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Tennis Fitness & Conditioning

Build the physical foundation to play longer, move faster, and recover quicker. Tennis-specific fitness training designed for African players at every level.

๐ŸŽฌ 21 Video Lessons๐Ÿ“š 7 Modulesโฑ 6 Weeks๐Ÿ“„ Training Programme PDF๐Ÿ† Certificate๐Ÿ‘จ Coach Kazeem Rasaki ยท ITF/PTR Certified
Start Learning Free โ†’
1
Module 1 ยท 3 Lessons
The Fit Tennis Player
Coach says: "Understanding what tennis fitness demands is the first step to building it. This module establishes your baseline, identifies your priorities, and sets up a sustainable weekly training framework."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Understand the five fitness demands of tennis
  • Complete a baseline fitness assessment across all key areas
  • Build a balanced weekly training schedule
  • Set 8-week targets for each fitness component
1
What Tennis Fitness Actually Demands
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Tennis is one of the most physically demanding sports in the world. A 3-set match can last 3 hours. You sprint, stop, change direction, swing, and recover hundreds of times. Yet most club players train for tennis by only playing tennis. Today we break down exactly what your body needs and build a training framework around those demands.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tennis Fitness Audit

Assess your current fitness across the five key areas.

  • Rate yourself 1-10 in each area: speed, agility, strength, endurance, flexibility
  • Be honest, this is your baseline
  • Anything below 5 is a priority training area
  • Total your score: below 30 means fitness is significantly limiting your game
  • Review in 8 weeks to measure improvement
🎻 Match Demands Analysis

Track the physical demands of one full practice match.

  • Count the number of direction changes in one set
  • Count the average rally length in seconds
  • Note the longest and shortest points
  • Calculate total on-court movement time vs rest time
  • This data defines your fitness training priorities
Key Coaching Cues
five fitness areasspeed agility strength endurance flexibilityaudit your baselinetennis specific trainingmeasure improvement
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players think that playing lots of tennis is enough physical preparation for tennis.

✓ The Fix

Playing tennis trains tennis skills. Fitness training trains the physical qualities that allow you to express those skills in the third set of a match. Both are essential.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Assessing Your Current Fitness Baseline
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
You cannot improve what you do not measure. Before starting any fitness programme, establish baselines in the key fitness tests relevant to tennis. These numbers guide your training and prove your progress. Test, train, retest, that is the improvement cycle.
Practice Drills
🎻 Fitness Test Battery

Complete these four tests and record your scores.

  • 20m sprint: sprint 20 metres, record your time (good = under 3.2 seconds)
  • Agility T-test: set up T-shape with cones 5m apart, weave through and back (good = under 12 seconds)
  • 3-minute step test: step on and off a chair for 3 minutes, measure heart rate immediately after
  • Sit-and-reach flexibility: sit with legs straight, reach forward, record how far past your toes you reach
🎻 On-Court Fitness Baseline

Test your on-court fitness with this simple drill.

  • Set a timer for 20 minutes
  • Play points at full intensity with no more than 20 seconds between points
  • Track: how many points before your movement quality drops?
  • Track: do you make more errors in the last 5 minutes than the first 5?
  • Your answers identify exactly where fitness is hurting your game
Key Coaching Cues
test your baselinemeasure everything20m sprintT-test agilityretest every 8 weeks
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players start fitness programmes without knowing their starting point, making it impossible to measure progress.

✓ The Fix

Test before you train. Record your baseline numbers. Retest every 8 weeks. Progress that is measured is progress that is real.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Setting Up Your Weekly Training Schedule
⏱ 7 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Fitness without recovery is not fitness. It is breakdown. Your weekly training schedule must balance training load, tennis practice, and recovery. Today we build a weekly template that improves fitness without compromising your tennis sessions.
Practice Drills
🎻 Weekly Schedule Template

Build your personalised weekly training schedule.

  • Monday: tennis practice + agility (30 min)
  • Tuesday: strength training (45 min)
  • Wednesday: tennis practice + rest or light stretch
  • Thursday: endurance run + core (40 min)
  • Friday: tennis practice
  • Saturday: match play or full practice
  • Sunday: complete rest or gentle yoga
🎻 Load Management Check

Assess whether your current schedule is balanced.

  • Track your energy levels 1-10 every morning for 2 weeks
  • Track your tennis performance quality 1-10 after each session
  • If energy drops below 5 consistently, you are overtrained
  • If performance drops below 6 consistently, fitness training is interfering
  • Adjust your schedule based on this data
Key Coaching Cues
training plus recoverynever two hard days back to backload managementenergy trackingscheduled rest
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players add fitness training on top of heavy tennis schedules without reducing intensity elsewhere, leading to overtraining.

✓ The Fix

Fitness training replaces low-intensity hitting sessions, not rest days. Build rest into your schedule the same way you build training in, as a non-negotiable component.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Module 2 ยท 3 Lessons
Speed & Agility
Coach says: "Tennis matches are won or lost in the first step. Speed is not just how fast you run, it is how fast you start, how quickly you change direction, and how well you recover between movements."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Train first-step quickness through reaction drills
  • Master the split step as your movement foundation
  • Build agility through ladder and cone training
  • Transfer gym speed to on-court movement
1
First-Step Quickness: Reaction Drills
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The fastest player on the court is not always the player who runs fastest. It is the player who moves first. First-step quickness is the explosive initial movement from a ready position, the milliseconds between reading the ball and beginning to move. Train this and you will reach balls that used to pass you.
Practice Drills
🎻 Reaction Ball Drill

Use a reaction ball (or irregular bouncing ball) to train unpredictable first-step response.

  • Drop a reaction ball from chest height
  • Sprint to catch it before the second bounce
  • Vary drop positions: left, right, in front, behind
  • Progress: partner drops the ball and you cannot look until they call "GO"
  • Do 3 sets of 10 drops with 30 seconds rest between sets
🎻 Mirror Drill

Two players face each other, one leads movements, the other mirrors at maximum speed.

  • Stand facing your partner 2 metres apart
  • Leader moves in any direction at any speed
  • Follower mirrors every movement as quickly as possible
  • Switch roles every 30 seconds
  • Do 5 sets of 30 seconds with 30 seconds rest
Key Coaching Cues
split step timingread before you movefirst step is the keyexplosive startreact then sprint
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players wait to fully identify the ball direction before starting to move, losing critical time.

✓ The Fix

Start moving before you are 100% sure of the direction. A good first step in the right general area is faster than a perfect first step half a second late.

✅ Module Checklist
2
The Split Step: Foundation of Court Movement
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The split step is the single most important movement skill in tennis. It is the small hop before your opponent makes contact that loads your legs for explosive movement in any direction. Without a split step, you are always late. With a well-timed split step, you add 0.3-0.5 seconds of reaction time, the difference between reaching the ball and watching it bounce twice.
Practice Drills
🎻 Split Step Timing Drill

Train split step timing with a feeding partner.

  • Partner feeds from the baseline or net
  • You start at the opposite baseline in ready position
  • Split step exactly as partner's racket makes contact
  • Sprint to ball and return
  • Repeat 20 times focusing only on timing the split step, not the return
🎻 Progressive Split Step Drill

Build split step into increasingly complex movement patterns.

  • Level 1: split step then step right or left only
  • Level 2: split step then sprint forward, back, or diagonal
  • Level 3: split step in rally situation at match pace
  • Level 4: split step while maintaining tactical awareness
Key Coaching Cues
split step every balltime to contactload both legshop then reactsplit step in rally
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players skip the split step when they are tired late in matches, arriving late to every ball.

✓ The Fix

The split step is not optional when you are tired, it is more important. A fatigued player who split steps will still reach more balls than a fresh player who does not.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Ladder Drills & Cone Patterns for Court Speed
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Agility ladders and cone patterns build the neuromuscular pathways for quick feet, direction changes, and lateral movement. They are the gym equivalent of your court footwork patterns. Done correctly and consistently, they translate directly to faster court coverage.
Practice Drills
🎻 5-Cone Star Drill

Set up 5 cones in a star pattern and run to each in sequence.

  • Place one centre cone and 4 outer cones 3 metres from the centre in N/S/E/W positions
  • Start at centre, sprint to North cone, return to centre
  • Sprint to East cone, return to centre
  • Continue to South, West, and repeat
  • Time yourself over 5 full rotations, target under 45 seconds
🎻 Agility Ladder Sequence

Run these three ladder patterns consecutively.

  • Pattern 1: two feet in each rung (basic run), 3 passes
  • Pattern 2: lateral shuffle (both feet in each rung, side-on), 3 passes
  • Pattern 3: Icky shuffle (in, in, out pattern), 3 passes
  • Rest 90 seconds between each sequence
  • Do 4 complete sequences per session
Key Coaching Cues
quick feetlateral shufflechange of directionladder speedagility transfers to court
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players run through agility drills slowly without urgency, getting no transfer to match speed.

✓ The Fix

Agility drills only improve your game if done at match pace or above. Slow agility training builds slow agility. Sprint every drill at full effort.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Module 3 ยท 3 Lessons
Strength & Power
Coach says: "Tennis strength is functional strength. Legs for movement, core for transfer, upper body for racket speed and shoulder health. This module builds all three in a tennis-specific way."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build explosive lower body strength for court movement and serve
  • Develop core stability that transfers to every shot
  • Train upper body power for serve pace and shoulder health
  • Avoid common gym mistakes that slow tennis players down
1
Lower Body Strength: Legs Win Matches
⏱ 12 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The serve starts from the legs. The forehand is powered by the legs. The split step loads the legs. Recovery begins with the legs. If your legs are weak or fatigued, every shot in your game suffers. Today we build a tennis-specific lower body strength programme.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tennis Squat Programme

Three squat variations for tennis-specific lower body strength.

  • Goblet squat: 3 sets of 12 (builds overall leg strength)
  • Split squat: 3 sets of 10 each leg (builds single-leg stability for court movement)
  • Jump squat: 3 sets of 8 (builds explosive power for split step and serve)
  • Rest 60-90 seconds between sets
  • Progress: increase weight or reps every two weeks
🎻 Lateral Band Walk

Build lateral leg strength for direction changes.

  • Place resistance band just above knees
  • Stand in athletic position (knees bent, back straight)
  • Step laterally 15 steps right, then 15 steps left
  • Keep toes forward and knees behind toes throughout
  • Do 3 sets with 30 seconds rest
Key Coaching Cues
leg strength transferssquat for powersingle leg stabilitylateral strengthexplosive legs
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players train upper body in the gym but neglect legs, then wonder why their movement breaks down late in matches.

✓ The Fix

Legs are your tennis engine. If you only have time for one gym session per week, make it a leg session. Strong legs improve every single shot and every single movement.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Core Stability: Foundation of Every Shot
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Every shot in tennis transfers force from your legs through your core to your arm and racket. A weak core leaks energy at the transfer point, reducing power and consistency. A strong, stable core transmits full force efficiently from your legs to your swing. Today we build your tennis core programme.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tennis Core Circuit

Complete this four-exercise core circuit.

  • Plank: 3 x 45 seconds (full body stability)
  • Side plank: 3 x 30 seconds each side (lateral stability for direction changes)
  • Dead bug: 3 x 10 reps each side (anti-rotation core control)
  • Pallof press: 3 x 12 reps each side (rotational resistance, directly transfers to groundstrokes)
  • Rest 30 seconds between exercises
🎻 Medicine Ball Rotational Throw

Train rotational power that transfers to groundstroke power.

  • Stand side-on to a wall 1 metre away
  • Hold medicine ball (3-4kg) at hip
  • Rotate and throw the ball into the wall
  • Catch and reset
  • 3 sets of 12 each side
Key Coaching Cues
core is transfer pointplank for stabilityrotation resistancemedicine ball powercore equals racket speed
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players do sit-ups thinking they are training their tennis core, when sit-ups are not a functional movement for tennis.

✓ The Fix

Tennis core training is rotational and anti-rotational. Planks, side planks, Pallof presses, and medicine ball throws, not sit-ups. Train movements, not muscles.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Upper Body Power for Serve and Groundstrokes
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Upper body strength for tennis is not bodybuilder strength. It is functional, fast-twitch power. The ability to accelerate a racket rapidly through contact, to decelerate after the swing, and to hold firm at volley contact. Today we build tennis-specific upper body power without adding muscle mass that slows you down.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tennis Upper Body Programme

Three exercises that build tennis-functional upper body strength.

  • Push-up variation (close grip for triceps): 3 x 15, builds serve and forehand follow-through strength
  • Band pull-apart: 3 x 20, builds rotator cuff and upper back strength (essential for serve health)
  • Dumbbell external rotation: 3 x 15 each arm, the most important injury prevention exercise for the shoulder
  • Rest 45 seconds between sets
🎻 Serve Specific Shoulder Strength

Build the specific strength needed for a powerful and healthy serve.

  • Y-T-W exercise: lie face down, raise arms to form Y, T, and W shapes
  • Hold each position 2 seconds
  • 3 sets of 8 reps
  • This exercise directly strengthens the muscles that control your serve motion and prevent shoulder injury
Key Coaching Cues
functional strengthrotator cuff healthband pull apartno heavy pressingracket speed not mass
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players do heavy bench press and bicep curls thinking it helps their tennis.

✓ The Fix

Heavy pressing movements can actually hinder tennis by building muscle that slows your swing. Focus on rotator cuff, upper back, and tricep exercises that build racket speed, not muscle bulk.

✅ Module Checklist
4
Module 4 ยท 3 Lessons
Endurance & Stamina
Coach says: "Fitness in the first set is irrelevant if you are exhausted in the third. This module builds the specific endurance, aerobic base, on-court stamina, and interval recovery, that keeps your game sharp for the entire match."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Understand how aerobic and anaerobic systems power tennis
  • Build on-court endurance through tennis-specific drills
  • Train interval capacity that mirrors match work-to-rest ratios
  • Progressively build stamina over a 6-week programme
1
Tennis Energy Systems: Aerobic vs Anaerobic
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Tennis uses two energy systems simultaneously. The aerobic system powers your recovery between points and your overall endurance across a 3-set match. The anaerobic system powers each explosive point, the sprints, the split steps, the overhead smash. Train both and you will be the fittest player on the court in the third set.
Practice Drills
🎻 Energy System Test

Test your aerobic and anaerobic fitness separately.

  • Anaerobic test: sprint 30m three times with 30 seconds rest. Time each. If times increase by more than 10% by the third sprint, anaerobic fitness needs work.
  • Aerobic test: run for 12 minutes at a pace you can sustain. Measure distance. Under 2km indicates aerobic base needs work.
  • Record both results. These are your energy system baselines.
🎻 On-Court Energy System Analysis

Assess which energy system fails you first in a match.

  • Play a full set at match intensity
  • Track: when do you feel most tired? Start of the set, middle, or end?
  • Start fatigue = aerobic base issue
  • Mid-set fatigue = lactate clearance issue
  • End-of-set fatigue = normal, work on extending your threshold
Key Coaching Cues
aerobic baseanaerobic powertwo systems one playerrecovery between pointsthird set fitness
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players run long slow distances for tennis fitness when tennis is an interval sport.

✓ The Fix

Long slow runs build aerobic base but not the explosive power needed for tennis points. Combine aerobic base work with interval training that simulates match intensity.

✅ Module Checklist
2
On-Court Endurance Drills
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The best endurance training for tennis is tennis-specific endurance training. Running on a road builds general fitness. Running specific court patterns under fatigue builds tennis endurance. Today we build a suite of on-court endurance drills that simulate match demands.
Practice Drills
🎻 Suicide Run Endurance Set

Classic court suicide runs for tennis-specific endurance.

  • Start at the baseline
  • Sprint to the service line, return to baseline
  • Sprint to the net, return to baseline
  • Sprint to the opposite service line, return to baseline
  • Sprint to opposite baseline, return, that is one rep
  • Do 8 reps with 30 seconds rest between each
  • Time how long before your form breaks down
🎻 Continuous Rally Endurance

Rally for extended time periods to build on-court endurance.

  • Rally with a partner for 20 consecutive minutes
  • No breaks except between points
  • Track: does your movement quality drop?
  • Does your error rate increase in the final 5 minutes?
  • If yes, your on-court endurance is a training priority
Key Coaching Cues
suicide runscontinuous rallyform under fatiguematch intensitybuild to 3 sets
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players train fitness off-court without testing whether it transfers to their on-court performance.

✓ The Fix

The proof of your fitness is in the third set. Test your fitness on court by playing long practice sets and tracking movement quality throughout. Off-court numbers only matter if they transfer to the court.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Interval Training: Simulate Match Intensity
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Interval training is the bridge between general fitness and tennis fitness. It simulates the work-to-rest ratio of a real match, a burst of effort, a short recovery, another burst. Done correctly, it trains your body to recover faster between points, which is one of the most valuable fitness qualities in tennis.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tennis Interval Protocol

The most tennis-specific interval training method.

  • Work interval: 10 seconds of maximum effort (sprint, jump squats, or court sprints)
  • Rest interval: 20 seconds of walking
  • Repeat 10 times, that is one set
  • Rest 2 minutes between sets
  • Do 4 sets (40 work intervals total)
  • This mimics the work-to-rest ratio of a real match
🎻 Progressive Interval Programme

Build interval capacity over 6 weeks.

  • Week 1-2: 10-second work, 30-second rest, 3 sets of 10
  • Week 3-4: 10-second work, 20-second rest, 4 sets of 10
  • Week 5-6: 15-second work, 20-second rest, 4 sets of 10
  • Retest after 6 weeks: your anaerobic fitness should have improved significantly
Key Coaching Cues
10 second bursts20 second rest4 sets of 10work to rest ratioprogressive overload
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players do long steady-state cardio as their only endurance training, which does not improve the ability to recover quickly between points.

✓ The Fix

Replace 50% of your steady-state cardio with interval training. The ability to recover quickly between points is trained specifically, not by running for 45 minutes at a comfortable pace.

✅ Module Checklist
5
Module 5 ยท 3 Lessons
Flexibility & Injury Prevention
Coach says: "The best training programme in the world is useless when you are injured. Flexibility keeps your body moving efficiently. Prehabilitation prevents the four most common tennis injuries. Recovery maximises the effect of every session."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build a daily tennis-specific stretching routine
  • Understand and prevent the four most common tennis injuries
  • Develop a post-match recovery protocol
  • Optimise sleep and nutrition for tennis recovery
1
Tennis-Specific Stretching Routine
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Flexibility is injury prevention and performance enhancement in one. Tight hamstrings limit your split step. Tight shoulders limit your serve. Tight hip flexors limit your groundstroke rotation. A daily tennis-specific stretching routine keeps your body moving as it is designed to move.
Practice Drills
🎻 Pre-Match Dynamic Warm-Up

A 10-minute dynamic warm-up for before every match or practice.

  • Leg swings: 15 forward/back each leg, 15 lateral each leg
  • Hip circles: 10 each direction, both legs
  • Arm circles: 10 forward, 10 backward, progressively larger
  • Trunk rotations: 15 each direction with arms extended
  • High knees: 20 metres
  • Heel flicks: 20 metres
  • Side shuffle: 10 metres each direction
🎻 Post-Match Static Stretching Routine

A 10-minute static stretch routine for after every match.

  • Hamstring stretch: 45 seconds each leg
  • Hip flexor lunge stretch: 45 seconds each side
  • Shoulder cross-body stretch: 45 seconds each arm
  • Tricep overhead stretch: 30 seconds each arm
  • Calf stretch against wall: 45 seconds each leg
  • Spine rotation: 30 seconds each side
Key Coaching Cues
dynamic beforestatic afterdaily flexibility work10 minutes is enoughtennis specific muscles
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players skip the warm-up and go straight into full-pace hitting, increasing injury risk significantly.

✓ The Fix

Dynamic stretching before, static stretching after. Never static stretch cold muscles before playing, this reduces power output. Save your static stretching for after the session.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Common Tennis Injuries & Prevention
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Tennis elbow. Shoulder impingement. Knee pain. Ankle sprains. These are the four most common tennis injuries, and all four are largely preventable with the right prehabilitation work. Today we build your injury prevention programme.
Practice Drills
🎻 Prehabilitation Circuit

Complete these exercises 3 times per week to prevent the four most common tennis injuries.

  • Tennis elbow prevention: wrist curls with light weight (1-2kg), 3 x 15 each direction
  • Shoulder: band pull-apart, 3 x 20
  • Knee: single-leg squat with control, 3 x 10 each leg
  • Ankle: single-leg balance on unstable surface, 3 x 30 seconds each side
🎻 Warning Sign Recognition

Learn the early warning signs of each injury so you can act before it becomes serious.

  • Tennis elbow: burning sensation on outside of elbow after playing, reduce volume, add wrist strengthening
  • Shoulder: pain above 90 degrees of elevation, stop serving, see physio
  • Knee pain: pain during or after squatting or running, reduce court time, add quad and glute strengthening
  • Ankle: instability feeling or rolling, add balance training, tape before playing
Key Coaching Cues
prevent before treatprehab circuitwarning sign recognitionreduce not stopthree times per week
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players play through early injury warning signs and turn minor issues into season-ending injuries.

✓ The Fix

Pain is a signal. Discomfort during play is a signal to investigate, not ignore. Most tennis injuries give you 2-4 weeks of warning signs before they become serious. Act then, not after.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Cool Down & Recovery Protocols
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Recovery is training. The adaptations from a session happen during recovery, not during the session. Players who train hard and recover poorly improve slower than players who train moderately and recover optimally. Today we build your recovery protocol.
Practice Drills
🎻 Post-Match Recovery Protocol

Complete this sequence after every match or intense practice.

  • 5 minutes: slow walking to lower heart rate gradually
  • 10 minutes: static stretching routine (from previous lesson)
  • Ice any area that has been under stress (elbow, shoulder, knee)
  • Nutrition: protein + carbohydrates within 30 minutes of finishing
  • Hydration: 500ml water minimum in the first 30 minutes after play
🎻 Sleep Optimisation for Tennis Recovery

Build better sleep habits to maximise overnight recovery.

  • Target 7-9 hours per night, this is where muscle repair happens
  • No screens 30 minutes before bed
  • Cool room (18-20 degrees) for optimal sleep quality
  • Post-match: avoid high-stress activities in the 2 hours before bed
  • Track your sleep quality and correlate it to next-day performance
Key Coaching Cues
recovery is trainingcool down alwaysice inflamed areasnutrition window 30 minsleep is recovery
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players finish training and immediately go about their day without any recovery protocol.

✓ The Fix

The 30 minutes after training is the most valuable recovery window. Use it for nutrition, hydration, and light movement. Skip it and you waste up to 30% of the training effect.

✅ Module Checklist
6
Module 6 ยท 3 Lessons
Nutrition & Hydration
Coach says: "You cannot out-train poor nutrition. Fuel correctly before, during, and after matches and your fitness training investment returns at full value. This module builds a complete nutrition and hydration system for African tennis players."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build a tested pre-match nutrition protocol
  • Develop a hydration strategy for hot-weather tennis
  • Maximise the 30-minute post-match recovery nutrition window
  • Plan your next-day recovery nutrition for consistent performance
1
Eating for Performance: Pre-Match Nutrition
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Your nutrition 24-48 hours before a match matters as much as your warm-up. Tennis is primarily powered by carbohydrates. Protein supports muscle repair. Hydration determines every physical quality you have. Get nutrition wrong and your fitness training is partially wasted. Today we build your pre-match nutrition protocol.
Practice Drills
🎻 Pre-Match Meal Template

Build a reliable pre-match meal that fuels 3+ hours of tennis.

  • 3-4 hours before: main pre-match meal, complex carbs (rice, pasta, sweet potato), lean protein (chicken, eggs), minimal fat
  • 1-2 hours before: small top-up if needed, banana, toast, small portion of oats
  • 30-60 minutes before: nothing heavy, water, small snack only if very hungry
  • Avoid: high-fat foods, large portions within 2 hours, unfamiliar foods on match day
🎻 Pre-Match Nutrition Testing

Test your pre-match meal system before it matters.

  • Test your pre-match meal on 3 consecutive practice days
  • Note: energy levels, stomach comfort, performance quality
  • Adjust timing and food choices based on how you feel
  • Never try a new food or timing on match day
Key Coaching Cues
carbs fuel tennis3-4 hours before matchavoid fat before playingtest before match dayconsistent nutrition
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players eat a large meal 1 hour before a match and then feel heavy and sluggish.

✓ The Fix

Eat your main pre-match meal 3-4 hours before play. If you need something 1-2 hours before, keep it small and easily digestible. Big meals close to match time go to your stomach, not your legs.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Hydration Strategy for Hot Weather Tennis
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
In Nigerian heat, dehydration can reduce performance by up to 20% within 1-2 hours of play. Waiting until you feel thirsty means you are already dehydrated. Hydration is a pre-match, during-match, and post-match strategy. Today we build your tennis hydration system.
Practice Drills
🎻 Daily Hydration Baseline

Establish your daily hydration target.

  • Target: at least 35ml of water per kg of body weight per day
  • Example: 70kg player needs at least 2.45 litres per day (not counting exercise)
  • Add 500ml per hour of tennis in moderate heat
  • Add 750-1000ml per hour of tennis in heavy heat (35+ degrees)
  • Colour of urine: pale yellow = hydrated, dark yellow = drink now
🎻 On-Court Hydration Protocol

Build a drinking routine that maintains hydration throughout a match.

  • Before match: 500ml in the 2 hours before playing
  • Changeovers: 200-250ml at every changeover (every 2 games)
  • Electrolytes: add a small pinch of salt or electrolyte tablet if playing more than 90 minutes in heat
  • Post match: 500ml immediately, then continue drinking for 2 hours
Key Coaching Cues
drink before thirstychangeover drinkingelectrolytes in heatpale yellow target500ml before match
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players only drink water when they feel thirsty, which means they are already 1-2% dehydrated and performance is declining.

✓ The Fix

Drink on a schedule, not by feel. 200ml at every changeover regardless of thirst. By the time you feel thirsty in the heat, you have already lost enough fluid to affect your speed and coordination.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Post-Match Recovery Nutrition
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The 30-minute window after a match is the most valuable nutritional window of the day. Your muscles are primed to absorb nutrients and begin the repair process. Miss this window and your recovery is slower, your next practice is less effective, and your improvement rate drops.
Practice Drills
🎻 Recovery Meal Protocol

Build a consistent post-match recovery meal.

  • Within 30 minutes: 20-30g protein + fast-release carbohydrates
  • Examples: banana + protein shake, rice + chicken (if full meal accessible), eggs on toast
  • Within 2 hours: full balanced meal with protein, carbs, and vegetables
  • Avoid: alcohol post-match (significantly impairs muscle repair), high-fat meals within 2 hours of finishing
🎻 Next-Day Preparation Nutrition

Fuel the day after a match correctly.

  • Day after a match: increase carbohydrate intake to replenish glycogen
  • Increase protein slightly (1.6-2g per kg of body weight)
  • Prioritise sleep: 8+ hours to allow muscle repair
  • Light movement only if sore: walking, gentle stretching
  • No hard training for 24-48 hours after a hard match
Key Coaching Cues
30 minute windowprotein plus carbsavoid alcohol post matchfull meal within 2 hoursnext day recovery
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players finish a match and eat nothing for 2-3 hours because they are not hungry after competing.

✓ The Fix

Post-match appetite suppression is normal, adrenaline reduces hunger. But your muscles need nutrients now, not when you feel hungry. Drink a recovery shake or eat a banana with protein within 30 minutes regardless of appetite.

✅ Module Checklist
7
Module 7 ยท 3 Lessons
Peak Performance Planning
Coach says: "Fitness training without planning produces random results. This final module teaches you to periodise your year, peak for tournaments, and follow a structured 6-week programme that ties everything together."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Understand periodisation and plan your training year
  • Build a tournament week taper protocol
  • Design and follow the complete 6-week tennis fitness programme
  • Track progress and build your next training block
1
Periodisation: Planning Your Training Year
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Elite athletes do not train the same way all year. They periodise, planning phases of high training load, then lower load, then peak performance, then recovery. Without periodisation, you plateau quickly and burn out regularly. Today we build a simple, practical periodisation framework for club and competitive players.
Practice Drills
🎻 Seasonal Training Block Design

Divide your year into four training phases.

  • Off-season (8-12 weeks): high volume fitness training, technique work, less match play
  • Pre-season (4-6 weeks): reduce fitness volume, increase intensity, more practice matches
  • In-season (variable): maintain fitness, prioritise match preparation, reduce gym volume
  • Recovery (2-4 weeks): complete rest, light activity only, mental recovery
  • Map your tournament schedule and work backwards to design your phases
🎻 Weekly Load Planning

Manage your weekly training load to avoid overtraining.

  • High load week: full training schedule (3 fitness, 5 tennis)
  • Medium load week: reduce by 20%
  • Low load week: reduce by 40% (every 4th week)
  • This prevents plateauing and reduces injury risk
  • Never have more than 3 consecutive high load weeks
Key Coaching Cues
off-season pre-season in-season recoveryplan backwards from tournamentsheavy then light weeksavoid overtrainingperiodisation prevents plateau
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players train exactly the same way all year, leading to plateaus, burnout, and predictable performance drops.

✓ The Fix

Plan your year before it starts. Identify your key tournaments and work backwards. Build fitness in the off-season, sharpen it pre-season, and maintain it in-season while reducing overall load.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Peaking for Tournament Week
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Tournament week is not training week. The fitness work was done weeks earlier. Tournament week is about maintaining sharpness, reducing fatigue, and arriving on match day feeling fresh, confident, and ready. Today we build your tournament week protocol.
Practice Drills
🎻 Tournament Week Training Reduction

Taper your training correctly in the week before a major tournament.

  • Monday: light practice, no fitness training
  • Tuesday: moderate practice, technical focus
  • Wednesday: light practice, serve and return focus
  • Thursday: rest or very light hit
  • Friday: rest
  • Saturday: match day or pre-match routine day
🎻 Tournament Day Routine

Build a fixed match-day routine that you execute every tournament.

  • Wake at same time as practice days (not earlier)
  • Same breakfast you have tested and trust
  • 15-minute easy walk or dynamic mobility
  • Arrive at venue 45 minutes before match
  • Dynamic warm-up 20 minutes before match
  • Last 5 minutes: visualisation and breathing
Key Coaching Cues
taper before tournamentsreduce volume keep intensityfixed match day routinearrive freshtrust your preparation
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players train at full volume right up to match day and arrive at their most important match exhausted.

✓ The Fix

Reduce training volume by 40-60% in the week before a major tournament. Maintain intensity (speed of drills) but cut the number of repetitions. Arrive fresh, not fit.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Your 6-Week Tennis Fitness Programme
⏱ 12 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Everything you have learned in this course comes together in this final lesson: a complete 6-week tennis fitness programme that addresses all five fitness components systematically. Follow this programme and you will be measurably fitter, faster, and more resilient in 6 weeks.
Practice Drills
🎻 6-Week Programme Structure

Your complete week-by-week tennis fitness plan.

  • Week 1: Baseline testing, 3 x agility sessions, 2 x strength (legs + core)
  • Week 2: Add interval training (2 sessions), continue agility and strength
  • Week 3: Increase interval intensity, maintain strength, add upper body session
  • Week 4: Deload, reduce all volume by 40%, focus on flexibility and recovery
  • Week 5: Peak training week, all components at maximum volume
  • Week 6: Taper and retest, confirm improvements against Week 1 baseline
🎻 Progress Tracking System

Track your progress across the 6-week programme.

  • Week 1: Record all baseline test scores
  • Week 4 (deload): Quick check test, are you improving?
  • Week 6: Full retest of all baseline metrics
  • Compare: sprint time, agility T-test, endurance, flexibility
  • Celebrate improvements. Identify remaining gaps.
  • Design your next 6-week block based on remaining weaknesses
Key Coaching Cues
6 week structuredeload week 4retest week 6measure every componentbuild the next block
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players do random fitness training without structure and cannot identify whether it is working or not.

✓ The Fix

Structure creates progress. Follow the 6-week programme exactly, track your numbers weekly, and retest at the end. The data tells you exactly where to focus next. Guessing is for players without a plan.

✅ Module Checklist