Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Great Tennis Professionals

By Bill Sutton


Becoming a superb tennis coach requires several credentials. Tennis players who emerge as tennis teachers frequently feel that understanding how to play the game immediately causes them to be an exceptional tennis instructor. Although being a great tennis player is helpful, it plays only a tiny part in the makeup of an proven tennis instructor. Listed below are the major parts of any ambitious tennis training master.

The initial thing any tennis teacher needs to concentrate on is visual appeal. Just like on a date, your first impression is significant when individuals choose their future tennis instructors. A professional look incorporates a mostly white apparel which includes collared shirt, shorts or sweat pants, tennis shoes, a cap during the summer months, and also the tennis racquet. This professional visual presentation is sometimes overlooked, but it is half the fight.

The other vitally important area is communication skills. This includes the ability to make the student comfortable, to share concepts, inspiration, and even a sense of humor. Communication skills are probably the key to being a tennis instructor.

During the tennis classes, the teacher must be ready to detect technical insufficiencies. It is the stage where knowing the fundamental principles of the game becomes essential. The right way to exercise your eye to determine technical problem areas is to picture the person striking a best shot. Following this, all you need to do is do a comparison of the actual swing to the stroke in the mind and correct the disparity.

A very common blunder that rookie tennis trainers make is that they make a great number of suggestions. The student will start concentrating on four or five different things, and they end up stressed and annoyed. Rather than presenting all the improvements at once, a good instructor offers only one instruction at a time. By prioritizing the problems from most important to least important, the student can focus on his or her stroke one step at a time without feeling overloaded.

As you can see, a good tennis coach wears several hats at the same time. You need to be knowledgeable, considerate, a motivator, and a good listener. You must create enduring partnerships and lasting relationships with your trainees. You must endlessly get better not only being a tennis teacher but as a individual as well.




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