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Article:
Improve Your Tennis in One-Fifth of A Second! by: Steve Smith How would you like to start playing vastly better tennis ... today? There's a particular 'magic'¯ moment in tennis'”one that lasts a mere fifth of a second. If you have (or can develop) the discipline to fully exploit that moment, you may astonish yourself and your opponents with your new-found scoring ability. The moment I'm talking about is the last 1/5th of a second before your racquet strikes the ball. The discipline I'm referring to is that of keeping your eye entirely on the ball for that super-critical moment. We've all been told many times that we should keep our eye on the ball in tennis. But how many of us really know what that means? How many of us really practice it? Keeping your eye on the ball doesn't mean watching it until it is a split second from hitting your racket, and then glancing away to look at your opponent. It means watching it until it has hit your strings and begun its rebound. This is not a new secret. Bill Tilden, perhaps the greatest player who ever lived, wrote about it more than 80 years ago and tried to drive its importance into the heads of his readers. Early on in his classic book, 'The Art of Lawn Tennis,' he cited statistics 'to show you how vital it is that the eye must be kept on the ball UNTIL THE MOMENT OF STRIKING IT'¯ (his emphasis). 'About 85 per cent of points in tennis are errors, and the remainder earned points. As the standard of play rises the percentage of errors drops until, in the average high-class tournament match, 60 per cent are errors and 40 per cent aces. ... Fully 80 percent of all errors are caused by taking the eye from the ball in the last one-fifth of a second of its flight.'¯ Wow. Sobering statistics, to be sure. But exciting ones, too, because what Tilden is telling us is that it's within our power, right now, to eliminate the majority of our errors! And reducing the errors we make is the surest way to starve our opponent of points and extend his opportunity to give up points to us. Tilden was a great tennis observer as well as a player. He studied and wrote about all of the top players of his day, and observed and advised many a tennis beginner. We can trust him when he says that the greatest fault commited by novices (and by many more experienced players) is trying to watch too much besides the ball. Tilden compared the human eye to a camera, noting that neither is capable of clearly focusing on a moving object and its background at the same time. 'Now the tennis ball is your moving object while the court, gallery, net, and your opponent constitute your background.'¯ Therefore, ignore the background and rather 'concentrate solely on focusing the eye firmly on the ball, and watching it until the moment of impact with your racquet face.'¯ Shouldn't you at least take a peek at your opponent, maybe out of the corner of your eye? No: 'You are not trying to hit him. You strive to miss him. Therefore, since you must watch what you strive to hit and not follow what you only wish to miss, keep your eye on the ball, and let your opponent take care of himself.'¯ Tilden provided a chart in 'The Art of Lawn Tennis,' a very simple one, but one that I hope you will commit to memory. It looked something like this: A'”1'”2'”3'”4'”B Imagine a ball passing from point A to point B, with you as the receiving player at B. According to Tilden, it can be taken as a scientific fact that if you keep your eye on the ball throughout its flight, your chance of making a good return is five times as great as it would be if you took your eye off the ball at point 4 (4/5ths of a second of its flight). Furthermore, your chance is ten times as great as it would be if your removed your eye from the ball at point 3 (3/5ths of a second of its flight). Tilden wrote: 'The average player follows the ball to '4
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