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"ATTACK - THE LION EFFECT!" | |
| "ATTACK - THE LION EFFECT!" |
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| Feb 21, 2008 at 03:12 AM | ||||
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ATTACK - "The Lion Effect" - Recently Miguel Crespo kindly offered to help me with a very interesting E-Book Tennis Tips/Articles project, by sending an email to all tennis coaches in the ITF CSSR and TennisiCoach list. On the other hand he asked me to contribute with an article to TennisiCoach, of course I felt honoured to oblige but, at the same time was left wondering, what can I write about that has not been written already? This thought did not occupy my head for 2 seconds because, the answer popped up in a flash, write about something you are absolutely passionate about! THE ATTACK!!! Wow Sergio, you are talking about something from a distant past! No, no my friends, I am talking about Rod Laver, John Newcombe, John McEnroe, Stefan Edberg, Patrick Rafter, Boris Becker, excitement! Living on the brink! Adrenaline pumping at every second! The crowd constantly on edge and yes, Pete Sampras and even Roger Federer, sometimes they can make it look boring, so easy they portray the attacking game. And let’s welcome Jo-Wilfred Tsonga to the club, what a marvellous player! Why am I so passionate about the attacking game? Let me tell you something, both styles of play are necessary and one should never exclude the other. Rod Laver, Pete Sampras and Roger Federer embody the perfect balance and John McEnroe and Boris Becker the perfect excitement! As some of the most dominant players of all time they mastered all aspects of the game (all ATP N#1). Even Björn Borg, who we all considered to be purely a baseliner, could serve and volley well enough to win Wimbledon 5 times in a row! Some of you are already saying, “but Sergio, how am I going to teach my pupils to hit a decent volley with today’s grips?” And, “anyway, it is so much easier to have immediate gratification for children and their parents by having kids just playing and running around the baseline!” The grips? At the net? You need to keep the discipline of teaching youngsters to use either the continental grips or if you prefer eastern (forehand and backhand) for the volleys, (continental for the service and overheads too of course!). Yes, you will have to spend equal amounts of your practice sessions at the baseline and the net. Sometimes you will have to dedicate entire sessions to net play and its variations. Here though, the responsibility is yours, you have to supervise those children, you have to encourage, you have to give them positive reinforcement at every sign of progress and or success! You can not let go until they are able to execute at the net with mastery and confidence. In addition, if you take the time to teach the attack now, in ten, twenty or even more years, players like the above mentioned will continue to emerge. You will be proud of yourself and we will all be able to enjoy an art of play that should never be forgotten or lost. Are there other compelling reasons to teach the attacking game? Only attackers can pose the type of challenges to baseliners that truly test their grit. Look at the return for example, will two baseliners return the same way they do against each other as when they face a serious attacker? Of course not! What happens? The baseliners perk-up and have to vary their returns much more, they have to be more accurate, they try to get the ball on the attackers shoe laces, stretch them to the sides, jam some hard shots to the body, drive more passing shots up the lines (instead of the usual run-of-the-mill cross courts), they have to be a lot more accurate and play the ball closer to the lines. The excitement just mounts! What did this little paragraph above do to you? It immediately aroused the mental level of your attention, just by reading it you felt the threats the attacker imposes on his foes and your heart might have started to pound a little faster. In match play it takes both players to another level of performance! Does the attacker have an easy task just because he is aggressive or by pressuring his opponent constantly? Of course not! By putting his baseline challenger on his toes, the attacker is asking for trouble, big trouble, but that is something that he loves! Attackers are aggressive, quick-minded, ultimate problem-solvers! They just love to be challenged and to challenge others! So what happens then? The attacker is forced to be versatile, creative, cunning, shrewd and uncompromising. He will have to mix the speed of his serves, the length, the placement, the spins and during each attack produce quality volleys of the same nature, angles, depth, sharp, drops, punishing, soft and so on. (In really close matches, both players can barely keep themselves in their skins and they are just about ready to pounce at each other, so strong is the adrenaline surge at these moments!) The lion heart has to come out on both sides, from the attacker and the baseliner. At this point of a match the crowds start getting excited and start doing the “WAVE”! Now are you excited about the attack? I bet you are, I am too! But, there is a lot more to it. Let’s take for instance the baseliner serving and the opportunities an attacker can create on the return, once again they are exquisite. For the baseliners just to get the first serve in, with the usual hard kick or mediocre second serves, is just not enough to stop the attackers mischievous determination. .....and WHY? Because, baseliners are just going to have their services stepped into, spanked, brutalized with sliced attacks down the line or cross courts flying away from them or straight at their feet, taking away reaction time and leave them with no other option, but to scramble constantly. Jo-Wilfred Tsonga did that to his adversaries in the Australian Open 2008 and concluded points at the net with delicate drop-shots and angle volleys or plainly dismissed floaters with spanking volleys. Have you ever seen a LION charging someone? I have! What happens? Well, things happen so darn faaast that even the most skilled hunters make the most basic mistakes, such as; not shooting straight, not shooting at all, not reloading the gun and not bending a little for better aim and balance. It is FEAR, man's worst enemy! When baseliners are faced with a lion at the net, they have the same type of reactions. They make mistakes, many more mistakes then usual, some of them pretty average! If they lose the match, they know very well why! Fear, fear to fail, fear to execute when threatened, sometimes even panic! Take a moment to reflect on what Roger Federer’s slice backhand approach shot provokes in the ATP ranks, jitters, frustration, fear and mistakes, yes, easy mistakes! "THE LION EFFECT" - as I call it! Oh! by the way, high clearance hard hit crosscourt topsin balls, which are the baseliners bread and butter, are just not going to do the trick. ....and again, WHY? Because, punishing volleys will make them pay the price on high cross court balls! So, they may try to keep the ball tight above the net, which they do not like to do to begin with and there again the errors creep up! Once more, they will have to shift patterns and go down the lines more often, with uncomfortable direction changes, which result in inaccurate shots or easy mistakes. Now, if you don’t know yet, you will ask me, “but why don’t you tell us how to develop the attacking skills, step by step?” My friends, it is up to you to do the research now, it’s all out there from A to Z, remember though: Create a solid base around your players game and skills, where all aspects are included. Drills are just drills, hollow mechanical repetitions, so create your practices, games and match-play, around challenging creative ideas. You will have a lot more fun watching your pupils develop, execute what you’ve planned and even surprise you with some outstandingly creative plays of their own! Examples of all time great attackers: * Pancho Gonzales ![]() Althea Gibson ![]() Margaret Court ![]() Maria Ester Bueno ![]() Billy Jean King ![]() Evonne Goolagong ![]() Martina Navratilova ![]() Lew Hoad ![]() ![]() Roy Emerson ![]() Rod Laver ![]() John Newcombe ![]() Arthur Ashe ![]() John McEnroe ![]() Boris Becker ![]() ....and Pat Cash, Stefan Edberg, Patrick Rafter, Pete Sampras, Tim Henman and Roger Federer to name a few. *You can find these biographies at http://www.tennisfame.com/enshrinees_atoz.html The intention of this article is to excite and motivate you (and parents to allow you) to plunge into the world of the attacker, I hope I made you a fan! If you are a teacher, your pupils will thank you forever! Wish you all the best and much success, with !!"THE LION EFFECT"!! Sergio Cruz Keep in touch with TennisCruz sign-up for our Monthly Tennis Newsletter |
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Text Copyright © Tenniscruz.com®. All rights reserved.| User Comments |
Comment by GUEST on 2008-02-21 13:46:15 |
Comment by GUEST on 2008-03-25 11:38:21 Sérgio, VERY Good article about ATTACK. As you know, at my low tennis level, I have been always a defensive player. At the same time, I am a believer in PERFECTION CONCEPTS. One thing I have always tought is: 1 - If GOD would play tennis there would be only two strokes: Service and baseline returns. Volleys, drop shots, smashes would not be part of his repertoire... Your good friend Luis Luis Cruz Almeida |
Comment by GUEST on 2008-03-25 19:03:12 I love my friend Luis! Here I spent hours writing this article about the ATTACK, trying to get people like him to go to the net and there he comes with his lobs, pushing the ball and all that goes with baseline territory! :-) Thanks my friend... Sergio |
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