots have minimal spin, so they don’t benefit from the Magnus effect. They fly straighter and faster, making them ideal for finishing points or rushing opponents. But the margin for error is small—there’s less net clearance and less shape to work with. Timing and footwork have to be sharp.


Power Comes From How You Move

Hitting hard doesn’t mean swinging harder. It means using your body as one connected system. Real power starts from the ground and travels up through the kinetic chain:

  • Legs generate the base force.

  • The core (abs, obliques, lower back) transfers that energy through the body.

  • The shoulder helps guide and time the release into the arm and racket.

It’s counterintuitive, but swinging too fast can actually make you lose power. When the swing outruns the body’s rotation, you break the energy flow.

That’s why the Tennis Whisperer uses the wheel analogy: your legs are the hub, your core is the axle, and your shoulder and arm are the rim. If the rim spins faster than the center, the wheel breaks down. But when everything turns together, the result is clean, effortless force: Easy Power.


And You Stay Healthier

When you hit this way, you don’t just gain control—you protect your body. A strong, coordinated swing reduces stress on your arm. You mitigate injury risks, especially chronic ones like tennis elbow. That’s especially important with today’s aggressive windscreen wiper western forehands, which can be a long-term injury trap if the arm does all the work.


Wrap

Master spin, and you manage space. Master movement, and you deliver power. Put them together, and you control the court—not just today, but year after year.

The Hardest Truth in Tennis

The Hardest Truth in Tennis: Understanding Probability in Tennis

Not every match goes your way—and sometimes, that’s not your fault.

You may show up with your best preparation, execute the right tactics, manage your emotions, and still walk off the court with a loss. It’s one of the hardest truths in tennis: doing everything right doesn’t guarantee the result you want on that day.

That’s where the role of probability comes in.

Tennis Is a Game of Margins—and Matchups

Unlike games of pure skill or strength, tennis is deeply influenced by matchups. Styles clash. Surfaces shift dynamics. Even the day’s conditions can tilt the court.

You might play smart—high-percentage targets, solid footwork, good energy—but face a player whose weapons slice through your patterns. That doesn’t mean your plan failed. It means on this day, against this player, the numbers didn’t line up.

And that’s okay.

The Breakthrough I’ll Never Forget

Growing up, I was able to dominate most players across Sydney—except for one guy. My nemesis.  I lost to him six straight times. Every match, same story: he was just cleaner, just sharper, always a step ahead. But   on the seventh try, something shifted.  We met in the semifinals. He rolled me in the first set, like usual. I dug deep, scrapped my way to win the second, barely hanging on. Then—out of nowhere—he retired. And he wasn’t hurt, well physically anyway. What?  I never lost a set to him again.

That day didn’t just mark a breakthrough—it showed me how persistence and process eventually turn the tide. Even when the odds have been stacked against you.

The Bigger Victory

Tennis demands more than just talent—it demands consistency under pressure and belief in yourself.  You may lose matches even where you do the right things, but if you keep showing up and sticking to the process, you’re stacking probability in your favor.

And when that tipping point comes—it changes everything.

Do the right things often enough, and probability eventually bends your way.

Tennis Is a Mind Game — Just Ask Musetti

Inside the Mind of Musetti and the Mental Game

It’s always fascinating to get into the mind of today’s top tennis players—what they’re thinking, how they evolve, and what inner shifts power their success.  Unlike generations past, modern athletes are increasingly open about the psychological side of the sport, offering us rare insights into their growth. One such moment came recently from Lorenzo Musetti, a rising force on the ATP tour.

 “I think I’m more clear what I have to do, and that’s really a step forward that I made. I know myself better on court; not just in terms of strategy and technique, but also on the mental side, on how I have to behave in certain situations. I know that I can play with the top (players) and I will try to beat them.” — Lorenzo Musetti

Mental Clarity: Catalyst for Growth

Musetti’s reflection marks a key turning point in any competitor’s journey—the moment you stop reacting and start responding. When clarity replaces chaos, every shot has purpose. It’s no longer about merely executing strokes; it’s about how you manage yourself under pressure, how you recognize patterns mid-match, and how you reset after setbacks.

This level of self-awareness transforms your game from the inside out. It’s the difference between surviving rallies and crafting them with intent.

The Confidence Loop

What Musetti describes is a classic feedback loop in high-performance psychology:

  • Self-awareness leads to smarter decisions.

  • Smarter decisions reduce fear of failure.

  • Reduced fear builds trust in your game.

  • That trust fuels confidence.

When you believe in your decision-making, you trust your game in critical moments—against top players, on big points, under lights. That’s how belief is born, not just from winning, but from knowing why you’re playing a certain way, and feeling aligned with that plan.

How You Can Develop This Mindset

You don’t need to be on the ATP Tour to train like Musetti. Here are concrete ways to sharpen your mental game:

  • Reflect after each match: What did you do well mentally? What rattled you? Write it down.

  • Practice under pressure: Replicate stress in practice with high-stakes scoring or fitness consequences.

  • Use visualization: Imagine yourself facing tough situations and calmly executing your plan.

  • Build routines: Pre-point rituals, breathing techniques, and reset behaviors are your anchors.

Wrap

Musetti’s evolution is a masterclass in what happens when you align strategy, technique, and mindset. It’s not just about believing you can beat the best—it’s about doing the right thing point after point.

Growth doesn’t just happen between points; it happens between seasons, in the quiet work of getting to know yourself.

Tennis Coach of the Year… and It’s a Robot

Meet the Future of Tennis: Tenniix AI Robot

Imagine a hitting partner who never misses a session, never complains, never gets tired, and always does exactly what you want — no questions asked.

Tenniix, is the world’s first vision-based AI tennis robot — a revolutionary training partner built to elevate your performance, sharpen your skills, and simulate match play like never before.

Precision Meets Intelligence

T-APEX Tenniix uses advanced vision and UWB hybrid tracking to deliver pinpoint ball placement and real-time responsiveness. With over 1,000 built-in drills, it covers every aspect of your training — from baseline consistency to net reflexes.

Smart, Lightweight, and Mobile

Weighing just 15.4 lbs, this ultra-portable unit travels easily and adapts seamlessly to any court — hard, clay, or grass. Whether you’re training at home or prepping courtside, Tenniix moves with you.

Personalized Coaching On-Demand

Experience smart match mode that simulates real opponents and challenges your tactical awareness. Voice and gesture controls allow hands-free operation, keeping your rhythm uninterrupted.

Choose Your Perfect Fit

  • Basic – $699

  • Pro – $999

  • Ultra – $1,499
    Each model offers progressive levels of features, from standard drills to full-court dynamic simulation — all at a fraction of the cost of hiring a pro full-time.

Available July 2025