How To Let Your Child Enjoy Playing Competitive Tennis

By Davis Pete


If you child is good at tennis, do not be overly anxious over his performance. Let time and his own physical and mental development take care and form his tennis playing career. If he is good, some how things will fall into place.

Tip No 1: Try out your child by playing light balls or balloons with him or her. If he displays an ability to hit the balloons at a very young age, he shows the potential to have good hands for tennis. The ability to have good coordination is key as well.

Tip#2: Look at how your child walks and run. If he moves smoothly, with agile and quick feet, he may have the necessary ingredient to play tennis. Fast feet and good footwork are needed to bring the tennis player into a good position to hit the tennis ball.

Tip#3: Tennis is all about co-ordination within split seconds with your eyes, hands, legs and body. It is quite amazing that so many senses are used just to hit that yellow ball. If your child can show he can catch or hit a ball when he is three years old, enrol him for tennis.

Tip#4: Teaching your child mental strength is not easy but it has to be done if your kid wants to excel in tennis. This is because tennis is very much won in the mind. Physical prowess is a given but someone with similar physical attributes will perform better if he is mentally calm and strong.

Tip#5: No matter how strong your mind is, if your physical conditioning is not up to mark, you will still end up at the losing end. This is so because, a strong and fit body will ensure a strong mind as well. Fitness is also crucial. The ability to take punishing heat and the strong sun are crucial to a sports person playing tennis.

Tip#6: A sound tennis coach acts as a good mentor to the child. The coach must be technically sound as well as emotionally capable to support the tennis kid.

Tip#7: Be a friend to your tennis playing kid. Do not punish and berate him on his tennis. There is enough pressure on the poor kid coming from the matches. He does not need more from his parents. Be a parent, not a coach.




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