Play Better Tennis Keep Your Eye On The Ball

If you want to improve your tennis game, learn to watch the ball. Don’t be distracted by the movements of the player beyond the net, don’t worry about what they’re doing that might indicate how they plan to deliver their next swing. And don’t look at their side of the court to decide where you want to send the ball back to them. Focus on the ball itself so you don’t lose sight of it once it passes the net, as most players do. Practice with a friend or a machine so you can return several balls without pause and practice watching the ball until it hits your tennis racket. If you take your eyes off the ball too soon, it’s going to be difficult to make sure it hits the center of your tennis racket, which is a clean hit in tennis and the most desirable way to return a ball.

Watching the ball can prevent hits that go off in unexpected directions because your tennis racquet has turned in your hand. It’s often not a grip problem (though this can be an issue, too) but because you’re not focused on the ball, you can’t tilt the tennis racquet properly to ensure that the ball hits in the center and that the tennis racquet is angled properly. If you’re looking at the ball just before it hits the tennis racquet, you can quickly changed the tilt of the racquet to make the shot you intended.

The more you learn to watch the ball, the better you’ll be able to return it from the center of the tennis racquet. You’ll also find you’re a much better judge of the speed and likely drop spot of the ball if you watch it until it hits the racket, rather than taking your eyes off it feet before it reaches you.

Unless your opponent is up close to the net as well, don’t return the ball too close to the net. If you do and they return from the back of the court, the ball will likely sail past your outstretched tennis racquet because you’ve had no time to move back into position to return it. If they’re close, though, it’s a great opportunity to do that to them.

Concentrate on staying in the center of the court. This is the best position to be in to quickly reach almost any ball. And don’t get so caught up in watching your return ball fly that you’re caught off guard by your opponent’s next move.

Study your mistakes and learn from them. If you’re always hitting the ball out of bounds, practice reigning in your swing. If the ball constantly ends up in the net, adjust the angle of your tennis racket and your swing to get it over the net more often. Letting yourself get frustrated over these errors will only cause you to make other small miscalculations. Look at them as opportunities to improve your tennis game and have even more fun.

Mohit And Kadhe Win Fenesta Tennis Championship Doubles Title, To Lock Horns In Mens Single Title

MOHIT AND KADHE WIN FENESTA TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP DOUBLES TITLE, TO LOCK HORNS IN MENS SINGLE TITLE CLASH
New Delhi, 18th October: Mohit Mayur Jayaprakash and Arjun Kadhe had an incredible day on Friday. Both the boys first recorded impressive wins to reach the mens singles final and then teamed up to win the doubles final title of the Fenesta Open National Tennis Championship.
Mohit and Arjun were a game down in the first set but then turned it on from there to beat P.C. Vignesh and Fariz Mohammed 6-4, 6-4 at the R.K. Khanna Tennis Complex.
Earlier in the day, Mohit defeated former national champion Nitten Kirtane 6-1, 2-6, 6-2 to make it to the title clash, while Arjun had a relatively easy outing against Chandril Sood 6-2, 6-1.
In the womens singles final it will be defending champion Prerna Bhambri up against top seed Shweta Rana, both of whom recorded contrasting wins in their respective semi-final matches on Friday.
While Shweta was pushed to three sets by fifth seed Sharmada Balu, before the former edged past with a 4-6, 6-1, 6-1 win, Prerna knocked out sixth seed C Sai Samhitha 6-2, 6-1.
The big-serving Mohit started the day with his intentions clear and broke Nitten in the fourth and sixth game of the opening set to finish it in barely 30 minutes. However, Nitten brought his experience into play and broke his rival twice in the second to take the match into the decider.
But Nitten couldnt cause an upset in the third set and Mohit sealed the issue to make it to the final.
In the womens singles semi-final, Prerna remained on course to defend her title after she went past Samitha with relative ease. She converted the breakpoints that she earned and never allowed the game slip away from her reach.
Prerna broke Samitha twice in the opening set and the sixth seed Tamil Nadu girl just couldnt hold on to her serve in the second. Samitha did break Prerna in the fourth game but that couldnt help her cause as she failed to hold her serve even once in the set.
In the ladies doubles final the title was taken by Rushmi Chakravarthi and Shweta Rana against Sharmada Balu and Prerna Bhambri 6-4,7-5.
In the boys under 18 doubles final, Deepak Vishwakarma and Aditya Deswal got the better of Alex Solanki and B.R. Nikshep 6-3, 6-4, while Snehal Mane and Nandini Sharma were crowned champions in the girls under-18 doubles with a 6-0, 4-6, 10-7 win over Vanshika Sawhney and Himani Mor.

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Nature Or Nurture Tennis Champions

John Newcombe, former world tennis No 1 and former Australian Davis Cup captain, once said that the top Australian players of his era believed that it was their destiny to become tennis champions.

Boris Becker told me that two weeks before achieving his first Wimbledon title (in 1985 when seventeen years old), he felt as if it were predetermined.

As a seventeen year old, Ivan Lendl, who, prior to Pete Sampras, held the No 1 spot longer than any other player in history, was convinced that he would turn himself into the best player in the world. He would even tell you so.

When asked by the media about his chances of winning his first US Open title (in 1975), Jimmy Connors’ response was: “There are 127 losers in the draw — and me!”
Jimmy won.

What these former greats had in common was an unshakeable certainty that they would win. It is a trait that is shared by all top sports people.

But a question that has always fascinated me is: Are such champions born, or are they made?

Were Newccombe, Becker, Lendl and Connors born to rule the tennis world? Or did they become champions because of the choices they made? Was their success predetermined, as suggested by Newcombe and Becker? Or was it a result of a single-minded dedication to making themselves the very best, as implied by Lendl and Connors?

Are champions a product of nature? Or of nurture?

To be a true champion at tennis or any other sport requires very special qualities. These qualities or attributes can be divided into two categories — the physical and the mental. It is my contention that physical attributes are predominantly a product of chance. They are determined genetically.

For instance, some people are born with a body structure conducive to speed, others to strength, and so on. In this sense, a very large proportion of the population are excluded, from birth, from ever winning an Olympic gold medal as a sprinter or a weightlifter.

It is the same with tennis. The physical attributes that are required to become a champion player are such things as good hand-eye coordination, quick reflexes, and leg-speed. Without question, these attributes can be developed to their fullest potential with hard work and effective training methods.

But most people are excluded from becoming the best tennis player in the world, no matter how much time they spend attempting to reach their physical ceiling of potential.

Does this mean, then, that champions are born? Were Newcombe, Becker, Lendl and Connors so physically superior to everyone else that becoming the best was just a mere formality?

Certainly not. All four were exceptionally gifted physically, but in my view, there were other players of the same eras who were more gifted than they were.

What separated them from everyone else were their mental attributes: their will to win, their determination, their perseverance, their ability to remain calm under presuure, their ability to bounce back from disappointments, and the belief that they deserved to win — all attributes that not one of us is born with, but that each one of us has the power to develop. The only choice is whether we want to or not.

It is in this sense that, given the necessary or essential physical attributes as a starting point, all champions are not only made — they are self-made.

How Are Tennis Equipment Items Like Tennis Balls Made

The humble tennis ball is one of the most iconic elements of this noble ball game, even the most disinterested individual would be able to instantly recognise a tennis ball no matter how much they try to avoid tennis itself. Although these ubiquitous balls are now an integral element of a tennis match, along with a tennis racket, they havent always been this way. Until the late 1800s tennis balls were made out of hand-woven leather, which was then stuffed with rags and horsehair. It was only after the 1870s that they began to resemble the vulcanised rubber balls that we are familiar with today. But how are items of tennis equipment such as tennis balls actually made? Lets take a closer look!

All tennis balls, whether they will end up on the most famous courts in the world or used in a back garden or park, start life as equals. They are all made from a large rubber sheet. These sheets are fed through special machines, which stamp out pre-measured slugs. These slugs are then melted and poured into half-shell moulds; its in these moulds that the liquidised blobs of rubber begin to form the tennis balls that we all recognise.

Before they can become a single tennis ball, the half-shells need to be carefully secured together, so they are dropped into a tray whereby glue is applied to the rim of each. The glues shells go into a press which forms them into a perfect sphere shape known as a core, and secures them so that the shells dont fall apart when they are hit on impact. The pressurised middle of the tennis ball occurs in the press, it is the press that regulates the pressure of air inside a ball and this is a very important step because pressure inside the ball determines its bounce levels.

At this stage, these balls still look like spheres of rubber, so they need to be finished off carefully to become usable and playable tennis balls. The tennis ball cores are sent through another machine that scuffs the surface before being covered in glue. After a glue soaking, they are wrapped with carefully shaped strips of green felt (other colours are possible, it depends on the individual manufacturer of the balls) and then sent into a machine which presses them from every angle, ensuring that the felt is tightly secured. Once the finished balls meet and satisfy regulations and approvals, they are stamped with the logo of the brand that is manufacturing them before being dropped into sealed and pressurised cans to maintain specific levels of pressure inside them.

How to Improve Tennis

This article will share with you some tips on how to improve tennis that you have been playing. Tennis is a though sport, but you can improve right now if you wanted to. So do not let anyone stop you from getting better. If you are interested to get better in tennis, do one or all of the following steps according to your needs.

1.To improve your overall game, find a training partner that around the same level as you and play with him or her as many times as possible. If you wonder why it must be around the same level as you, the reason is if your play partner too good, you will likely be frustrated and quit every time you play. If it is around the same level, you know you can beat him or her, but you will need more effort. This will push you to play to your limit, therefore you can learn much more. One more tips which is optional, when you play, play with a small bets, for example winner pay today lunch. This is to encourage you to have mentality play to win and not play not to lose.

2.If you are alone, you can try to hit the ball to the ground with your racket to improve your feeling for your racket sweet spot. If you want more challenge, find a flat wall around your house or anywhere you like, draw the net on the wall and hit the ball to the wall as if you are playing a match with the wall as your opponent. If you want even more challenge, find a wall with an irregular surface. Irregular surface will cause the ball to bounce back to any direction so it will train you in your reflex, speed, and your swing. From my experience, try not to use a lot of power when you hit unless you can follow the ball.

3.Run, run, and run. There is no such thing as walking when you are playing tennis. You must run all the way in the game. So you need to improve your run. Train your run by running while lifting your knee as high as possible. Train yourself to run backwards. If for any reason you cannot run outside, you can try skipping rope to replace it.