Always Wanted To Learn How To Play Tennis But Don't Know Where To Start
Learning how to play tennis can be an enjoyable journey, especially when your game improves to the level at which you move effortlessly around the court hitting accurate and powerful strokes.
However, as with every journey, you can head off in the wrong direction. The direction you take at the outset makes the biggest difference in where you end up.
Unfortunately, tennis teaching has long been too intellectual, with too many verbal instructions. The result is over-thinking beginners who move like tennis robots.
Do you feel that you are stuck or maybe even going the wrong direction?
The biggest danger for a beginning tennis player is learning a stroke the wrong way. Once the body learns a movement pattern, it's hard to unlearn it. Erasing muscle memory, by replacing it with a new correct movement, is a frustrating and painstaking process.
And the hardest things to unlearn are those we learn as a raw beginner. Flaws you acquire at this stage are deeply ingrained. They can dog you forever, making you miss shots you shouldn't miss.
What If You Learn My Step-By-Step Modern Method Of Teaching Tennis Beginners?
My name is Tomaz Mencinger, and in the last 12 years as a tennis pro, I have taught hundreds of beginners from 4 to 74 years old how to play tennis with this modern and proven way of teaching tennis.
The way tennis is taught has changed in the last 10 years, and I have been in touch with all the latest research and methods, being a level 3 coach in European standards and a USPTR Professional tennis coach.
Here's A Secret That's Probably Going to Shock You...
Tennis technique is only a small part of the abilities and skills needed to play tennis. Most instruction online and on court fails to recognize this.
They teach you the technique but not HOW TO PLAY. Moving your arms in a "correct" way has very little to do with being able to play tennis.
For example, they keep telling you how to follow-through, not seeing that your biggest problem is judging the ball flight and getting to the right place in the 1.5 seconds you have available.
Having many instructions in your mind makes your brain very busy, so that it cannot calculate the ball's flight and your timing correctly.
But Not Anymore...
It provides drills to improve your ball judgment skills. It shows you how to get rid of the tension that slows your improvement. And much more...
They guide you with a step-by-step, proven, modern, game-based approach that has you playing mini tennis in the first MINUTE of the first instruction video!
How To Play Tennis From The Baseline
This is best suited for tennis beginners who play maybe only once a week and are interested in learning only how to play from the baseline.
How To Serve And Return
This is a good choice for beginners who are somewhat successful from the baseline but want to learn the serve and return in a way that allows them to continuously improve.
How To Play Tennis At The Net
This is best suited for tennis beginners who can serve and play from the baseline with some consistency but feel really lacking in volley and overhead skills and want a complete game as soon as possible.
The Tennis Beginners Video Instruction Guide includes 5 bonus videos, that show you how we learn motor skills and much more.
And If You Are Really Serious About Your Tennis Game...
I know that if you invest in the complete guide "How to Play Tennis For Beginners" - all 3 packages - you are serious about learning how to play tennis.
They expect you to be able to memorize all that and execute all those movements while trying to judge the ball flight and move your legs correctly in the 1.5 seconds you have before the ball gets to you.
Yes, learning tennis in this way is incredibly difficult. It is a complex sport. To learn it with enjoyment and continuous improvement.


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