| | | | Welcome to the June 2016 update from Tennis Server, http://www.tennisserver.com/ Greetings, In our June edition of Tennis Server, Ron Waite provides tips for developing good tennis footwork in Put Your Best Feet Forward!!!; John Mills talks about how to vary the pace of your shots in Slow-Medium-Fast; and in his column in this newsletter below, Tennis Warrior Tom Veneziano chimes in on the virtues of "Tennis Chunking." Enjoy Wimbledon, and have fun on the court! Cliff Kurtzman Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Tennis Server Here's what's on our side of the Net this month: The Tennis Warrior by Tom Veneziano - Exclusive to Tennis Server INTERACTIVE This Month's Tennis Server Columns Upcoming Tournaments and Exhibitions Becoming a Tennis Server Sponsor/Advertiser Linking to the Tennis Server Newsletter Ground Rules
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The Tennis Warrior is brought to you by Tom Veneziano ([email protected]). Tom is a tennis pro teaching at the Piney Point Racquet Club in Houston, Texas. Tom has taught thousands of players to think like a pro with his Tennis Warrior System. June 2016 -- Tennis Chunking No, you will not gain weight by reading this article! The chunking I refer to here is actually something extraordinary that occurs in your brain as you are learning. There is a process that scientists call "perceptual chunking" in which the human brain groups small, scattered pieces of information into one whole unit, making the learning and recall of that information more efficient. This process happens automatically during perception, so you are not even aware you are doing it! When information is reduced to one unit, this unit is called a chunk. Oftentimes, it is a familiar pattern that can be used as a chunk. Chess masters are known for their chunking of many different patterns. When they look at a chessboard they do not see each individual piece. Instead, the master's mind recognizes chunks of patterns involving individual pieces experienced as one unit. The information stored as chunks can be recognized instantly. A chess master can have 100,000 chunks of stored patterns at his or her mental fingertips! When the situation calls for it, the chess master can quickly recall and select a specific chunk of information to be used. Strangely enough, as he or she does this, time effectively slows down for their match. Their mind can relax, even under pressure, not having to concentrate on remembering various and scattered pieces of information. On the other hand, in a high-powered, quick-moving chess match, a chess player who is trying to recall information as individual parts really feels the pressure. Their thinking is unorganized so they struggle to remember anything. As their inefficient mind frantically works though the problem, they sense that they are running out of time and feels as though each moment is flying by. Do you have the ability to chunk information and recall it as if time has slowed down? Yes, you do! You have been chunking information all of your life when you drive, walk, speak and even hear your name! In "Understanding the Secrets of Human Perception," Professor Peter M. Vishton of The College of William and Mary gives an excellent example of chunking. Suppose your name is Barbara, and you are in a room full of people. The crowd has broken up into a number of small groups, each having a conversation. Your group, engaged in an interesting conversation, has all of your attention. Suddenly, in the midst of their own conversation, another group nearby mentions your name. You instantly look around, "Who said Barbara?" You have just experienced chunking. Your name stood out and everything seemed to slow down as your name Barbara was broadcast loud and clear. But only for you! Why? Because you have had a lifetime of repetition to chunk your name in your brain. No longer is it in your mind as indiscriminate noise, as less familiar words would be. You now know and hear your name as one unique unit that stands out among all the other words and names that are mentioned in a crowd. What does this have to do with tennis? Well, the same process occurs when learning the game of tennis. Players who use massive repetition will over time automatically chunk information together. Once it's chunked it stands out like a sore thumb! A player can chunk patterns of play, racket movements, positions of opponents, spins of the ball and even the ball itself. Repetition makes all this chunking possible through intense and consistent practice, and you do it without consciously knowing it. After all, you spent years writing, hearing and speaking your name, and you learned to chunk it without even knowing what was occurring! Let's suppose you would like to see the ball better and read it coming off of your opponent's racket. Here is your problem. Without enough repetition you only see the ball, your opponent's racket and your opponent as separate parts. Your mind races in its frantic attempt to keep track of the individual parts and determine the direction of the ball. There is just not enough time. Everything is happening too fast! As far as you are concerned, reading the situation and reacting quickly to the ball is impossible. Your conclusion: you must not have the talent. Wrong! With intense and consistent practice you will begin to chunk information together so you see the ball, the racket and opponent as one unit that stands out. Experiencing all of these parts as one unit has the result of slowing everything down so you clearly see your opponent, the racket-head position and the direction of the ball. If you have fifty marbles spread out on a table and you try to evaluate each individual marble quickly, it would take too much time. But if you put all the marbles in a glass container and look at the whole container, you will see the marbles as one unit. This, in effect, is what your brain does when it chunks information. Your brain automatically processes the information and places it in a container for you to quickly see as one unit. When you chunk tennis information you will definitely move your game to a higher level. And, amazingly, your brain will be working less! Nothing is more taxing on the brain than trying to calculate individual parts that do not fit together as a whole unit. When your brain recognizes whole units chunked together, you will process all the information on the court much more efficiently. Neat! At this point you should be furious with some of the teaching pros. When a pro is telling you, "Watch the position of your opponent's racket face to determine the direction of the ball," he is giving you information that HE or SHE has already chunked in their brain but you have not. Therefore, reading the racket face and the direction of the ball is quick and easy for them, but impossible for you. You first need many hours of practice, just like the pro needed a lot of practice before they could read the racket face properly. How do you know when you begin the process of chunking? Easy! You will get the impression that the ball, the situations, your opponents, court position and everything in tennis is slowing down. But in reality nothing has slowed down! You are just experiencing the magic of chunking. Chunking changes everything! Your Tennis Pro, Tom Veneziano Previous columns from Tom Veneziano are archived online in the Tennis Server's Tennis Warrior Archive six months after publication in this newsletter. In Tom Veneziano's book "The Truth about Winning!", tennis players learn in a step-by-step fashion the thinking the pros have mastered to win! Tom takes you Step-by-step from basic mental toughness to advanced mental toughness. All skill levels can learn from this unique book from beginner to professional. No need to change your strokes just your thinking. Also available at a discount as an E-Book. Audio CDs by Tom Veneziano: The Refocus Technique: Controlling Your Emotions in Tennis. Think Like a Pro -- 2 Audio CDs. Three minute free sample (real audio): http://www.tenniswarrior.com/audio/sample_audio.ram Training for Pressure Play -- Audio CD. Four minute free sample (real audio): http://www.tenniswarrior.com/audio/pressure-play-sample.ram Recent Tennis Server Columns If you read an article and enjoy it, please help spread the word by clicking on the "Recommend" link at the top or bottom of the article! Drills and Tips: Turbo Tennis by Ron Waite
Most tennis players do not pay enough attention to developing good footwork, so in his June column, Ron discusses tennis footwork. See: Put Your Best Feet Forward!!! Player Tip: "Tennis Anyone?" by USPTA Pro John Mills
In his June column, John talks about how to choose the pace of your shot in different situations. See: Slow-Medium-Fast
Upcoming Tournaments and Exhibitions June 27 - July 10, 2016 Wimbledon Championships (Men & Women) London, England, UK Tennis Server Ticket Exchange: Wimbledon Tickets July 10 - 17, 2016 German Open Tennis Championships (Men) Hamburg, Germany Hall of Fame Tennis Championships (Men) Newport, Rhode Island, USA SkiStar Swedish Open (Men) Bastad, Sweden BRD Bucharest Open (Women) Bucharest, Romania Ladies Championship Gstaad (Women) Gstaad, Switzerland July 15 - 17, 2016 Davis Cup World Group Quarterfinals (Men) Serbia vs Great Britain @ Serbia Italy vs Argentina @ Italy Czech Republic vs France @ Czech Republic USA vs Croatia @ Portland, Oregon, USA July 18 - 24, 2016 J. Safra Sarasin Swiss Open Gstaad (Men) Gstaad, Switzerland Generali Open Kitzbuhel (Men) Kitzbuhel, Austria Konzum Croatia Open Umag (Men) Umag, Croatia Bank of the West Classic (Women) Stanford, California, USA Citi Open (Men & Women) Washington D.C., U.S.A. Tennis Server Ticket Exchange: Citi Open Tennis Classic Tickets Ericsson Open (Women) Bastad, Sweden July 25 - 31, 2016 Rogers Cup Montreal Quebec (Women) & Toronto Ontario (Men), Canada Tennis Server Ticket Exchange: Rogers Cup Tennis Tickets August 1 - 7, 2016 BB&T Atlanta Open (Men) Atlanta, Georgia, USA Brasil Tennis Cup (Women) Florianopolis, Brazil Jiangxi International Women's Tennis Open (Women) Nanchang, China August 4 - 14, 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games (Men & Women) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil August 8 - 13, 2016 Abierto Mexicano Los Cabos (Men) Los Cabos, Mexico August 14 - 21, 2016 Western & Southern Open (Men & Women) Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Tennis Server Ticket Exchange: Western & Southern Open Tickets August 21 - 27, 2016 Winston-Salem Open at Wake Forest University (Men) Winston-Salem, NC, U.S.A. Connecticut Open (Women) New Haven, CT, U.S.A. Louisville International Open (Women) Louisville, KY, U.S.A. August 29 - September 11, 2016 US Open (Men & Women) Flushing Meadow, New York, U.S.A. Tennis Server Ticket Exchange: US Open Tennis Tickets Becoming a Tennis Server Sponsor/Advertiser Our readers continually tell us they are hungry for information on tennis-related products, equipment, tournaments, and travel opportunities. There is no better way to reach the avid online tennis audience than through the Tennis Server. For information on advertising through our web site or in this newsletter, please contact us by using this form or call us at (281) 480-6300. We have a variety of sponsorship programs available, and we can connect you with a highly targeted tennis audience at rates that are lower than many web sites charge for reaching a general audience. Linking to the Tennis Server We frequently receive requests from people for a graphic to use in linking from their site to the Tennis Server site. We've created a graphic at: http://www.tennisserver.com/images/button.gif that you are welcome to use in conjunction with a link to http://www.tennisserver.com/. You are welcome to copy this graphic and use it on your site for this purpose. Please be sure to include an ALT tag with the graphic: ALT="Tennis Server". Newsletter Ground Rules The Tennis Server and Tennis Server INTERACTIVE are copyrighted publications. "Tennis Server" is a registered trademark and "Center Court for Tennis on the Internet" is a trademark of Tennis Server. This newsletter, along with the editorial and photographs on the tennisserver.com web site, are copyrighted by Tennis Server and its contributors. Our newsletters cover updates to the Tennis Server and other tennis information of general interest. Mailings occur approximately once a month, usually by the end of the first weekend of the month. The newsletter sometimes contains commercial tennis-related content from Tennis Server sponsors. We keep the addresses of mailing list subscribers confidential. If someone asks us to distribute tennis- related materials to the mailing list, we might do so for them, and we might charge them for doing so if there is commercial content to the message. See you on the courts, --Cliff Kurtzman for Tennis Server INTERACTIVE | | |
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