Articles on Tennis Matters:

Successful Tips in Tennis

If you will learn how your tennis opponent thinks, and apply it in your own game, you will understand better how the external causes can influence your mind and your game. If you want to understand how his mind works, first you have to understand your own mental processes and study how it will affect you if happened in different circumstances.

Both you and your opponent will react differently in different situations. Pay attention on how your game works when you are nervous, satisfied or confused. Do you have a good reaction? If so, do not let the other one know it. If it interferes with your concentration, ignore it or remove the cause. When you will know for sure how you react at different stimulus, study your opponent from the same point of view.

In case your opponent has the same temperament as you, it is more likely that his reactions will be similar to yours. Controlling your mental processes gives you the best chance to notice those of the other. You can control ones mental processes if you have studied it for some while.

A phlegmatic player is a keen observer and thinker. That is why you will see that the physical appearance is usually related to the type of mind. An easy-going man who enjoys playing the baseline game adopts this tactic because he thinks this is the safest method of reaching the net. Other players adopt a different technique: to stay in the back and attack to break the opponents game. This is a worthful opponent, a deep thinker.

He has a complex game by mixing length with direction. The two types of players are completely different: the first one hits the ball by chance and has no system of attack, while the other always has a plan and he sticks to it. The opponent you should be afraid is the one who changes the place all the time from back to fore court, it is a real interesting case to study. He has a certain purpose, he can exit any difficult situation with a genius reply, and he has a viewpoint hard to guess, because he never allows himself to think at anything beside his game.

When we look back and try to understand our actions, we think at all good shots we had, but we never think about what might of been if we would gain the shots we missed. Sometimes, a miss by the inch has a bigger value than a failure of the return from your opponent. In tennis, if the opponent sends the tennis ball with an angle-shot out of court. You try to reach it and miss by an inch. That moment leads your opponent to think that your shot might have gone in as out and takes the wrong decision to play the ball. You managed to increase his chance of error.

If you just managed to send back that ball and your opponent would kill it, we would of felt confident that you are not as good at getting the ball out of his reach. It you do that, you get one points from your opponent, and still gets him to worry about missing that chance.

In tennis, both adversaries start with the same chances. When one of them takes the lead, he has greater confidence, while his opponent worries. He will think now only at how to maintain his lead and the other one tries to pull ahead. If he manages to do that, his confidence will increase because he begun to change a defeat into a probable victory. The tennis psychology is interesting and easy to understand and you can apply it in your own games to see if it works.

Colin Pike
08 Dec 2006

Colin writes about various topics ranging from
Tennis Tips http://www.recreationalarticles.com/promo/ to financial related subjects. For more writings by him, visit: Sporting Articles http://www.recreationalarticles.com

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