Here are 5 tennis tips to avoid these unforced errors.
1. How To Prepare For The Next Shot
Many players often run towards the ball without bringing their racket back to prepare for the shot, whether it be a forehand or backhand. In tennis, it is important to be prepared. Being prepared is having the racket ready to swing and hit the ball. When a player is running towards the next ball, it is important to simultaneously bring the racket back. Bringing the racket back gives the player more time to concentrate on timing, footwork, and control. Tennis is all about timing, and being prepared gives players a better advantage.
2. Take Little Steps
Some people may assume that taking big steps or leaps towards the ball gets them closer to the ball quicker. This may be true, but it is more beneficial to take several little steps towards the ball. This helps with footwork, which every tennis player knows is the most crucial skill in tennis. Taking little steps helps avoid over-running the ball, which causes players to be too close to the ball when hitting. It also helps to avoid being too far from the ball, which causes reaching. Taking little steps will help improve footwork and groundstrokes.
3. Blocking At The Net
Swinging at the net is probably the easiest mistake to make in the game of tennis. It is most common when hitting volleys because players think they will hit a winner on a volley by swinging their hardest at the ball. Winners do not usually happen with swinging at the ball because the ball usually goes into the net or beyond the baseline to the back fence. Some tennis tips for blocking the ball are simple. Keep your eye on the ball and block it like you are giving the ball a high-five. And always remember to NOT swing at the net.
4. Place Your Serve
When beginners learn how to play tennis, they tend to think their serves will improve by hitting it harder. This is not the best idea because hitting a serve harder without control will cause the ball to either go into the net or beyond the service box. It is important to start off learning to serve by placing the ball in certain areas of the service box. This will increase your consistency in serves and also give you an advantage over your opponents.
5. Relax When Playing Tennis
Many players tend to get tense and forget to breathe while hitting. It is beneficial to develop a breathing pattern when serving and returning. This breathing pattern helps to relax your muscles and you are able to hit a free-flowing shot. Relaxing also helps you hit the ball deeper towards the baseline.
These are only a few tennis tips to help you avoid unforced errors out on the tennis courts. It would be even more beneficial to know what can be improved in your personal game. Getting tennis tips and critiques on certain shots will help you better your tennis game. Submit a video on any part of your tennis game to get critiques and extra tennis tips on how to improve your tennis game.
------
Tennis is a great way to keep fit and stay in shape. Visit http://bit.ly/uUEcHU for more essential tennis tips and tennis video instructions.
Article Source: http://bit.ly/mZBMTm://zachhunt.articlealley.com/5-tennis-tips-to-avoid-unforced-errors-2102972.html
Marathon Training For Beginners
Unique New Running Program About Marathon Training For Beginners. With A Very Successful Sales Page, Offering High Commisions Of 60%. Tap In To This Great Little Niche! For Affiliate Help And Training - Http://www.affiliates.marathontrainingexpert.com more info...When did you/will you run your first marathon?
I consider myself a beginner runner. I have run on and off since December 2007.
I'm considering -- and ONLY considering! -- running a full marathon in October 2011. I wonder when others ran, or will run, their first one? What weekly mileage were you putting in BEFORE you began your marathon training, and for how long had you been running consistently? And how did you feel physically during and following your marathon (if you've run your first one already)?
I'm a penguin (relatively slow), and am okay with that. I'm not in it for any time goal -- just for fun, and to run the entire distance. I ran two half marathons last fall but in retrospect, was undertrained for the first one. I want to be fully trained for my next half (which will probably be in October 2010), and then will consider whether I will run a marathon the following year.
thank you to everyone for your answer!
i really enjoyed reading them. they're very encouraging to say the least.
Answer
What a great question!
First, I began running at age 38, after having shed a lot of weight at a nearby health and fitness center. When the club newsletter asked for my next goal, my answer was to run both my first 10K and 10 mile road races before age 40, and then Boston by age 45.
My early training for running was sort of hit and miss, and as a result my progress was sort of slow and steady (with the emphasis on "slow"). However, I was able to run several 10K races and 2 10-mile races during my first year of running, so the next goal was the marathon.
On November 3, 1991, that first marathon (the Marine Corps Marathon) became a reality. I had put in several months of intense training, during which I had set something like 10 or 12 consecutive PR times, covering most all of the distances(5K, 4 mile, 5 mile, 10K, 10 mile, and half-marathon).
My first week towards the marathon was 30 miles, and I added about 10% to that each week, with a high week of 57 miles, and a Long Run topping out at 18 miles.
The odd thing was that the only book I had read at that time was by former world record holder Derek Clayton, titled "Running to the Top". It covered how he had come to run marathons, and some of his training techniques. While that was all well and good for Derek Clayton, I had to discard several of his ideas as being impractical for myself. He wanted to set a world record: I wanted to finish my first marathon. Huge difference! (His training techniques resulted in his having had numerous surgical operations on his legs at one time or another, and I did not find that idea apppealing!)
The full story of that first marathon would take up quite a bit of space, and I'm not sure Yahoo Answers would appreciate that very much. However, I learned a lot during that time, and in the 10 marathons I ran following that first MCM.
Perhaps there were two things that took place during that MCM that struck me as odd. Firstly, I had never gone past 18 miles in training, so once I got to that point, with 8.2 miles to go, I was in what we call "virgin territory" after that, and had no idea what to expect. At about 19 miles, my legs and hips felt a bit odd, sort of "heavy", in a way. But, that passed quickly enough, and by the 20-mile mark I was fine.
And then I waited for "The Wall" to come.
It never came.
Over the final 6.2 miles, I was fine, with some fatigue, but nothing that could truly be classified as "The Wall" as I had come to understand it. When I crossed the Finish Line at the Marine Corps Memorial I felt that I could easily have run another 3-4 miles.
At that point, it was clear to me that I had done everything correctly. My diet that final week was one long carbo-load, done while I was in the tapering-off mode. That allowed my body to absorb more of those complex carbs, and they stayed with me throughout the marathon. Perhaps that, along with all of the other (non-running) training I had done, contributed greatly to the results of that day.
Mind you, I was 42 when I ran that first marathon, an age when most people are starting to think about being "over the hill". Baloney! You are only "over the hill" if you think you are!
During the week that followed, I spent some time at the health club, and some time in their whirlpool. It was very therapeutic, to say the least, and allowed the muscles to relax. Before that week was out, I was running again, albeit closer to a jogging pace than my normal running stride. Why? Perhaps because of the residual fatigue that had set in. Yes, I chowed down on carbs for the next 2 days after the MCM, and that aided in my recovery. But there was still a lot of fatigue, and that was understandable...and tolerable.
In retrospect, I made a few mistakes along the way, and those were corrected when training for later marathons. One result was that those other marathons were much more enjoyable than they would have been. Some, however, were sheer torture. For example, the 1994 Sugarloaf Marathon, just a month after having run Boston (9 days before my 45th birthday!). We started running at 7AM, with a temperature of about 50 degrees, no clouds inthe sky, and no shade on the course. This was late May, in Maine. By the time I reached the halfway mark, the temperature was about 80 degrees, and much closer to 90 by the time I crossed the finish line. With water stops stationed every 3.5 miles apart (BAD!!!!!!), I hate to say this, but I did more walking during those last 8-10 miles than I care to admit. At least I made it to the end, though, and that's what counts.
Three days later, I was running again.
Please allow me to pass along something that I wrote the night before the 1991 MCM, when I still had all those doubts and questions. It is still my personal motto to this day:
"You find out what you're made of when you see what it takes to stop you."
Just about anyone can go out and finish a 5K. That takes no real talent. With work, a 10K can become a reality. With a lot of work, 10 milers and half-marathons can also become a reality. But you can train to perfection for a marathon, and still fail to finish for a variety of reasons, none of which have anything to do with your ability as a runner.
0 comments:
Post a Comment