Strokes depend on "feel" not "mechanics"

If you would like to learn to play tennis or reach a higher level at a quicker rate you must understand that stroke production is based on a ‘feel' of a particular stroke, not ‘mechanics.' Are you thinking, "not mechanics, I thought strokes were all mechanics!" Well, that is what conventional methods would lead you to believe, but it simply is not true.

The truth is all pros have developed a feel of a given stroke by many hours of repetition. Either by having someone feed them balls or just having fun as a child playing day in and day out. As they develop a feel for a given shot then the mechanics work correctly. Did you catch that? The feel of a stroke allows the mechanics to function properly. The mechanics themselves do not make the stroke function correctly. An example of this would be a player who has the perfect mechanics and looks good, but cannot keep the ball in the court with any consistency. He has painstakingly forced himself to do the mechanics correctly, but has developed no ‘feel' of the stroke through repetition.

What do I mean by ‘feel'? A feel is an identification with a stroke as a whole unit, not its individual parts. By the way this is true for all sports. If you think Michael Jordan was one of the all time greatest basketball players because he had the best mechanics you would be dead wrong. His ‘feel' of the game, shots, and situations were beyond most players in the history of the game. He developed that ‘feel' from long hours of repetition when most would become bored! The same is true in tennis. Develop a feel of a shot and that feel will make the mechanics work correctly. Try it and see for yourself!

Go out and practice any one of your shots for one month, just one half hour a week or more and watch what begins to happen. Use a ball machine or a partner that will simply feed you balls. Hit for ten minutes, then rest by practicing another stroke for three minutes, then come back to the same stroke for ten more minutes. Do this for as long as you like each week for a month and watch the different ‘feel' that develops for that particular shot. Even if you are not doing everything perfectly you will still improve!!!

Why?

THE MAGIC OF THE LOST ART OF REPETITION!

That's right I said the lost art of repetition. Most players now-a-days want a pro to tell them what they technically did wrong so they can correct it and then they think everything is fine. Only one problem, if that is all there were to it everyone would be a pro! Everyone seems to forget repetition. Repetition is so powerful that many times you do not even have to be technically correct and you will still improve. Besides with a little guidance and a lot of repetition many of the mistakes you are making will disappear on there own. Why? Because most of the mistakes players make are based on incorrect balance, timing, judgment, and undeveloped muscle. All four can only be developed by repetition, not by forcing yourself to do a host of technical things.

This is the same problem a child is having when he learns to walk. He lacks the balance, the timing, the judgment, and has undeveloped muscle. How does the child solve this problem? With the same principle you should use to develop your game - REPETITION!

REPETITION develops balance, timing, judgment, and undeveloped muscle which in turn leads to a feel for any given stroke and that feel makes the mechanics work properly. This is exactly how repetition taught you a feel for walking as a child and eventually a feel for the advanced skill of running. Learning tennis is based on developing a ‘feel' for the whole stroke through repetition, not on learning each and every intricate mechanical movement.

Repetition is the chariot of genius

Ok, it's time to learn a principle related to repetition that is very subtle, but extremely important to understand. You can approach learning tennis from the standpoint of placing the emphasis on the technical or you can approach it from the standpoint of placing the emphasis on repetition. Which is better? Even more important - why? The correct answer is repetition! Repetition is the chariot of genius....sound familiar?

Now, this does not mean that the technical is not important, because it is, but it should be kept to a minimum. More importance should be placed on repetition of simple principles. The subtle difference between the two shows up in match play. When a person learns from the emphasis on the technical they are constantly thinking, if I kept my eye on the ball that would have worked, if I bent my knees I would not have missed, if I keep my elbow in on the volley that would have corrected the mistake, and so on.

This is exactly the way they approach their matches. Always thinking if the technical were right I would have made the shot. You have subtly conditioned yourself to think the technical is what makes it all work, not YOU!!! This subtle, but incorrect mindset can be devastating in match play. Mainly because you will try to solve problems on the court from this incorrect mindset...always looking for the technical to solve the problems.

On the other hand, when you are repetition oriented you develop a different mindset. Since repetition requires you to do something over and over and over again until you get it, you and your thinking become the most important factor, not the technical! This has the subtle affect of YOU not blaming the technical for every mistake, which results in YOU taking responsibility for your mistakes in a match. The end result is YOU start looking for different and better solutions to problems you face on the court! Solutions like, maybe I should slow it down, I need to relax, don't overplay, I need to manage my mistakes better, etc. This does not eliminate some minor technical changes, but now the priority has shifted toward YOU! And YOU can win with perfect technical skills or without them!!!