unblocked school. There
appears to be some snobbery in our sport and the coaches coaching the
“better” players seem to think they are somehow “better” coaches because
they work with elite players. I know I have definitely been guilty of
this at times earlier in my coaching career.
Some people claim coaching the top players is extremely challenging
because they can be “difficult to work with” in a team setting or as
individuals. I find this sentiment quite laughable. In my experience,
the easiest players to coach are the top ones. Getting to work with
extremely self-motivated, highly skillful, hardworking players is easy.
Yes, maybe they have some superior attitude and their rate of
improvement is hard to measure. But the most difficult and rewarding
thing about coaching is keeping people motivated when they are
struggling, teaching new skills that appear complex and creating a
culture of hard work, passion and love for the game. Personally, I am
huge fan of the coach who nurtured a child’s passion for tennis, not the
one who reaped the accolades for the almost-finished product.
I have been fortunate to coach at a number of different levels and I
believe my skill set is best suited to the current demographic I am
working with (NCAA Division I). I learned this very clearly when I
started coaching my 6 year old son and his buddies. I realized I had
very little idea of current best practices and how to ensure I was
helping them with their technique while having a lot of fun! I gained a
new appreciation of just how difficult it is to keep kids engaged and
eager to come back for more.
When it comes to tennis, I can’t help but wonder if we are expecting
our coaches to know too much in a lot of different areas and never
really become experts in just a few. Tennis is such a vast game, with so
many different shots, movement patterns, fitness considerations, injury
prevention, mental and tactical situations to master. We don’t expect
our teachers to be proficient at teaching every grade level.
During my playing career I was extremely lucky to be tutored by some
outstanding coaches. I was fortunate to work with a technical coach who
restructured my game when I was very young and held me to a high
standard of technical ability. As I got older, I began to work with
coaches who gave me a better understanding of the tactical aspects of
the sport. It wasn’t until I got to college that I learned the physical
nature of tennis and the type of toughness that was required to succeed
at a higher level.
It appeared that over the course of my career the right coach came
into my life at the right time to help me understand a new layer as to
what the sport required. I don’t know that if I had stayed with the same
coach all my life I would have been as well rounded a player. Some
players stay with the same coach their whole life and have amazing
careers.
Again, proving that there is no one path or magic pill for producing
great tennis players. I know for myself that I did not make it on the
professional tour because I did not have the required mental aptitude
nor was I willing to sacrifice other areas of my life. I don’t blame
anyone, have any regrets or think that if I had grown up playing on hard
courts, or had more resources or a top 10 player from my home country
to look up to or anything else that it would have been any different.
In conclusion, I believe we need to continue to improve education for
not only coaches and players, but for parents too. We also need to
understand that we live in global world and tennis is a very global
sport. What is so bad about players leaving countries to go elsewhere to
develop their passion? Is it truly the federation’s job to develop
players? At the top level of tennis, it is more about individual names
than the country they represent.
Players are playing for themselves 98% of the time and not for their
country. Federations don’t have to be responsible for developing elite
players past a certain point. Let the private sector take care of that
and let players go wherever they want to go. The best always find a way;
that is why they are the best. This is not an opinion I would have held
when I was playing or even 5 years ago. But as I gain a better
understanding of globalization and relate this back to the world of
tennis, I can see more clearly now that our focus appears to be in the
wrong place at times.
Let’s set a solid foundation for our players, provide adequate
training facilities and a logical tournament schedule and ranking
system. Most importantly, let’s get our best coaches working with our
young players and figure out how to make tennis as relevant as possible
throughout the world. Federations everywhere have consistently failed at
developing players. No one truly knows what it takes, so let’s stop
holding them accountable for such an unrealistic target. No one is
responsible for creating champions other than the individuals themselves
that want to achieve greatness.
Let’s reward those that get the most children passionate about tennis
and turn the spotlight on these individuals on a much more consistent
basis unblocked games online. We all have a responsibility to ensure the future of our game.
Let’s stop pitting one development system against another. Let’s stop
going into our silos and only associating with those coaches who are
working with players of a similar level. Let’s stop telling kids to go
“pro” when they should be going to college.
And let’s all put our knowledge and resources together to encourage
future generations of tennis players. The more children we have playing
tennis, the more we will have to celebrate.
As I mentioned in Part I of this blog, I strongly believe the coaches
we need to be celebrating and rewarding are the ones that are finding
ways to help children be passionate about our game. These are the
coaches that are truly developing players and not just managing and
smoothing out the edges of the already polished tennis player Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Does Anyone Really Know How to Produce Champions? Part II
Published :
2:54 AM
Author :
Simuka Rafeal
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