If you're struggling with tennis basics, check out these quick tips to enhance your game. Remember, there's no perfect way to play a tennis stroke, but these fundamentals can help refine your skills.
1. Early Preparation
Prepare yourself as soon as possible. Turn your hips and shoulders before the ball bounces on your side.
2. Exaggerate Your Follow Through
Follow through completely after your hit. Hit the ball, follow through, and move your feet.
3. Hit and Recover
Instead of focusing on your shot after hitting it, focus on recovering. Hit, finish, and get back into position.
4. Keep Your Head Still
To avoid mis-hitting, ensure your head isn't moving during your swing. Follow the ball onto the racquet and keep your head still until the shot is complete.
5. Get Your Back Leg Behind the Ball
Positioning your back leg and weight behind the ball allows for easier weight transfer and more consistent shots.
6. Pull Back on Your Serve Speed
The serve is crucial, but don't just hit the ball hard. Focus on accuracy over force.
7. Prepare Early for Groundstrokes
As soon as you know where the ball will bounce, position yourself comfortably for the shot. A higher backswing generally generates more power. Balance is key between swing and force.
8. Get the Right Forehand Grip
Gripping the tennis racquet correctly is vital. The pros often use the continental grip for serving. You can find helpful videos on YouTube to learn this grip in a few simple steps.
9. Practice Your Tennis Ball Toss
For serving, your ball toss should go straight up and come down about 18 inches in front of your leading foot. Practice your toss with a bucket of balls without hitting them.
10. Don’t Be Too Hard on Yourself During Matches
It's easy to be overly critical, especially if you miss an easy shot in a competitive setting. If you miss, move forward and continue playing your best. Practice your stroke afterward to improve.
These tips should help you improve your tennis game and enjoy playing even more!
So, what's the difference? let's find out!
5 a side VS 11 a side
Which would you rather… getting the ball every 10 seconds at the least, or not touching the ball for minutes on end, or just not being used because you’re not liked. In Futsal you always have the ball, since there are 4 players and a keeper, you basically only have a max of three options at all times, positioning is much more flexible as well, so you get the ball all the time. 5 a side destroys 11 a side in amount of time on the ball.
Positioning
As I mentioned above, positioning in Futsal is much more flexible. What I mean by that is that you will 100% defend and attack numerous times in a game regardless of where you are playing on the pitch, even keepers attack in certain situations. As a result of the smaller pitch and having less players on it, there will be situations that a defender is out of position, so you’ll drop back and cover, there will be times that you’re defending and see a gap or a shot and go for it, it’s just so fluid, in Futsal you always need to be switched on, because if you switch off then it’s like a 4 v 3 match. Losing a player in Futsal is so much worse than losing one in Football, compare 9 v 10 to 3 v 4 (excluding keepers), obviously the percentage is very different.
Intensity
Futsal is really intense and physical, which can be said about Football as well, but due to the smaller space on the pitch you are continually battling the same 4 players. If you embarrass the same guy once or twice he won’t take that well at all and will have it out for you for the rest of the game. Since the ball is rarely in the air (due to it’s weight) the ball is played with the feet more, so expect a lot of tackles, not all of them clean (thank god there are no studs). But intensity is a great thing, it can showcase the best players and result in an awesome event for the spectators, it can also bring out the bad… but that’s still entertaining right.
Anyway, at the end of the day, is up to you to decide whether you prefer futsal or football.