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Mental toughness

Nov 20 2019

Top tips for tackling tantrums and teaching kids to lose well

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Tennis24/7: Kids Club - Top Tips for Tackling Tantrums

Top Tips for Tackling Tantrums and Teaching Kids to Lose Well

Chances are you’ve seen tantrums thrown on court! Parents are embarrassed, many people look the other way. What is the answer?

A quick web search shows us that there is a tendency for the media to glamourise tantrum throwers in tennis. We’ve pulled out three typical headlines from mainstream media!:

  • In tennis, no shortage of temper tantrums and tirades, in CNN
  • Top 5 Tennis Tantrums and What You Can Learn From Them, in HuffPost
  • Tennis tantrums quiz: how well do you remember these meltdowns? in The Guardian

These articles all feature tennis icons that we, and our children, admire – and they’re throwing a tantrum. It’s also reasonably well known that Roger Federer, who these days is a paragon of perfect behaviour, was an epic tantrum thrower as a child. To read more about his transformation this article describes his journey from tantrum thrower to controlled legend, “The Making of a Champion“.

Tantrum throwers in junior tennis

We’re willing to bet that as a coach or tennis parent you’ve seen your share of tantrum throwers too. Junior tennis has quite a few of them. Sometimes the tantrum thrower is our own child! The dreaded tantrum thrower has a repertoire that includes: to cry in the middle of the match, smash or throw their racket (drink bottle etc), refuse to shake their opponent’s hand, make bad calls, accuse their opponent of cheating… Parents are usually embarrassed and opponents get upset. Unfortunately coaches and tournament referees sometimes look the other way. What is the answer?

Managing a Tantrum Thrower in Junior Tennis

Despite it being pretty well known that temper on court is counter-productive, tantrums continue to be a challenge for the sport.

Mark Tennant – Coach, Parent and Director of i2c – provides guidance on managing tantrum throwers. Mark’s advice is relevant whether you’re a coach, a parent, or the tournament referee.

Tennis(24/7): What role do coaches have in teaching children to manage their behaviour when they are losing?

Mark: I think coaches have a role to educate players and parents in this respect. That can be done in so many ways. On court, I guess a lot of it goes back to whether they are more focused on mastery or ego. Ego-focussed children don’t take kindly to losing, will often go to extremes to win, and see winning and losing as part of their identity. Mastery-focussed kids are more accepting of results because they are more focussed on improvement and skill development and see winning and losing as part of the journey.

There are lots of drills and games to help children understand losing:

  1. Task or mastery activities where praise, points or prizes are given for effort rather than the outcome
  2. Having clear goals so that kids and parents see improvement through things other than just results
  3. Reversing the score in matches or by using cheat cards
  4. Strategies to deal with thinking time on the court between points and games, to develop pre and post-point routines and to forget about the previous point and focus on the next point

Much of human behaviour is driven by FEAR (False Expectations Appearing Real!). A player who fears losing, either because they have been told that losing is bad or because they believe for whatever reason that losing is bad, will try to find a way out to avoid the fear becoming reality. The solution could be to fight and try harder or to resort to cheating, or it could just end in meltdown if the player doesn’t know how to deal with the match going badly.

So much of what goes on in a player’s head is down to their upbringing and the way in which the children and their parents view and deal with competition and sport in general. It’s also to do with how the coach behaves and the environment which is created in the programme.

Of course it is possible to have mental strategies to address specific issues such as poor behaviour, negative self-talk or cheating, but many of these things are the result of an incorrect or warped view of competition and of winning and losing, and where emphasis is placed by the coach and the parents in the early years. Coaches, parents and kids need to understand the true meaning of success and ‘winning’, and at an early age, it isn’t defined by results.

Tennis(24/7): How well are coaches prepared for that role through training and experience? Is there any element of “this is just tennis/sport – get used to it”?

Mark: There’s some truth in that. It is a sport, and life in general, but those are tough messages for kids to understand. It’s covered very briefly in some coach education courses but generally, coaches are poorly supported in this respect.

However, there is pressure and expectation on everyone involved in sport. There are performance pathways for players, there are selections to be made for teams and there could be funding allocated for ‘talent’. These things create pressures because of the expectations and aspirations which they create in players and parents, and coaches are often expected to deliver.

All the time we hear coaches talk about their counterparts asking “who has he/she ever produced?” The implication is that the marker of success for a coach is results-based’  – either player results, players being selected for a team, or funding being received for ‘talented’ players. For many coaches, tennis is a tough results-based business. But let’s look at it a different way.

In my opinion, the first and most important marker of success of a coach is not the competitive results or rankings of a player, but whether the player started and stayed in the sport, and if they grew into a well-rounded and healthy person who enjoys sport and competition and who stays in the sport for a lifetime. We don’t promote and celebrate this marker of success as much as we should, and we should help coaches understand their true primary role in sport.

Tennis(24/7): What role do parents have in teaching children to manage their behaviour when they are losing?

Mark: If you drop the ‘when they are losing’ bit from the question, then ask yourself the same question, the answer is ‘totally’. The fact that we are talking about behaviour on a tennis court doesn’t excuse bad behaviour. But young kids can’t easily manage their own behaviour; even many adults can’t manage that! So we have to be realistic and we have to put in place strategies to support kids and their parents.

By its nature, competition is stressful, both physically and mentally, and kids have to learn to deal with it just like they have to learn about hitting tennis balls. Watching kids compete can also be stressful for parents; nobody likes to see their kids lose or taking a real hiding on a tennis court, but it happens. All parents have a huge responsibility to kids in that respect, through their general upbringing, setting boundaries, rewarding good behaviour (and maybe consequences for bad behaviour).

The answers to this don’t lie on the tennis court, but in the home, in the garden and in the car. I think you will find that positive ‘glass half-full’ people are less likely to show poor behaviour when the chips are down. Positive parents generally bring up positive kids. Stopping poor behaviour as it happens is almost impossible, so its about identifying the root causes. Clearly everyone is different, so no strategy will ever work the same for two different players. I think the key is to not have to deal with bad behaviour as it happens, but to work on managing the behaviour in a more proactive way. Some ideas away from the tennis court could include:

  1. “Tell me about some good things about your day at school” (the message here is “let’s focus on positives and what went well”
  2. Catch someone doing something well. We all like a bit of praise and kids are more likely to repeat something that meets with approval or which creates praise
  3. Praise and reward effort. Secretly most of us want our kids to win, but that’s not a healthy message. More important is to focus on what can be controlled – effort, application, honesty, integrity – and to praise them when they are displayed
  4. Relish the challenge. In any game you play with your kids (ie climbing frames in the park) , or any task you help them complete (ie homework), help your kids to find strategies to overcome a challenge. It send the message that solutions can be found to almost anything with a bit of effort, planning and a positive outlook
  5. Show your own failures. Let your kids see you fail but also let them realise that losing doesn’t define you. Show humility and honesty in defeat, and show pride in trying to be better every day

Tennis(24/7): Do you think that there is room to improve the way we support coaches and parents to deal with this behaviour?

Mark: Yes – definitely – and I hope this article goes a small way towards helping!

Related Articles on Tennis 24/7

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Written by SharonLeeLukas · Categorized: Coach Academy, Mental, Mental toughness, Special Topics for Parents

Jun 13 2018

Mindfulness in tennis: a 10 minute meditation

Remembering back, Djokovic is probably the player who did the most initially to raise awareness of mindfulness meditation. Djokovic talked about how mindfulness meditation, as much as his extraordinary physical fitness, helped him in his rise to rating dominance several years ago.

Back then, his approach to the mental side of tennis through Mindfulness meditation was innovative. Since then, mindfulness meditation has started to pop up everywhere – even at my kid’s school residential camp! For kids whose minds are racing and jumping about – particularly after playing video games – mindfulness meditation can help with kid’s focus and concentration.

No-one in the i2c office is trained in meditation techniques, but we’ve used our knowledge of Mindfulness meditation to get you started with a short 10-minute meditation.

You’ll see big improvements in your ability to complete the mediation if you practise the 10 minutes of meditation twice a day. You’ll notice how you get better at observing your thoughts and re-focusing.

10 minute Mindfulness meditation

  1. Set a timer for 10 minutes.
  1. Find a comfortable, quiet spot to sit where you won’t be disturbed for 10 minutes. Sit so that your feet are resting on the floor and your hands are by your sides or resting comfortably, but not crossed. Close your eyes to reduce distractions.
  1. Settle your mind by thinking about the physical sensation of where your body is touching whatever you are sitting on. Is it soft, hard, spongy, rough? Think about these sensations for a minute or two. If you find that tough, then a great alternative is to put a small piece of chocolate in your mouth and think about the flavour and texture of the chocolate in your mouth. This is a great way to help children settle their minds!
  1. When you are ready, bring your awareness to your breath. Breathing normally, begin to focus on the process of breathing in… and breathing out. Observe the rise and fall of your rib cage as you take each breath in.
  1. During the remainder of the 10 minutes continue to keep your attention on your breathing. You will probably find that your mind will wander; that’s normal. When you realise that has happened, observe where your thoughts went to, but don’t criticise, and gently bring your attention back to your breathing.
  2. When the timer stops you at 10 minutes, open your eyes and re-focus on your surroundings.

 

Disclaimer: i2c are not trained in meditation techniques. This meditation is based on our own knowledge of Mindfulness meditation. We cannot guarantee any benefit or improvement in your game or health by undertaking this meditation. You undertake this meditation entirely at your own risk.

Originally published on: Nov 11, 2016

Written by SharonLeeLukas · Categorized: Coach Academy, Mental, Mental toughness, Special Topics for Parents, Warm Ups

Jan 28 2018

Pay Attention! Internal vs External Focus Instruction in Tennis

By Matt Kuzdub

Bend your knees. Use your legs. Turn your shoulders. Extend your elbow at impact. Flick your wrists. These are just some of the verbal cues that we’ve all heard countless of times. Notice any similarities? Let me give you a hint…the focus of these instructions are directed exclusively towards a body segment or part. Is this type of feedback relevant? Does it help improve technique and ultimately, performance? Let’s take one of these examples and break it down. ‘Bend your knees’. How does a player interpret this cue? I mean how low should I bend my knees? Is a 90 degree bend more or less effective than a 100 degree bend? On which type of shot? Should one knee be bent more than the other? As you can see, this cue can be interpreted in a number of different ways depending on the athlete and the context.

Luckily for us, there’s a growing body of research that attempts to understand this type of verbal instruction. Researchers (in particular, Gabriele Wulf, a pioneer in the field of motor learning) have been exploring learning (and cueing) from an attentional focus perspective for years now. Attentional focus cues can be either external or internal. This post will distinguish between these 2 types of foci while using research examples from tennis, along with other sports like golf and baseball. Finally, I’ll provide a few examples of internal vs external cueing as they relate to tennis – as you’ll see, a small change in wording may be all it takes to shift a cue from internal to external – but it could make a big difference in your tennis play.

Note: The examples provided at the beginning of this article are all internally focused cues.

EXTERNAL VS INTERNAL FOCUS OF ATTENTION: WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?

Let’s first define each type of attentional focus. External focus of attention is described as “where the performer’s attention is directed to the effect of the action” while an internal focus of attention is described as “where attention is directed to the action itself” (Wulf 2007).

To clarify, external focus instructions are aimed at factors outside the body, like an implement, support surface, the trajectory of an object or a target. In tennis, for example, we could direct our focus to the racquet (it’s swing path for instance), the ball (it’s height, shape, spin, speed etc.) or hitting into a specific area of the court (target). Even from a physical training perspective, an external cue may be used. You could, for instance, direct attention to the ground. During a jump exercise for increased height/power, this type of cue could look something like this “push the ground away from you” and/or “try to look above my hand” (or some other reference point).

An internal focus cue would direct a learner to a particular limb, or body part, in an attempt to produce the desired movement. Instructions would then be aimed at specific movements of the body. In tennis, that may mean to focus on your arm during a stroke. More specifically, you could direct your focus to specific aspects of your arm, like your wrist – “lay back your wrist” is an example of aiming your attention to internal factors. Another example may be to “turn your shoulders” when preparing to hit a groundstroke. From a physical training perspective a typical cue to increase jump height may be to “bend your knees to a 90 degree angle and extend them explosively”.

IS ONE TYPE OF FOCUS BETTER THAN THE OTHER?

The question is, which is more effective at enhancing learning and consequently, performance? When it comes to the scientific literature (as we’ll soon see), the effects are quite clear. In close to 100 experiments, from a variety of sports and disciplines, significant differences exist between external and internal attentional foci. More specifically, it’s external focus of attention cues that significantly and consistently outperform internal attentional focus cues. Apart from a few studies that showed slight benefits to internal cueing OR no significant difference between the 2 types of cueing, external seems to be the way to go.

But there’s a problem, according to Wulf (2013). In an interview study, more than 84% of track & field athletes reported that their coaches gave instructions that were specific to the movement of a body part or segment. Practically, we see this quite often in tennis settings – from beginners to elite performers, many students consistently receive instructions to deliberately focus and think about a particular body part when either learning a new skill or when attempting to master one.

Before we completely switch how we instruct as coaches, and what we focus on as players, let’s outline why an external focus may be more beneficial and some of the research that tells the story.

THE THEORY BEHIND ATTENTIONAL FOCUS

In a previous post on learning in tennis, I spoke about dynamic systems and some of the work by Nicolai Bernstein. Further to that discussion, when it comes to coordination and movement control, Bernstein proposed that the processes that govern movement aspects are “delegated to subordinate levels of the nervous system, where control is less conscious” (Chow et al 2015). As outlined previously, dynamic systems theory is based on the premise that the body will self-organize itself to meet task demands. When movement occurs at a more sub-conscious level, the theory states that the goal of a particular task will be carried out more optimally. In contrast, “if the movement occurs more consciously, the upper levels of the central nervous system are more involved and this can lead to undesirable breakdown of the movement” – as Chow explains (2015).

“If the movement occurs more consciously, the upper levels of the central nervous system are more involved and this can lead to undesirable breakdown of the movement”. – Chow et al (2015) on focusing attention internally.

Interestingly, it’s internal focus of attention instructions that contribute to a conscious awareness of the desired movement, thereby inhibiting automatic processes. While the opposite is true for external focus of attention cues – they facilitate a “subconscious control of movement”. Why does focusing on internal movements function in this manner? Wulf (2013) suggests that an internal focus may act as a ‘self-invoking trigger’. In other words, when directing attention to a particular limb for example, there’s a neural representation of the self. We end up attempting to regulate our actions which does the opposite of what we’re intending to accomplish. Instead of moving with more grace, we end up increasing tension, resulting in a more ‘mechanical’ rather than an effortless movement outcome. We’ve all been there before right? You’re given feedback to keep your wrist locked at impact for example and what happens, your entire arm, shoulder, neck etc get tight – you can’t even make clean contact with the ball!

There’s another factor that contributes negatively to movement outcome when the ‘self’ gets involved (btw, if you’ve ever read The Inner Game of Tennis, by Tim Gallwey, you’ll likely have a greater appreciation for the work by Wulf and the research related to attentional focus). Because we’re more conscious about our bodily movements, we also begin to critique ourselves – with an inclination towards negative evaluations of our performance. To paraphrase Wulf, all of our thoughts, actions and behaviours influence how we perceive the movement – which ends up getting in the way of producing an effortless swing, for example. This is partly the reason Gallwey, in Inner Game, developed specific drills to get the ‘self’ out of the way. For example, he used a simple auditory drill to get his students to better focus on the ball, rather than where and how they should swing a racquet. He would get his students to say ‘bounce’ when the ball hit the court on their side and ‘hit’ at the moment of impact. What he noticed was that performance almost immediately improved. There are a number of external focus drills and cues that can help distract the ‘self’ while at the same time facilitating more automaticity in movement production. In future posts we’ll outline more of these drills but for now, let’s take a look at some research on this topic.

WHAT DO ELITE VS NON-ELITE PLAYERS FOCUS ON? A SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVE

Tennis is a precision type sport. In other words, you must be quite accurate with your shots as boundaries to where you can hit, exist. There are a few studies that have attempted to determine whether an external or internal focus of attention in tennis would be better at improving accuracy in a variety of shots. One study by Hadler et al (2014), put the theory to work with 11 year old children (none of which had any prior tennis playing experience). The kids that were given external focus instructions outperformed those that were given internal focus instructions along with those kids who were given no instructions at all. Interestingly, there wasn’t much difference between the internal cues group and the control group – both performed equally poorly. Serve performance in both novice performers and advanced performers (Wulf et al 2002) also benefited more from external attentional cues versus internal ones.

Similar findings have been seen in golf settings with both novice and expert performers. Wulf and Su (2007) found that external instructions were better in both novices and experts – in other words, when the attention of the players was directed at the swing of the club and a target versus some movement of the arms. Perkins-Ceccato et al (2003), however, found that internal focus instructions helped less skilled golfers while external cues helped more skilled golfers. Perhaps the skill level could be a deciding factor in what kind of instructions should be given. Let’s take a closer look.

In baseball batting (Castaneda and Gray 2007), when attentional cues were put to the test with both highly skilled and less-skilled batters, the results varied. Out of 4 different attentional conditions, highly skilled batters performed best when attention was focused on “the flight of the ball leaving the bat” – this attentional cue is considered both environmental and external. These same batters performed worse when attending to “the movement of their hands” where the focus is internal and on the skill itself. Interestingly, however, the less-skilled batters performed worse when attending to environmental cues, even when those cues were external. These batters fared best when the attention was aimed toward the execution of the skill – and there was no significant difference between external and internal instructions (although external cues were slightly better). So in less skilled performers, both internal AND external cues benefitted performance.

In less skilled performers, both internal AND external cues benefitted performance. – Based on research comparing highly skilled vs less skilled, baseball batters.

Given these findings, along with the beliefs of dynamic systems proponents (Chow et al 2015), it would appear that, although attending to external cues seem to be more impactful when it comes to learning and mastering complex motor skills, there may still be a place for internal cueing with novice athletes. In other words, it’s likely that complete beginners may benefit from some internal cueing. The shift in attention from internal to external, however, should probably happen fairly quickly and early in the learning process, so that the self-organizing system (body) can take over.

CUEING COMPARISONS: INTERNAL VS EXTERNAL

FUTURE RESEARCH & FINAL THOUGHTS

Coaches should work together with researchers to conduct further studies with highly specific instructions, in a variety of environments (from beginning children to elite performers). This would further help to clarify the debate as at times, researchers don’t possess the know how to provide accurate and meaningful instructions. For example, simply focusing on your arm during a tennis forehand can differ greatly from focusing on a specific position of your elbow during the take-back phase of a forehand. The former cue being quite broad while the latter possessing specific characteristics that may be relevant to an elite player. Also, although similarities may exist between a variety of sport skills, differences cannot be overlooked. Analyzing specific skills within each sport may provide further insight into this topic – for example, a 1st serve return on the forehand side differs considerably compared to a cross-court neutral rally forehand.

Furthermore, the type of focus and even the intricate details of each cue are highly relevant. Elite players should be mostly given external cues – from the research, we’re now aware of that. They’ve hit enough tennis shots to know how it’s done. But even within external cueing, there exists skill specific cueing along with environmental specific cueing. For instance, if I tell a player to focus on some feature of the racquet, this would be classified as a skill based external cue. On the other hand, if I ask a player to focus on the flight of the ball or some area of the court to hit into, these would be examples of environmental based external cues. Some studies in elite performers actually point towards distal cueing as being more effective – i.e. the further the external cue from the body, the better the performance – like a target vs a racquet.

Knowing this may help direct our cueing depending on the time of year. During a competitive phase, it may be counterproductive to tell a player to focus on racquet preparation or the path etc. (even if you’re externally cueing). In this phase of a season, it may be more appropriate to bring focus to the ball, a target or even certain features of your opponent (the way they move, where they’re standing, how they prepare for different types of shots etc).

All in all, subconscious control allows attention to be directed at other important features of the environment. As we saw earlier with baseball batters, elite hitters performed better when attending to the environment. The authors proposed that this “freed-up” their attention – in other words, they weren’t thinking about the specific details of swinging a bat. They’ve hit millions of balls in the past and simply allowed automatic processes to take over based on the environmental cues they were attending to. This enables the human body to organize itself most effectively in order to execute the desired task/movement. This is also why when asked, many elite athletes cannot recall exactly how they executed a certain skill, they “just did it”.

In future posts we’ll dive further into examples of external cueing along with constraint led training – both of which aim to facilitate sub-conscious control of movement in elite performers by attending to factors away from the body.

MATT KUZDUB MSC CSCS

E: matt@mattspoint.com // mattspoint.com

MATTSPOINT // COACHING & TRAINING SOLUTIONS

This article has been reproduced with the kind permission of Matt Kuzdub.

Written by SharonLeeLukas · Categorized: Coach Academy, Mental, Mental toughness · Tagged: Coaching, Coaching methodology, External focus, Internal focus, Tennis

Feb 08 2017

Rafael Nadal struggles with self-confidence – so will you!

The best tennis players of our sport look and act extremely self-confident, but we forget that it might be completely different under the surface. They are also experiencing uncertainty and doubt. Tennis is an odd sport. Some days, you feel like you can’t miss the ball even if you tried to, and other days you doubt if you can even hit the opponent’s half.

14-time Grand Slam Champion Rafael Nadal has been very outspoken earlier this year about his lack of self-confidence. He has not experienced the feeling of self-confidence despite the fact that he will go down in the history books as one of the best players the world has ever seen.

So if you sometimes get the thought that you are the only one struggling with confidence, remember that even the best players in the world struggle. The difference is in how you handle it. The professional players understand that it is possible to win several matches before the feeling of self-confidence will come back.

It is also important to remember that having high self-confidence doesn’t always lead to good performances.

There is a very fine line between having high self-confidence and having too big of an ego. If you are having too big of an ego, it often leads to not preparing well enough, or you might get a little bit too cocky in the way that you are going about your performance.

Therefore, we need to redefine our understanding of self-confidence. It is in the way you practice. It is in the way you prepare. It is your willingness to follow your gameplan no matter what thoughts and emotions you will experience during a match.
We need to remember that the act of self-confidence comes before the feeling. The feeling of self-confidence often arrives after a good performance. Not always, but often times. So the feeling of self-confidence is more like a bonus.

When Rafael Nadal talks about his lack of self-confidence, there is absolutely no doubt that he is talking about the feeling of self-confidence. Rafa knows that he can’t control the feeling, but everything that is in his own control in the preparation before matches will be taken care of with an extreme attention to detail.

The acts of self-confidence are all the things that you can control in your preparation before match. It is how you eat, how you sleep and the game plan that you will make together with your coach.

You do not need to have high self-confidence in order to have the opportunity to perform well. It helps, but it is not a necessity. Remember that the important thing is to act self-confidently. The act of self-confidence comes before the feeling.

 

Adam Blicher is a guest author on Tennis(24/7).

Originally published on: Feb 8, 2017

Written by SharonLeeLukas · Categorized: Mental toughness

Nov 11 2016

i2c talk about mindfulness in tennis

The practice of “Mindfulness” has taken a hold on the tennis world. Mindfulness is a meditation and awareness practise that teaches people to non-judgementally recognise and observe their thoughts without trying to stop them.

Perhaps the most influential advocate is Novak Djokovic. It’s been said that Djokovic’s dominance at the top of the ratings is due not just to his extraordinary physical fitness but to his innovative approach to the mental side of tennis through Mindfulness meditation.

So what is Mindfulness meditation and why is it so attractive to tennis players? Whether you’re already a fan; or simply keen to take a look and decide if it’s something you’re interested in, we’ve put together a guide for tennis coaches, players and parents.

Who Started It?

We Googled and it seems that the roots of Mindfulness go back 2500 years, or more! Some Mindfulness meditation techniques were practiced by Hindus and later by Buddists.

However, the current surge in popularity of Mindfulness is based on techniques drawn from the Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) work done at the University of Massachussets Medical Centre in the U.S. and an MBCT programme developed at England’s Cambridge University and Canada’s University of Toronto2.

What is it?

At least some of us, when we think about meditation, will imagine a serene state of mind where we put all thoughts out of our heads – probably through the repetition of a mantra. That is true of some meditation techniques, but it is not a part of Mindfulness meditation.

Rather than banishing negative or stressful thoughts, Mindfulness teaches people to recognise and observe their thoughts, but not try to blot them out or to judge them. The idea is that by learning to recognise negative thoughts as they happen, and being able distance themselves from them, a person can stop the process in which negative thought patterns create a downward spiral and overwhelm them.

Mindfulness meditations do not need to be long. Djokovic says that he does his meditation for 15 minutes every day3. A mindfulness meditation usually involves focussing your attention on your breathing (and sometimes on a different physical sensation); being aware of your breath as you breathe in and out. When your mind wanders, you refocus your attention back to your breathing.

Does it work?

Sports psychologists say that practising mindfulness meditation techniques can improve a player’s overall performance by sharpening concentration and by improving accuracy and precision.

Djokovic is certainly a big fan. In his book “Serve to Win” Djokovic says that his Mindfulness meditation is as important to him as his physical training. He explains that, “meditation has enabled him to let go of negative emotions such as self-doubt, anger and worry, and that this has made all the difference to his mental approach on court”…”I used to freeze up whenever I made a mistake; I was sure I wasn’t in the same league as the Federers and the Andy Murrays. Now, when I blow a serve or shank a backhand, I still get those flashes of self-doubt, but I know how to handle them”3.

Where can you go if you want to try Mindfulness meditation for yourself?

Probably because mental strength is such a critical success factor in tennis, there is something of a Mindfulness revolution in the tennis world. If you Google “Mindfulness in Tennis” you will find multiple websites with guides to practicing Mindfulness. We also found an app “Welzen Tennis – Guided Meditation for Tennis” which is available on both Apple and Android for £18.99. We haven’t bought or used these downloads so we can’t recommend any of them above another, but we can recommend the book by Williams and Penman “Mindfulness: a Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World” (available for as little as £11 on Amazon https://www.amazon.co.uk/Mindfulness-practical-guide-finding-frantic/dp/074995308X). While the meditations may not be as useful without understanding the philosophy, you can access the free audio downloads that accompany the book “Mindfulness For Dummies” at http://www.dummies.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-824309.html .

Click here to go to our BONUS 10-minute mindfulness meditation!

We referred to some external sources in this post:

  1. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/neil-endicott/post_11514_b_9616446.html
  2. Williams, M. and Penman, D. (2011) “Mindfulness: a Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World” Piatkus, Great Britain
  3. Djokovic, N. (2014) “Serve to Win: The 14-Day Gluten-free Plan for Physical and Mental Excellence” Corgi Press (pages 171-174)

Written by SharonLeeLukas · Categorized: Mental, Mental toughness, Parent Guides

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