Article Sphere Logo

How To Coach Better At Tennis

By Expert Author: Jenny Styles | Article Abstract
Word Count: 362 words | Views: 49 view(s)
For those who are interested in a more individualized sport, tennis is one of the popular options. This particular game is built to show strength, durability, and grace all at the same time. If you are looking at the possibilities for participating in tennis, you can begin by understanding the basics of the game.

Tennis is not a game that was invented at any recent time. In fact, the game has been traced back to the ancient Greeks and was played casually among several cultures for centuries. By the year 1874, the name tennis was patented and became a standard game around the world. It first became popular in French, then spread to Portugal and England, eventually moving to a world wide known game.

Tennis begins in a court that is about seventy-eight feet long and twenty-seven feet wide. It will either be made of grass, clay, or concrete, depending on the texture that is needed for the game. One player will be on each side of the court with a net stretched all the way across the middle in order to divide them. One of the players will begin by serving the ball and the other player will be designated to receive the ball.

The objective of tennis is to get the most points by getting the opponent to miss the ball. If they are not able to hit the ball back over the net with a racket, then it is a point for the other side. If the ball bounces more than once, if it goes out of bounds, hits the net on the way back or is missed, then the opposing side will gain a point. Usually, there will be five sets in a tennis match, all which will be added together with the points that are made by each side striking the other out.

If you are looking into the game of tennis, this is where to begin. The basics of the game allow one to see what the main objective and goal is in order to win. By doing this, one will have the ability to take their playing abilities to the court.
Jenny Styles

About the Author/Author Bio

Want to look at skiing pictures and pictures of skiing? Watch them at the Ski Trip Planning website.

Article Source: http://www.articlesphere.com/Article/How-To-Coach-Better-At-Tennis/181231

Article Submitted: 2009-03-10 | This Article has been viewed 49 times.

Rate Article

Related Videos

Virtua Tennis 3 Gameplay: Win Point within 3 Shots of Serve
Virtua Tennis 3 Gameplay: Win Point on 5th Shot with a Volley
Virtua Tennis 3 Gameplay: Hit 5 Forehands in a Row
Virtua Tennis 3 Gameplay: Win within 6 Shots of Service Return
Virtua Tennis 3 Gameplay: Win the Point with a Crosscourt Shot
 

More "Tennis" Related Articles

 
 

Listed below are more articles related to the above article from the "Tennis" article category.

People interested in the above article "How To Coach Better At Tennis" are also interested in the related articles listed below:

 
It was due to leg injury that forced Nadal to skip this great tour and gave some disappointment to tennis fans. They will really miss this fast pace action star in the field of ATP tournament. One of Nadal sports friend top-ranked Spaniard says about his injury that he will be soon back on the field to play for Spain in the next month for the Davis cup. This will be the match of first round where Nadal will be able to strike back to his current performance.
The lion’s share of tennis highlights in 2008 come from the racquets of the ATP giants, with newbie, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, elevating tennis to Tinsel Town-type entertainment, and Nadal and Federer fighting one grand slam battle after another for the number one spot in world tennis.
Roger Federer in his youth, took men's tennis by storm. Before he embarked on his remarkable journey of winning Grand Slams, his greatest achievement was beating Pete Sampras in the fourth round of Wimbledon in 2001. I was fortunate enough to be in the stands that fateful day.
When Ana Ivanovic won the French Open to snap Henin's hold on the title after winning it for three consecutive times, tennis fans proclaimed the youthful Serbian player as the next player who shall dominate the sport, a picture of beauty and grace that has not been seen in the sport since Martina Hingis ruled the women's side. Ivanovic started to wilt under pressure. Maria Sharapova got sidelined for the rest of the year due to her shoulder injury while Jelena Jankovic has to win a major before she can claim the top ranking convincingly. That leaves the Williams sisters to battle each other out to stake claim as no.1 female tennis player.
Tournament favorite and second ranked Serena Williams earned a ticket to play in the Australian Open tennis finals when she defeated fourth ranked Russian Elena Dementieva in straight sets 6-3, 6-4 in the first semi-final match this morning. The win snapped Dementieva's unbeaten streak and also avenged Williams' loss to Dementieva in the semi-finals of the Beijing Olympics and Medibank International.
When interviewed about their troubled nation's past, each one can remember those frightening days and troublesome times. Knowing that they possess a special talent in sports, particularly tennis, it gave them something to dream for. They may not admit it directly but tennis has provided them an opportunity to flee the harsh conditions of a nation in strife. And it gave them a bright future, of something to look forward too.
The first week of the Australian Open has passed and play has gone into the fourth round. As what I have come to expect, the women's draw has come to be the more open side, with the top four seeds not as solid as the men side and are then prone to upsets.
 
Article Directory Home All Categories Recreation And Sports Tennis
 

Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
 
Copyright © 2005 - by Larry Lim, Singapore - Article Search Engine Directory at ArticleSphere.com™
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.

Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Belarusian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish German English Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Irish Italiano Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Malay Maltese Dutch Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Vietnamese Welsh Yiddish