Who Makes More Returns?
G’day from New York!
So what do you think… Who puts more returns in the court between the following two levels?
- A Top 10 player in the world.
- A 16-year-old junior (boy or girl)
We all know how inconsistent junior tennis is. Balls spraying everywhere. Too many loose errors. The lack of maturity in their game is obvious. A professional player has spent thousands of hours honing their skills. Their job is not to miss. They make a lot of money putting the ball in the court.
So who puts more returns in the court? The 16-year-old does….
Look at a pro player on the practice court. They never miss. But watch them in a match. They miss all the time.
Why? Power. That’s why.
Here’s a little snapshot of how GAMEPLAN educate’s your mind, and in turn makes you a much better player, coach, or fan of the game.
The following is a sample of Male data in the new page Returns – Made/Winners/Errors.
- The Under 16 boy is putting 83% of his forehand returns in play.
- The Top 10 player is putting 72% of his forehand returns in play.
As you clearly see, forehand returns in play dropped along the Player Development Pathway. You see the direct influence of power. Fewer balls in the court. More errors made. More heat behind the serve.
SO…
So that means YOU HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO GET AHEAD OF THE GAME.
Embrace this data, and start working on blocking returns at a younger age. Don’t wait until it’s too late.
Imagine a coach out on the court firing hard first serves at a 12-year-old. Someone may walk by the court and think it’s overkill. They could easily think that the coach should not be doing that because nobody in 12’s hit a serve that hard.
He is just getting ahead of the game. He is giving his player a four-year head start with a skill that will greatly determine wins and losses in 16’s and 18’s. That college scholarship is getting a helping hand earlier in the pathway.
Smart. Knowledge is power.
Look at my tweet below. Yesterday, Federer was only making 55% of his forehand returns in the Deuce court deep in the 4th set. Pressure. Power. Expectation. All factors.
#FEDERER 5-4 4th set at #USOpen
Huge holes
1. Forehand returns DEUCE CT. Only made 12/22 (55%)
2. Baseline Points Won 43% (56/128)#Ouch pic.twitter.com/AJLB2iPZE7— Craig O’Shannessy (@BrainGameTennis) August 31, 2017
The more you immerse yourself in GAMEPLAN, the more you are going to uncover these gold nuggets of information and make it an outstanding resource for your coaching, or your own game.
Cheers from New York,
Craig