YouTube is NOT Helping Your Tennis!

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
  • #1 Amazon new release for tennis book - Essential Tennis: www.amazon.com... Order your copy today and learn from my top 38 principles for tennis success!
    Are you spending hours learning new mechanics and ideas from the internet to try and improve your tennis? Is it working? For most players, the answer is no...
    Weren't not saying online instruction is bad, it's just most players don't know how to properly utilize this tool, or the improvement process in general. Here's how...
    #tennis #coach #youtube
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 273

  • @EssentialTennis
    @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

    Get 15% off ALL Diadem gear here: diademsports.com/discount/ET15 Their racquets, strings, grips and balls are all fantastic!

  • @KaruesellHQ
    @KaruesellHQ Рік тому +184

    😂 I love this. I often question if any of my videos make a difference. Hard to know. But yeah most people don't have the time to actually get better. It's hours and hours on court creating good habits. Strokes are ever changing, adjustments are always happening. There's never really a final form yet most people are looking for that! Great video

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +37

      I respect your honesty and authenticity so much, Karue! Love your content 🔥

    • @marcelobarros5729
      @marcelobarros5729 Рік тому +6

      While it's true that most of us don't have the time to apply many of your tips and lessons, I can say I've picked up some tips here and there that have helped me on technique. A very simple example is just the psychology of the serve toss when you talk about just placing the ball and not tossing. Now, of course that's a simple one and I think many teachers do teach that ... but I am not taking lessons :-) . So I think your videos do provide value even for the weekend warriors although I think your content is typically geared more towards the more advanced level (5.0).

    • @nightowldickson
      @nightowldickson Рік тому +1

      It most certainly does, but probably for players who are around advanced intermediate level.

    • @bournejason66
      @bournejason66 Рік тому +3

      Karue’s right to left weight shift on forehand and Ian’s racket face and path help me improve my game tremendously.

    • @guitarnoob4568
      @guitarnoob4568 Рік тому +5

      Karue, your videos helped A LOT! Just from that latest video you did with Winston about his second serve, the tips were just so on point, I played two days in a row after that video, and I got so many love games from my service games lol (i'm lefty btw)

  • @StephenHolme
    @StephenHolme Рік тому +31

    A coach told me, and I think it’s true. You can really only change one thing at a time-and need to give it a week or two of constant attention. There is a tendency to lose focus and start working on something else before the habit is firmly ingrained. As a result, people really don’t change at all. Getting better quickly is the enemy of getting better at all.

    • @Jitzie
      @Jitzie 5 місяців тому

      it's not a week or two, every individual is different. It's however long it takes...

  • @jordanwinn5330
    @jordanwinn5330 Рік тому +17

    “You can’t break an old habit if your primary goal is to win.” GOLD advice! Nothing wrong with playing to win but technical improvement and immediate results almost never go hand in hand! Love this video!

  • @BeastRane
    @BeastRane 5 місяців тому +1

    Step 1. Record yourself on video.
    Step 2. Compare yourself to a professional
    Step 3. Start easy, to make sure you focus on doing the technique correctly. Ex: shadow swings, no ball.
    Step 4. Verify with video. Doing step 1 and 3, you can verify your technique is correct.
    Step 5. Increase the level of challenge slowly (10% at a time). Find small ways to increase the difficulty. Don't jump up the difficulty a ton right after doing some shadow swings.
    Step 6. Verify verify verify. Continue to verify as you increase the difficulty. You might go back to your old habits as you increase the difficulty.
    Step 7. Repetition!!! Continue to train and re-verify. You need to repeat a lot to make the correct technique become subconscious habit. Expect it to take long, do not expect your technique to be fixed in a day.
    For myself to refer back to. Great video, will think of this when I catch myself watching too many videos and not practicing!

  • @electric_boogaloo496
    @electric_boogaloo496 Рік тому +4

    My personal goal is to be able to look at a video of myself playing and feel proud. As a pure casual player, aesthetic improvements to my game has taken priority over winning "dirty" points.

  • @andygilhooley
    @andygilhooley Рік тому +4

    Don’t sell yourself short Ian. Before I watched your vids I could only do a one handed floaty slice backhand that often went long. Now I have a decent enough top spin double handed backhand that can be hit fast enough for clean winners. 💪🏻 🎾

  • @SeireaTennis
    @SeireaTennis Рік тому +3

    This is one of the things from your book I've taken to heart most. If I really want to change something, or break a bad habit, I *have* to either shelve the thing during match play, or shelve match play entirely for a while.

  • @lyndseyandandrew5771
    @lyndseyandandrew5771 Рік тому +3

    Can't tell you how much using slow mo video on my phone for solo practice has helped me over the last few years! Learning still takes ages but I've learned that it's possible. I appreciate youtube coaches for showing me the way.
    Definitely a "necessary but not sufficient" situation for youtube coaching!

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      Good for you! So few players record themselves!

    • @lyndseyandandrew5771
      @lyndseyandandrew5771 Рік тому

      @@EssentialTennis Appreciate it! I've found the next level of challenge for me is identifying what, on video, is causing what I'm seeing. That's really hard! But good video instruction with occasional personal reviews has helped a lot.

  • @staceyzoller2811
    @staceyzoller2811 Рік тому +6

    Great timing! I played a match this morning and told myself I would stay committed to implementing the serving changes I am working on. It was a rough first set, but I stayed the course on the new serve technique because that's what I need to do for "big picture" improvement. And the second set serving went much better!

  • @nvl6880
    @nvl6880 Рік тому +1

    I try to improve one aspect in about 6 to 7 month, before moving to the next. Typically after competition season, to have it ready intime for the next. I started playing in 1977, with Borg's Donnay. Changed my technic over the years a lot. But take one max two things you feel you need to improve overall the most and stay with it until you feel you're ready for the next. If I try to improve too many aspects at the same time, I feel I lack enough computational brain power to think of all that. Then, after a while, in a game, you notice there is enough memory left to excecute your new leanings.
    I learn from all youtube coaches, starting with Jeff Salzenstien way back to you Ian. And thanks for that too you all.
    I whish one day you all find yourself learning from eachother, comparing technics, sharing feedback and coming together.
    Sincerely, Niek

  • @jassay6435
    @jassay6435 Рік тому +3

    Nice and wise tips. About new skills in match, I’d like to say more, “you cannot be happy if you win and if you didn’t do what you said you would do, you have to be happy only if you did what you promised yourself you would do, that is the process to perform.” We call it success to change a skill, and cwhat’s more, this is the happiness that tennis/competition bring to us

  • @thenaturalyogi5934
    @thenaturalyogi5934 Рік тому +2

    This is exactly what my coach keeps telling me regarding focusing on what I should be doing and not the match itself, but I don't see myself while playing matches so the last time I played a match I recorded myself on my side of the court and saw stuff that my back hand wasn't what I thought it was. 😂 From now on I'm going to be recording my drills and every session especially the matches. 😂

  • @SickAttorney
    @SickAttorney Рік тому +1

    I learned proper serve motions and stuff with videos and after the idea was in my head I just kept doing it until I got better. That's the only case I can think of, nothing else

  • @DelMelo
    @DelMelo Рік тому +4

    Well this is a sobering splash of cold water on my ATP dreams!
    But always appreciate your honest and forthright insight, Ian.

  • @seanmurphy7858
    @seanmurphy7858 Рік тому +2

    Love this message Ian. Appraise, verify, do. Appraise, verify, do. I have made so much progress by breaking down movements into easy chunks, quality repetitions, review and slowly increasing the pressure. For us old dogs, focusing a rebuild on a single stroke/movement at a time is well worth it. The time commitment can be reduced if the focus is increased.

  • @blarpieman
    @blarpieman Рік тому +15

    Doing video's is really the only way to make improvements without a coach. I video every session and analyze each one what could be better and take that to my next session that way there is always something on the menu to focus on. In 15 months of doing this I moved from around 3.0 to around 4.5-5.0 in practice. It can be done and the wall is a key component and Not slamming balls against the wall but establishing repeatable new patterns that focus on quality not quantity. Shadow swings in the living room are important too.

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +1

      That's super impressive, good for you!

    • @blarpieman
      @blarpieman Рік тому +2

      @@EssentialTennis Thanks so much you guys are the best!! I never understood why so few record their sessions. Its essential no pun!

    • @xg3069
      @xg3069 Рік тому +1

      What do you mean by “4.5 - 5.0 in practice”? Bear in mind that most tennis players plateau, some at 4.0, some at 4.5, lots of tennis players have been playing for 20 years + and never reached 5.0. So good for you if you managed to do it in 1 year!

    • @blarpieman
      @blarpieman Рік тому

      @@xg3069 I practice at a high level just haven’t played a match in years. I will say I obsessed everyday about the stroke and how it looked and still do. This last week was a huge upgrade in consistency and fluidity. I played in college but quit for 25 years and took it back up at 47 in sept 2021 and my game was horrific I mean like beginner status bad. Old world strokes. I used the phone did a ton of drop ball, wall ball and then some playing then now I play once a week and add improvements every couple weeks. I also studied the pros in slow motion a lot which is useful.

    • @xg3069
      @xg3069 Рік тому

      @@blarpieman that means hopefully you haven’t reached your best level in tennis yet! Am sure you can become better than during your college years, age 49 should not be a factor.

  • @hexabusman
    @hexabusman Рік тому +2

    I totally agree with you, Ian. Though I have to admit that I find these videos relaxing and can't help hoping something sticks by magic. It doesn't. As you have illustrated repeatedly, knowing what you need to do is not enough, it's just step 1, and a relatively easy one at that.
    My problem is that in order to make durable, major changes to my technique I have to stop playing matches for 6 months, and I don't want to. It's just too much fun to play, even with our not perfect but serviceable enough strokes. I will go out and practice alone, serve whole baskets, hit agains the wall, but come the weekend, it all goes out the window, mostly.

  • @lakeforest2020
    @lakeforest2020 Рік тому +4

    It’s hard to find club pros who will spend the time with amateurs on drilling new habits. I even had a popular youtube coach tell me amateur club players can never really improve. I think he meant because they do not put in the hundreds of hours it takes to make fundamental changes. It’s tough for sure to change old habits. This video really hits that point

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +2

      Unfortunately I agree: it's hard to find a really good coach who actually understands what it takes to change habits.

  • @oliviamou60
    @oliviamou60 Рік тому

    probably one of the most important youtube videos on tennis out there.
    Watching videos and practicing doesn’t guarantee success.
    Failure #1:
    You can’t break your own habit if your primary goal is to win. FEEL VS REAL.
    Problem #2:
    progressions..
    Making a tiny change feels gigantic. Good improvement but only is 25% of the position it needs to be.
    Reason #2: Repetition, Quality, & Quantity
    CORRECT repetition is KEY.
    First time you do it, don’t expect to get it right away.
    Steps…
    #1: Record your wrong thing.
    #2: Compare where you are starting to a WORLD CLASS result.
    Step #3: Start easy..record yourself doing shadow swings. Start without a ball.
    Step #4: Record yourself & verify you are doing it right.
    Step #5: slowly increase the challenge..small ways
    Step #6: Continue to verify.
    Step #7: Repeat! Rinse and repeat and verify and train.

  • @FortuneTennis
    @FortuneTennis Рік тому +6

    Thanks Ian for this! I do believe that it is important to realize the difference between feel and real. That is why I video record my students so they can see the difference. I’m starting to provide tips on UA-cam too which I’m excited about this journey, but I also see how students can miss out on really improving if they only apply a few tips here and there. Awesome content Ian!!!

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +1

      Amazing, good for you! Your students will be better for it!

  • @deantanglis9511
    @deantanglis9511 Рік тому +2

    Something to add to this. Especially when you were talking about the consistent issues that always show up amongst all students. The equipment most tennis players use, don't require them to develop clean technique. For example, your forehand example, if people used heavier, players' frames, they wouldn't be able to just muscle balls. It would require them to recruit the proper muscles. Instant results usually get appreciated more than long term results. Dealt with this a lot growing up from club pros. My father had me using a pro staff 6.0 85 from 10-14. Every single coach I had begged me to switch frames, claiming how much more power I'd have, more spin I'd have and so on. By the time I was 15-16, I had the biggest forehand at the club, but even coaches didn't see the long term approach to it. It applies to juniors and adults, people tend to pick what feels easiest and requires the least amount of struggle, which usually results in the least amount of progress as well. It's extremely hard to reinforce change on your own as it is, when the equipment you use lets you rely on bad technique, it makes it almost impossible.

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      Really appreciate your thoughts!

    • @wackojumey
      @wackojumey Рік тому

      Nice comment! I heard from a coach who took a like wise approach to coaching and gave a newer player a Vcore Pro 97 instead of like an oversized power racket. Especially to not get results from the racket but from technique. And let them not be afraid to swing out on the ball while using the techniques where the big power racket would smack the ball out of the park and make the trainee get scared to make the full swings. Plus the racket is comfortable and not a baseball bat on the untrained arms.

  • @portlandtennis4646
    @portlandtennis4646 Рік тому +1

    I will tell you this, your channel has made me a better coach. Especially the videos with a live look at the lessons.

  • @Shaunsweeney-Kubach71
    @Shaunsweeney-Kubach71 6 місяців тому

    I watch your videos and every one of the videos of the people you mentioned in the video. I also practice and play tennis 4 to 5 days a week. I have improved my tennis tremendously. Benjamin Franklin said you can form a habit or break a habit in 3 days. I use videos of myself to make sure I am playing properly. Ty my dude.

  • @patb.814
    @patb.814 Рік тому +2

    I'm very happy after the first few sentences after having seeing my intuitive tennis boy on the thumbnail.

  • @saschamillard8270
    @saschamillard8270 Рік тому +1

    I have to admit, I was a bit of a critic of your channel a couple years ago but this video especially solidifies to me you're a great coach. And I mean great, because there are a lot of experienced coaches who don't get this. The feel vs real is something my coach and I talked about, and it is genuinely something you do not figure out as a player until you're thousands of hours in. So this information is indispensable as someone with only a couple hundred. I'd also add to something you alluded to, it isn't just that people don't like get to worse and don't realize how long it takes to learn a new stroke, it's that most people do not realize they don't want to put in that time. It becomes a second job in some cases. I personally compare it to walking through a thick sea of mud. Every step is slow and the sea just seems to get thicker and larger, but if you can push through it to notice some semblance of improvement, that dopamine hit will kick in and you can learn to enjoy the process. Great work, Ian!

  • @TennisHacker
    @TennisHacker Рік тому +2

    Great video Ian!
    Hopefully lots of players will get to see it and it won't get downed out by yes another video claiming we can hit Federer's forehand in 3 simple steps (even though no youtube coaches can hit their forehand like Fed, including amazing players like Jeff Salzenstein, Alex Slabinsky & Karue).
    The only think I would add and know you've talked about this in other videos is the importance of working off the court so that your body is capable of doing the thing you are trying to do. The simplest example being if you want to use a split step your calves have to be strong enough to do it on every shot. People often use time as an excuse, but there's normally a way to fit things in because you can do calf raises while watching YT videos and scrolling on insta.

  • @spacexbrawler
    @spacexbrawler 8 місяців тому

    Thanks for pointing all this out. I've recently started going deep into tennis tube and I've already found improvements in my serve and mechanics on specific shots.
    I think a lot of people can know the info but it's a whole other thing to see it in your game.
    I think the top two things people need to be doing is recording themselves playing to see the mistakes happening and developing better body awareness.

  • @nathanmiller6051
    @nathanmiller6051 Рік тому +2

    We've never talked about it Ian but you have helped me understand coaches, get the most out of a lesson, how to be coachable, take a lesson and appreciate different tennis Coaches, I've learned a ton from maybe five or six of my favorite tennis Coaches, things I've never seen or thought about 😊 plus I just enjoy watching great tennis coaching! I agree 💯 with you tho Great job! Thanks 🙏❤️🎾💪

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +1

      Good for you, Nathan! Way to take charge of your tennis learning!

  • @2033rabbit
    @2033rabbit Рік тому

    As a tennis coach myself, you’re a true warrior letting that lesson throw your racquet for that serve practice.

  • @markchan006
    @markchan006 Рік тому +2

    Progress is only made with hundreds of hours of training with constant focus.
    I was new to tennis last year and developed a waiter tray serve in the first two months of playing. Then it took me like 4-5 months of solo practice just for the serve on an empty court with self-recording (3-4 hours a week, which adds up to around 70-80hours of training, probably hundred thousands of repetitions) while getting tips from coaches in group class, to finally get good racket drop on edge, leading with the edge & tossing arm extended then tucked inside body subconsciously. But still even my serve motion is pretty "proper" now I have bad control on my serve placement. And I only hit slice serve by accident and still can't do any kick serve even though in my mind I know how to do them after watching youtube vids.
    Watching a 10 mins video is perhaps all you need to understand the mechanics of serve but being able to hit the fundamentals takes at least 100 hours of training (moths of very dedicated training), and to do it well may take 1000+ hours, that is, years of training. In the meantime, I can only accept progress is made with non-stop practice and hopefully my serve will further improve after more months, years, decades of training.

    • @paddlepower888
      @paddlepower888 Рік тому

      I read Inner Game of Tennis. Not really long. Could help.

  • @CuddyTennis
    @CuddyTennis Рік тому +2

    Feel vs Real plays such a huge part in the swing. Very similar to baseball where the player must establish their own mental cues for execution. Whether or not those cues are what they are actually doing. (example: wind shield wiper, petting the dog, etc.) Practice what the goal is and use mental cues to guide the body

  • @scissorsharp9032
    @scissorsharp9032 Рік тому +2

    1. I can just imagine Nikolas face as he sees your thumbnail for the vid.😂
    2. 100% but tennis is pure meritocracy and the people that assume yt is helping them improve whilst not improving are the ppl that haven’t ever earned a high level in anything… if your not willing to hit thousands of balls to ingrain a particular technique then you don’t care enough about improving.
    Thanks Ian, your insight on video analysis is not just important, it’s essential!😉

  • @yutooober
    @yutooober Рік тому +2

    "Slowly but surely" - I don't think people understand how hard the first element is. There is no sure without slow. And we can spend years rushing through development stages and never improve. Last year I put my commitment to slow to the test. I tried to learn how to spin a ball on my finger. You can't skip here - each step is built on the other. I committed to five minutes or 100 attempts every day, and tried not to get discouraged or give up. TEN MONTHS later, it started to click. I might be an outlier, but I was shocked how long it took for my brain to knit that skill together. Now when I work on my serve, I try to bring that same mentality to the process. Step, step, step. Now my progress is slow, but it is sure.

  • @melfox215
    @melfox215 8 місяців тому

    Improving gets so difficult at a certain point. I try improving my level from a level like US 4.0 to 4.5 (German rating is different), but regardless hours of training serves whilevrecording, adjusting, talking to various coaches, etc., progress is slow. My experience is, that progress doesn't run linear. You have to be patient and find out what keeps you from improving to exactly transform it.

  • @AB-xp8im
    @AB-xp8im Рік тому +1

    Sorry Ian but i got to disagree with the title of this video. You and other youtubers have shown me things i should be doing differently and then recognize that its going to take time for me to "get through the jungle"...and you know what, it works! I am SO much happier with my game now AND i've saved tons of money on lessons, or simply getting bad instruction, thanks to such videos

  • @phillipenriquez2325
    @phillipenriquez2325 9 місяців тому

    3:46 Someone hitting the wall up at Smith Park in San Gabriel!

  • @asbestomolesto
    @asbestomolesto Рік тому +2

    I can add that private sessions / lessons for just a week / ten days doesn't help also, because when the session finished, everybody goes back home and stop training over and over in the correct way, to transform all those precious advices and adjustement into habits. And this is another problem... :)

  • @wolfpacknation69
    @wolfpacknation69 Рік тому

    “UA-cam is not helping my tennis” - me watching UA-cam to help my tennis. Now I’m really lost

  • @robertyacoub9705
    @robertyacoub9705 Рік тому

    More brilliant stuff from Ian. He is the ultimate in getting into the head of a tennis player. Just so much value in this. It’s so incredible how deeply he thinks about this and how well and consistently he communicates it.

  • @butchgo6130
    @butchgo6130 Рік тому +1

    On the contrary, YT videos did help my tennis game improve. I love and learned the game in my teens without a trainer. I'm in my seventies and I still play singles and doubles. This old dog learned new tricks by watching YT videos.

  • @aleluia01
    @aleluia01 Рік тому +2

    Well, my game improved tremendously watching your videos and other videos. Certainly, it can only take you so far, but we are not aiming to be GS champions

  • @gab_ale
    @gab_ale Рік тому +2

    5:00 Trey cameo. He has actually improved a lot with his private lessons.

  • @robertyacoub9705
    @robertyacoub9705 Рік тому

    This also helps immensely even if you are working with a live coach because it empowers you to have great input into the coaching.

  • @gavinmasterson2242
    @gavinmasterson2242 Рік тому

    I am always recording myself during practice to give me feedback on my intentions vs outcomes. I've been working on my forehand for 5 weeks with video, and I'm finally seeing it move in the direction I've been aiming since day 1. I now have correct body rotation, which causes the wrist lag and gives me the world power and safety that the videos are not lying about. Maybe I'll even post some clips of my evolution one day if I'm brave enough.
    Importantly, I'm not trying to change anything else. Just my forehand technique, consistency, and feel.

  • @JerryKellar
    @JerryKellar Рік тому +1

    I highly recommend the book, The Inner Game of Tennis. Our minds can't consciously control so many muscle group in real time. It's easier to imagine the stroke, and let your body mimic it. This is why young kids can do amazing things. Their minds are not clouded with so much info.

    • @paddlepower888
      @paddlepower888 Рік тому

      Yup. Just read the audiobook version and doing it again.
      Interesting how self 1 overthinks things that self 2 can do once he/she knows the technique.

  • @anacap007
    @anacap007 Рік тому +2

    Feel is how we learn things but if you learn the wrong way, Feel can also trap you because we don't realize how easy it is to fool yourself. That's where video can help break someone free from that but that's only the first step. You have to accept getting worse before getting better when you implement something new. A lot of players aren't willing to pay that price.

  • @RobManser77
    @RobManser77 Рік тому

    This is so, so true. I’ve had intensive coaching in quite a few sports in my life so far, and coached one myself, and everything you say here applies universally to everything I know. The most profound thing is probably the difference between what you think you’re doing and what you are doing, which is why real life coaches are important, and why You Tube and books often fail.

  • @ijz8543
    @ijz8543 Рік тому

    I cannot pay private lessons, and youtube videos really help me to improve. For me the key is to record myself and change the technique gradually. There's no such thing as instant improvement, it takes weeks or months to master a stroke

  • @repoman7804
    @repoman7804 Рік тому

    Thanks. That's one of your greatest ever instructional videos. In golf, there is a video teaching system that puts a monitor on the ground just in front of the ball that can show you a front and rear live video of your swing. You see yourself taking a backswing, the forward swing, the follow through, and immediately after ball impact, it shows the whole thing to you again in slow motion. It can also show your swing side by side with a pro swinging. It's the greatest teaching tool ever for golf instruction. An analogous system is obviously not possible in tennis since we're running around while hitting the ball, but your 7-step process is the next best thing.

  • @paddlepower888
    @paddlepower888 Рік тому

    Playing sets with friends is fun, but my level after four years (and no lessons) isn’t something to write home about. I don’t get many good shots in during points in our doubles games-I blow a lot of shots. If I can practice a lot, I find I hit better in casual rallies and do things in rallies like aim at my partner’s backhand or move to the net if I’ve stretched him out. I can dip into games and matches gradually and retreat if I suspect declining technique.
    The tripod really shone today-my “Feel” was non dominant hand bringing the racket back on my forehand take-back.
    The video showed “real": my nondominant hand letting go of the racket very early in my take-back. I corrected that (confirmed with video) but tomorrow the old habits will try to erase today’s progress.

  • @eliastieleniuskruythoff7588

    So true! ......

  • @crruan1142
    @crruan1142 Рік тому

    Thank you for this welcome realism in tennis 101 Vid‼️👏❤️

  • @gabrielariveramagallanes2695

    I actually use a combination of your videos (and Karue's and Winston's honestly) as my study time to make very MINOR improvements or to get ideas on the court. I am an amateur player but want to constantly improve and understand the endless amount of tweaks you can do to your game - for many reasons: to improve my form, and technique, prevent injuries, and enjoy myself more when practicing or playing USTA leagues. That said, your content and MyTennisHQ is amazing but I study it with a realistic perspective that not everything applies to me or my game. I consult with a coach and then dedicate sessions just to make sense if it works for me. So, if anything this is a disclaimer that your content is study material, and same as everything else needs to be adjusted and adapted to you. Thank you for this video and for your incredible work!

  • @mixmastermikebiz
    @mixmastermikebiz Рік тому +1

    If you don't practices this way, UA-cam may not help your tennis. Better headline, or would it be as the current one got my attention! Anyway. UA-cam has def helped my tennis, albeit slowly at times. Good motivation for me to add video and practice intentionally, thanks! I just played an opponnent who used Swingvision, I plan to get that app for use in my matches, eye opening!

  • @vectorthurm
    @vectorthurm Рік тому

    I have recently only focused only on 1 thing at time with the help of a pro, constant video and some online tips. I have put match play on hold. Better technique is more important to me, once I am satisfied my strokes are where I want them to be (which may never happen lol) I will dial up the match play.
    I stopped watching UA-cam videos…until now! Thanks a lot Ian for getting me sucked back in lol😂

  • @grimson
    @grimson Рік тому +1

    Excellent video Ian! I have definitely been helped by your videos, and Karue's and others, but it helps that my profession is coaching (soccer) and I therefore have a pretty good understanding of the process of improvement. As you say, it's not as simple as watching a video and then trying your 'new' technique in a match. Under pressure, we almost always default back to old habits, until the new habits are truly ingrained. And that takes time and effort!

  • @luyin1961
    @luyin1961 Рік тому +1

    So true, not just for tennis, but many other things as well. Most people look for easy and quick fixes, but don't have the time or discipline to actually practice. Same can be said of people taking lessons. I have some friends who take 2 lessons a week, but never practice/play tennis outside the tennis lessons. Guess how well they hit the ball.

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      YES, so true about lessons being the same way.

    • @luyin1961
      @luyin1961 Рік тому

      ​@@EssentialTennis Thank you for the reply. Just want to thank you for the youtube videos and the book. For a lot of people, watching online instructions is fun by itself. And most people like the idea of improving, but not actually improving. It is a hobby, and whatever encourage people to have some cardio and fun is helpful. So keep the good work.

  • @mohammadabuqubu7079
    @mohammadabuqubu7079 7 місяців тому

    THis video deserves Mil+ views and likes. Thank you, subscribed :)

  • @-Munditimum-
    @-Munditimum- Рік тому +1

    Love it. So precise and right to the point about rewriting tissue memory.
    What I love more is that it's highly likely that even this video will probably not make that difference.🤦‍♀
    Hope that this is one of the cases where I'm 100% wrong.
    Cheers,
    M

  • @swagger2009
    @swagger2009 4 місяці тому

    Thanks for this video - makes good sense but nice to be realistic about the process. I was curious to know if there is a particular app you use on your iPad to do the video capture and slow-mo playback. Can you please share a link? Thanks

  • @astropiazzolla
    @astropiazzolla Рік тому

    Excellent video, and perhaps a much needed one in the age of high consumption in this medium. In reality most instructional videos seem like documentaries on how someone who is already very competent does it, rather than how someone who's doing it already wrongly can fix it. Every time I see a video about "How to hit xxx", I feel like asking how many of your students have you changed by following this advise? Perhaps what we need more of is an evidence based approach, though that would be much more work to implement and perhaps go against the way these contents are meant to be consumed quickly.

  • @MyTennisCoaching
    @MyTennisCoaching Рік тому

    Tennis is unique. The biggest mistake any player can make is trying to find a one-fits-all solution or copying someone else's style. No two players are the same, with different mentality, physicality and experience. This is before we even look at game styles, environment (court surface, temperature), situation, scoreboard pressure the list goes on. Players should stop trying to find perfection with technique and play the ball in front of them. UA-cam is not improving your game because there are no guarantees in tennis, and every ball you hit will be different from the previous one.

  • @lessfatty
    @lessfatty Рік тому +1

    Whilst the content of this you tube isn't that bad the video thumbnail has crossed the line of responsible or reasonable. Imagine the reverse any of those creators having a thumbnail with your face with a big red cross saying "NOT Helping". We all know that you cannot watch any you tube head down to the court and do a Fed level airborne reverse backhand cross court volley. Their intent is to help and to the limit of the you tube media they do help in a way that is different but valuable to directly coaching.

  • @dan.0
    @dan.0 Рік тому +5

    This is the G.I. Joe fallacy in action. Knowing is not half the battle. We think that we can learn something from a YT video, do a couple of shadow swings at home, then go out to the court and execute it. But in reality, learning a new movement pattern takes a ton of consistent focused practice. I've been reworking my serve for 2 years and while I've made huge progress, I'm still making mistakes that I "learned" on day 1.

  • @sonicmilk
    @sonicmilk Рік тому

    I've improved a lot thanks to UA-cam. IMO key is to practice what you learn from the videos and I mean a LOT of practice.

  • @SkittlesandFiFi
    @SkittlesandFiFi Рік тому +1

    One of your best. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!

  • @mauricecatayan3406
    @mauricecatayan3406 Рік тому

    Tennis is technically a very difficult sport. There are a lot of reference points/body positions/postures you have to hit dynamically and fluidly to perform a stroke correctly or most effectively/efficiently. Therefore, it is hard to pick up, especially for adults who don't have above average coordination.
    UA-cam videos are best for those who already have the strokes down but are hindered or confused by only one or two specific mechanical problems of any particular stroke.

  • @neygercey7899
    @neygercey7899 Рік тому

    It's a long way from Brazil to USA. Have to use local tennis instructors.😊

  • @smokinjoe4684
    @smokinjoe4684 Рік тому

    Tomaz deserved a photo in the thumbnail 4:27. Glad he got mentioned though LOL.

  • @majormajor9672
    @majormajor9672 Рік тому +3

    I think it does help - obviously anyone who even plays the game knows that the ONLY way to get better is lots of ACTUAL practice with good and timely corrective coaching. But most people do not do this for a living and can only dedicate a small amount of time in-between job, family, and day drinking to play tennis. I would look at your channel, and also MyTennisHQ, and find maybe one or two tips to try next time. Does it magically make me a better player? Of course not. Is it enjoyable? Yes. If your goal is to go from a 4.0 to a 4.5, or from 4.5 to a 5.0, I think you are experienced enough to already know that watching a few videos ain't gonna work. But if my goal is just to find enjoyment and maybe marginally make my game better, then I find these clips useful and a way to pass 10 minutes while day drinking...

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +1

      Maybe it's obvious to you that watching videos doesn't = improvement, but for most people, it isn't obvious. If you're viewing them for enjoyment/entertainment only then by all means, watch them all! 😆

  • @merileetanbara9749
    @merileetanbara9749 Рік тому

    If I want improve Ms I have 1.25 hours of court time, how do I split up the time? For example, 5 min of shadow swings, 10 min of someone hand feeding, etc?

  • @cincotennisacademy
    @cincotennisacademy Рік тому +1

    Preach Ian!!

  • @julianpenfold1638
    @julianpenfold1638 Рік тому

    The approach described seems like the right one to me and the only one likely to produce results for most adult recreational players. I wonder why it's not the default approach. I suspect because most students and most coaches simply don't have the patience, get bored easily and prefer to kid themselves they are getting better. It's much easier to kid yourself if you're not working very specifically. If you focus on getting basics right, step by step, you are likely to notice that progress is incredibly slow and you will realise that your level of expectation is much too high and you will never be anywhere near the level you hoped when starting. What I would add to the approach described is to try to enjoy the process and to be relaxed but not sloppy - this is something I really struggle with and sometimes wish there were pills to help with that...

  • @rayrozema5960
    @rayrozema5960 Рік тому +1

    Very Insightful

  • @Widmer09
    @Widmer09 Рік тому +1

    Well, reality is tough. And unfortunately, Ian, yourself is included. ~3 yrs ago, you committed to improve your topspin/drive backhand. You had a private coach working with you to improve it and to come over the ball more in the real match. Watched the latest match that you played against Chris on RT channel, you still use your slice backend >98% of the time. I do respect the fact that you put yourself out there and play real matches on UA-cam, while most other YT coaches don’t for obvious reasons

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      You might be missing some details. 16 months ago I played a match against Adam in which I drove the most backhands I ever have in a match, not even close: ua-cam.com/video/EEMXQ2Sr4_o/v-deo.html Unfortunately, I also tore my shoulder during that match. Since then I've ignored the drive 100% to try and recover as quickly and completely as possible. I made progress, but obviously still a long ways to go, especially after not hitting it at all for 18 months. Looking forward to picking it up again in the future. Cheers

  • @filipposclub
    @filipposclub Рік тому +2

    He spoke some facts

  • @doosrajawad
    @doosrajawad Рік тому

    How much jungle is cleared by each machete slash? This remains a total mystery to me. I watched a Mika Babel video dissecting Ash Barty's offensive slice down the line. I went on the practice court and cleared a path a mile deep. It has been my most reliable finishing shot in match play for a couple of years now. I have hacking away at the OHB topspin version of this shot for a decade, and I have not cut very deep at all.

  • @gzhang2543
    @gzhang2543 5 місяців тому

    but they are, as self learned tennis player reaching 4.0 in 2.5 years, i watched all those coaches, and benefit greatly

  • @bigfish1676
    @bigfish1676 Рік тому

    Actually, you're selling yourself short. I've learned a lot from your videos, as well as other channels, and have gotten better over time. Thanks for your videos!

  • @mvmcali6900
    @mvmcali6900 Рік тому

    What a great video you made here. It really made me smile. So funny and so true 👍

  • @johnbabcock9766
    @johnbabcock9766 Рік тому

    This is why it’s SUPER DUPER IMPORTANT TO GET GOOD AND CORRECT Coaching IN THE VERY BEGINNING.
    There is some truth that you can’t teach an old dog new tricks

  • @thomasmedeiros5722
    @thomasmedeiros5722 Рік тому

    Developing tennis skills is a long and continuous process. I started way back in the 1970’s with coaching by a teaching professional. I spent lots of hours developing proper strokes by doing drills and hitting with my coach. As the decades passed I started teaching and coaching. An important part of coaching is teaching players how to practice. I believe in doing drills to build skills. Then practice the way you want to play. Play points with a practice partner with out keeping score. Set a goal like you have to go to the net and volley to win the point. Then play tiebreakers using that skill. Then play a practice set emphasizing that skill. Don’t be afraid to lose points when developing or practicing skills.

  • @FF_AlohaEdition
    @FF_AlohaEdition Рік тому

    Most people fail to realize their strokes are linked to another part of their strokes. For example, your forehand influence the way the backhand works and vice versa. Therefore you can't just change one stroke and expect your game to be better. Your strokes might change for the better but then makes another part of your stroke worse.
    Don't believe me? Well Federer never use a ball machine. Wonder why? It's because he won't learn anything from consecutive shots that's limited in varieties. He wants to hit with a live person so when that person expose a weakness in his stroke he can analyze it and fix it.
    All hope is not lost. Over time you will learn what works and what doesn't work. You will find the "Key". This key is the technique that makes your strokes better without making anything worse.
    Wonder why I say "Key" instead of saying exactly what it is? Well it's like I'm trying to explain what it's like to skydive to another person who hasn't skydive yet. Even if I tell you the key, you can't use the key because you won't understand it. Most of all, if your body is out of shape, unless you are in shape and experienced in the past, your body will only slow you down in the learning process. Sadly that's the truth. There's a reason why they teach kids tennis very early on because their brain can absorb information easier and most of all their bodies are nimble enough to execute all the techniques.
    Not to say youtube videos are useless. If you have no clue where to start, those video definitely is helpful to get you started. However be aware that these coaches are good at doing what they do because they are mediocre. They are good at teaching the basic to medium level skills. If they are truly great, they wouldn't be teaching but instead playing on the tour. True tennis professional has an even higher understanding of their techniques than whatever all these coaches can teach them. I myself got started watching intuitive tennis and got to say his advice is very helpful. However, it did not get me to where I want to be so I have to analyze myself and finally I figured out and reached a higher level.
    Lastly, just set a real and attainable goal. Don't say you want to become Federer. Be content with developing your own style. To me that's what motivated me to be better: To be similar to pros but at the same time be unique. That's why I never teach other people unless I get asked because I want them to find their own style. To me the second best thing in tennis is to play like a professional. The most best thing in tennis is to play unlike anyone else. I see all these generic tennis players and it's great that they find success playing the way they do but at the same time they are not unique and honestly not fun to watch. Just be yourself but be a better version of yourself tomorrow.

  • @ScottDanahey
    @ScottDanahey Рік тому +2

    Great information. However, is there a particular app that you'd recommend using to video our strokes, particularly one that will provide a side-by-side comparison of my stroke vs. Federer's or the ideal form? That would be tremendously Helpful. Thanks...

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому +1

      The one I use is called "OnForm". Cheers!

    • @ScottDanahey
      @ScottDanahey Рік тому

      @@EssentialTennis Perfect! Thanks very much.

  • @dunkky23
    @dunkky23 Рік тому

    coach, a question.. i see these one hour per week lessons every where. what's the realistic expectation here without putting any extra hour? tennis is one of the hardest sports to learn, how can one learn tennis effectively by only spending one hour/week with a private coach. this is very unrealistic but that seems to be the expectation from some parents.

  • @markbrodeur1707
    @markbrodeur1707 Рік тому +1

    Where did I hear that it takes 10,000 repetitions to change a bad habit? Most adults don't have that amount of practice time available to them. If I were to try to hit a new serve 10,000 times, I'd have to have shoulder surgery. That's 100 serves for 100 days. At my best, I can serve with a new technique with a full basket of 60 balls before my arm tells me "That's enough". I have 166 days to go which given the weather and availability means a couple of years. UGH.

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      Keep at it, Mark!

    • @dustyroot4708
      @dustyroot4708 Рік тому

      I know the “10,000 hours to become an expert” is mentioned frequently in the book Outliers by Malcom Gladwell. 10,000 repetitions is not a lot if you think about it in tennis terms. You could likely hit over 1,000 in a single session.

  • @jakehkign
    @jakehkign Рік тому

    Yes they are

  • @Tang.Nguyen
    @Tang.Nguyen Рік тому +1

    I clicked in with an intent to debate. I decided not to after the video. 👍😁

  • @joysonmenezes2158
    @joysonmenezes2158 Рік тому

    Great video! Very helpful 😊
    Do you advise correcting one or two techniques during training? E.g. if I am drilling for an hour, so should I focus on just forehand drive for 1 hour or 30 mins each on forehand drive and volley?
    Thanks kindly.

  • @dadsfreetimeclassicgaming1220

    Im a coach in atlanta and I like y'all's videos. The thing that bothers me is that yall very rarely shout out the local pro. There's so many fill ins that players can't get by watching that a good pro can smooth out and the last person i ever heard give that shout out was arthur ashe.

  • @ql3670
    @ql3670 Рік тому +1

    Basically, it is easier said than done. :)

  • @gab_ale
    @gab_ale Рік тому

    There's nothing like having someone with experience observing you and providing feedback in real time. That being said, youtube videos work for people who already have a solid base game and want to learn advanced techniques.

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  Рік тому

      You don't think advanced players can fall into the traps I talked about?

    • @gab_ale
      @gab_ale Рік тому +2

      @@EssentialTennis I think anyone can fall for the traps a little bit, but what I mean is that someone more advanced who has already gone through multiple cycles of fixing and improving is able to benefit more from the videos than a beginner.

  • @vlesmeries
    @vlesmeries Рік тому

    Yup if the old pattern is getting you wins, why make big adjustments? Most folks have a very selective memory. We only remember that last fantastic winner we hit. And most don't watch themselves play. I'm very guilty of this, I think/feel I look like Fed until I actually watch myself lol.

  • @deadpres
    @deadpres Рік тому

    Ian, what are you using to record, and what program are you using to play back side by side?

  • @jadawin1137
    @jadawin1137 6 місяців тому

    This is all true, but watching a competent coach like you and some of the other guys on UA-cam, has still helped my tennis a lot more than dozens of actual in-person lessons with the three different coaches that are available in my area. Unfortunately most coaches are really bad, so you pay 50+ bucks per hour and get basically nothing out of it.

  • @speedymr
    @speedymr Рік тому

    Great Video Ian.

  • @wasabiattack
    @wasabiattack Рік тому

    Honestly, the simplest thing to do is: every time you play, focus on improving one technique instead of on winning. That can be remembering to split step, watch contact point, etc. If you do the one thing consistently, then you've won for that day. But this is super hard for people because they're competitive and automatically focus on winning, so they never improve.

  • @mario17-t34
    @mario17-t34 Рік тому

    what good slow mo player we can use for iOS or Windows ?

  • @VeganBeerMonster
    @VeganBeerMonster 4 місяці тому

    Let's say you have two control groups. Control group 1 has 100 participants who each watch 100 hours of UA-cam videos. Control group 2 has 100 participants who don't watch any UA-cam videos. All other factors being equal, are you suggesting control group 1 has no advantage at all?

    • @EssentialTennis
      @EssentialTennis  4 місяці тому

      No, I didn't suggest that anywhere in the video.