Federer's 7 KEYS for Mental Toughness

preview_player
Показать описание
————————————

————————————
————————————
————————————
MORE HELPFUL LESSONS:

Why Your Forehand is WEAK

Steal Roger’s Secret Strategy

World’s Most Annoying Tennis Opponent (and why they beat you)

Aim HERE For Easy Tennis Wins!

Stop Standing HERE In Tennis (why you’re losing)

Stop Beating YOURSELF At Tennis!

Hit WINNERS Like Djokovic

Bryan Brothers DON’T Cover This!

————————————

FOLLOW US ONLINE:

Facebook:

Instagram:

Google Play:

Twitter:

Stitcher:

————————————

OUR PRODUCTION GEAR:

————————————

Essential Tennis is worldwide leader in digital tennis improvement resources. For over a decade their coaches have been publishing video, audio, and written instruction helping millions of passionate players improve at the game they love.

With content ranging from video lessons, to the first tennis podcast ever published on iTunes, to insightful long form emails giving insight into the improvement process Essential Tennis has the guidance you need to reach your goals and break through to the next level of play.

Their coaches also provide world class in person experiences including group clinics and their exclusive, Milwaukee VIP instructional package.

For more information on lessons, digital training programs, or anything else please send an email to support AT essentialtennis DOT com.

————————————

If you can read this you have an impressive scrolling game.

:-)
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Awesome and very valuable video, as always... Thanks for this! I believe the two most important ones in this very difficult but beautiful sport, in general terms, are:
1) Patience
2) You need to REALLY loose in order to win
Once you accept this two facts you relax a lot and then start enjoying it... Suddenly you don't even pursue wins but only fun and then the best of you starts to come out!

NachoMontamat
Автор

Good stuff. Not just for 🎾 but life as well. No matter what we're doing in life there will always be expectations, failure, goals you have; and if you fail you have to pick yourself up and trust the process.

alexfowler
Автор

Mental toughness is learnt at a young age. I currently enrolled my girls at the Evert Academy and Manchester Tennis academy this summer and both academies spent 45 minutes daily to every other day working on mental fitness. I wasnt able to observe but my girls said they had to perform activities where they must remain completely focused and not let their surroundings distract them. You can see how once the mental fitness is ingrained at such a young age, they learn how to deal with pressure, crowds, elements etc.
Thanks for this video. Its exactly what all tennis players need.

jeffhermida
Автор

I bet if you looked at lists of top characteristics of highly successful people you'd find pretty much the same advice. You have to like what you are doing, accept that you'll make mistakes, learn from your mistakes as well as your successes, have a plan, be patient, and take changes.

IamnotJohnFord
Автор

A short personal story: the best match I ever played I lost 0 and 2. No sarcasm! I'd decided to see what an Open tournament was like. I got lucky and drew the #1 seed: Mike Tammen, former #1 in 40+ age. You always want to play the best. Well, I had to wear my best Wimbledon white for this match. You want to talk mental toughness? We played only a short time after his daughter died of suicide. Tennis must have been a refuge for him in time of sorrow. But that really is his story to tell. MY story continues...I was obviously outclassed. His serve was pinpoint accurate with plenty of pace. He did not let up on me in any phase of the game. After the first set, I decided I had to try SOMEthing different. How about increasing aggression in all phases of my game? More offense (first strike tennis)! I had to "go for it" in all phases, especially pace. So, I amped up my serve and ground strokes and made it to 2-2. I won a couple service games! I even had a game point to go up 3-2 on his serve! But he won that point, game, and the set. He did not give me those games; I won them with my brain and body (execution). And I am very proud to have won those two games. The point is that I was able to be humble and imagine a different strategy. And I gained confidence that I was capable of implementing it. It inspired me to improve my serve over time with a little more power, topspin, and location...just like his serve. Getting whooped and being humble about it shows what you have to work on. In the end, you have to dress well. Because at least then you will look good on the court, no matter how the score turns out. :)

brianbarrett
Автор

The most talented tennis player with the best technique ever.

aymansabi
Автор

Para la derecha, saca el brazo a las 3, mueve la muñeca atras y alante cuando vas a golpear (brazo derecho) y quita el izquierdo. (Como Federer).

Javi-gkzs
Автор

Love the Fed tantrums. He is human! Tennis is cool because it forces the mind (discipline!) to move on immediately...or suffer the consequences. How many points make up a match? Hundreds. If you can't move on and appreciate the process after every point, the consequence is mental disturbance (anger, anxiety, embarrassment, etc.) and loss. It's not fun to be disturbed by errors and disappointments. Losing or getting whooped is a lesson and the foundation for eventual improvement. Even the gifted pros have difficulties with this concept! Fed as a young man, Serena as a fully-fledge woman, etc.

brianbarrett
Автор

learn for a very last tym if u can :- you can't normalise things which can't agreeing for accepting in your own life for your own selves . So don't try

shahnaz