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Mental Performance & Match Psychology

The match is won or lost between your ears. Learn the mental skills, focus, resilience, pressure management, that separate champions from talented players.

๐ŸŽฌ 21 Video Lessons๐Ÿ“š 7 Modulesโฑ 5 Weeks๐Ÿ“„ Mental Skills Workbook๐Ÿ† Certificate๐Ÿ‘จ Coach Kazeem Rasaki ยท ITF/PTR Certified
Start Learning Free โ†’
1
Module 1 ยท 3 Lessons
The Mental Game Foundation
Coach says: "The mental game is not a soft extra. It is the deciding factor in close matches at every level. Before you can improve it, you need to understand it and measure where you currently are."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Understand the scientific importance of the mental game
  • Develop the champion mindset framework
  • Build self-awareness of your mental patterns
  • Create your mental game priority list
1
Why the Mental Game Matters More Than You Think
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
At 6-6 in the final set, both players have the same physical fitness. Both have the same technique. The point goes to the player who handles the moment best. That is the mental game. Research consistently shows that above a basic technical level, mental factors account for 50 to 90 percent of match outcomes. Today we establish why mental training is not optional.
Practice Drills
🎻 Match Reflection Exercise

Think of your last five losses and identify how many were primarily mental.

  • Write down your last 5 losses
  • For each, rate: was the loss due to technical or mental factors?
  • Technical: opponent was physically better
  • Mental: you made errors from nerves, anger, or poor concentration
  • Count how many were mental. This is your mental game priority number.
🎻 Mental Game Audit

Rate yourself honestly on 10 mental skills from 1 to 10.

  • Rate: focus, calm under pressure, self-confidence, resilience, emotional control, concentration, positive self-talk, competitive drive, adaptability, pre-match routine
  • Total your score out of 100
  • Below 60: mental game is significantly limiting your performance
  • Identify your three lowest scores, these are your training priorities
Key Coaching Cues
mental game is trainable50-90% of match outcomesphysical baseline then mentalprioritise weakest areasmental audit
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players believe mental toughness is something you either have or do not have, a fixed trait.

✓ The Fix

Mental toughness is a skill. It is trained through deliberate practice just like a forehand. You can build it with the right techniques and repetition.

✅ Module Checklist
2
The Champion Mindset
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Champions think differently. Not in obvious ways, they still feel nerves, frustration, and self-doubt. But they process those feelings differently. They see problems as challenges. They focus on what they can control. They commit fully to the next point regardless of what happened on the last. Today we build that mindset framework.
Practice Drills
🎻 Controllables List

Write down everything you can and cannot control in a tennis match.

  • Draw two columns: CAN CONTROL / CANNOT CONTROL
  • Fill in both sides honestly
  • Can control: effort, attitude, between-point routine, strategy, communication, preparation
  • Cannot control: opponent's level, weather, line calls, crowd, draw
  • Commit to focusing only on the left column during matches
🎻 Challenge Reframe Drill

Practice turning threat language into challenge language.

  • Write down your three most common negative match thoughts
  • Example: "I always choke at 5-5"
  • Reframe each as a challenge: "5-5 is my chance to prove what I have trained for"
  • Read your reframed statements out loud before your next 5 practices
Key Coaching Cues
focus on controllablesthreat vs challengeprocess not outcomenext point onlycommit fully
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players dwell on factors they cannot control (opponent's level, bad luck, draws) which drains energy and focus.

✓ The Fix

Write your controllables list and put it in your bag. Before matches, remind yourself: energy only goes into the left column.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Self-Awareness: Knowing Your Mental Patterns
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
You cannot fix a problem you have not identified. Most players know exactly what technical error they make under pressure. Far fewer know what mental error they make. Do you speed up? Tighten your grip? Stop trusting your serve? Avoid the net? Today we build your mental pattern map.
Practice Drills
🎻 Pattern Tracking Journal

Keep a mental game journal for the next 4 weeks.

  • After every match or practice, write for 5 minutes
  • Note: what was my mental state at the start?
  • Where did I lose focus first?
  • What triggered my biggest mental dip?
  • What worked? What do I want to do differently?
🎻 Video Review Mental Check

Watch your own match video focusing only on body language and behaviour patterns.

  • Watch a match video with sound off
  • Track: what does your body language say after errors?
  • Do you walk slower, faster? Look at your strings?
  • When do you look most confident?
  • Make a list of your most common mental pattern behaviours
Key Coaching Cues
know your patternsjournal after every matchbody language is dataidentify triggersself-awareness first
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players repeat the same mental errors in every match without ever identifying what they are.

✓ The Fix

Start a mental journal. The simple act of writing after each match creates the self-awareness needed to change patterns over time.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Module 2 ยท 3 Lessons
Focus & Concentration
Coach says: "Concentration is a skill. Like a muscle, it can be trained and it fatigues. Learn to stay present through a between-point routine, present-moment mantras, and a distraction refocus system."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build a personalised between-point routine
  • Develop present-moment focus skills
  • Create a refocus system for when distractions occur
  • Train concentration as a deliberate mental skill
1
The Between-Point Ritual
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The between-point routine is the most important mental performance tool in tennis. You have 20 seconds between points. How you use those 20 seconds determines your mental state for the next point. Champions use a fixed routine: turn away, breathe, recover, walk slowly, prepare. Today we build your routine.
Practice Drills
🎻 20-Second Routine Design

Build your personalised between-point routine.

  • After the point ends: turn away from the opponent
  • Take two slow breaths (4 counts in, 4 counts out)
  • Walk at a controlled pace to your position
  • Look at your strings (physical anchor)
  • Decide your tactical plan for next point
  • Set your feet, bounce once, begin
🎻 Routine Enforcement Practice

Enforce your routine in practice by having a partner time you.

  • Partner holds a stopwatch
  • After each point, execute your full routine
  • Partner calls "time" if your routine is rushed or incomplete
  • Practise until the routine runs automatically without thinking about it
Key Coaching Cues
turn away firstbreathe slowlywalk do not rushstrings as anchoralways the same routine
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players rush immediately into the next point when they are losing, becoming faster and more erratic.

✓ The Fix

Speed kills concentration in tennis. Deliberately slow down after errors. Walk to the baseline at half speed. Breathe. Reset. Only then prepare for the next point.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Staying Present: One Point at a Time
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The past cannot be changed. The future has not happened. The only point you can influence is the one happening right now. Every second you spend thinking about the last unforced error is a second you are not focused on the current point. The greatest mental skill in tennis is learning to stay present, completely and consistently.
Practice Drills
🎻 Present-Focus Mantras

Develop 3-5 short mantras that bring you back to the present moment.

  • Write down 5 short present-focus phrases
  • Examples: "This point", "Here now", "Next ball", "Stay here", "Focus"
  • Choose the two that resonate most with you
  • Use them between every point during your next 5 practices
  • Evaluate: which one brings you back fastest?
🎻 Breathing Anchor Practice

Use a breathing technique as your present-moment anchor.

  • After each point, take one breath: 4 counts in through the nose, 4 counts hold, 4 counts out through the mouth
  • This activates the parasympathetic nervous system
  • The physical act of breathing pulls focus into the body, not the mind
  • Practise this 20 times per day, not just in tennis
Key Coaching Cues
one point at a timepast is gonebreathe to returnmantra for nowstay present
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players mentally replay the last 3 errors while trying to play the current point.

✓ The Fix

After an error, give yourself exactly 3 seconds of reaction. Then use your between-point routine to reset completely. The current point deserves 100% of your attention.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Dealing with Distractions On and Off Court
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Distractions are part of the game. Noise from the next court. A call you disagree with. A spectator. Your phone buzzing in your bag. Champions do not eliminate distractions. They have a system for refocusing quickly when distractions occur. Today we build your refocus system.
Practice Drills
🎻 Distraction Simulation Drill

Practise with deliberate distractions to build refocus skills.

  • Ask a friend to distract you during practice points in any way
  • Noise, sudden movement, questions, comments
  • After each distraction, use your between-point routine to refocus
  • Track: how long does it take to refocus fully?
  • Goal: refocus in 15 seconds or less
🎻 Refocus Word Drill

Create a personal refocus word and train it to trigger concentration.

  • Choose one word that means "focus now" to you
  • Say it internally every time you are distracted
  • Pair it with a physical action (tap racket strings, adjust cap)
  • Train this pairing in practice so it works automatically in matches
Key Coaching Cues
distractions are part of tennisrefocus systemword plus physical anchor15 second refocus goaltrain the refocus
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players become increasingly agitated by distractions, using energy and focus fighting things they cannot control.

✓ The Fix

Accept that distractions will happen. Your job is not to eliminate them but to refocus faster than your opponent after they occur.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Module 3 ยท 3 Lessons
Managing Nerves & Pressure
Coach says: "Nerves are not your enemy. Unmanaged nerves are. Learn to use anxiety productively, control your nervous system through breathing, and perform to your training level on the biggest points."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Identify your optimal performance anxiety zone
  • Use physiological breathing techniques to manage pressure
  • Build a big-point routine that delivers under stress
  • Understand why preparation, not mental tricks, wins big points
1
Understanding Anxiety: When Nerves Help vs Hurt
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Nerves are not your enemy. At the right level, anxiety is your body preparing to perform, heart pumping oxygen to muscles, heightened focus, faster reactions. At too high a level, anxiety tightens muscles, disrupts technique, and narrows thinking. The goal is not to eliminate nerves. It is to use them.
Practice Drills
🎻 Anxiety Level Assessment

Learn to identify your optimal performance anxiety level.

  • Rate your anxiety before your last 5 matches from 1-10
  • Rate your performance in those matches from 1-10
  • Find the pattern: at what anxiety level did you perform best?
  • This is your Optimal Performance Zone, typically between 4 and 7
  • Develop strategies to raise anxiety if below 4 and lower if above 7
🎻 Reappraisal Practice

Practice reappraising nervous feelings as excitement and readiness.

  • Before your next practice, identify any nervousness
  • Instead of thinking "I am nervous", say "I am excited"
  • These two states have identical physiology
  • The reappraisal changes how you interpret the feeling
  • Practice this reappraisal before 10 practices in a row
Key Coaching Cues
optimal anxiety zonenerves are informationreappraise nervousnessexcitement not fearuse your adrenaline
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players interpret all pre-match nerves as a sign they will perform poorly.

✓ The Fix

Nerves mean your body is preparing to compete. Say to yourself: "I am ready, my body is ready." Use the energy, do not fight it.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Breathing Techniques for Match Pressure
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Breathing is the most direct access point to your nervous system. You cannot think your way out of panic. But you can breathe your way out of it. Box breathing, physiological sigh, and tactical breathing have been used by elite athletes and military personnel to manage high-pressure situations. Today we build your match breathing toolkit.
Practice Drills
🎻 Box Breathing Protocol

Master the box breathing technique for pre-match and between-set use.

  • Inhale for 4 counts
  • Hold for 4 counts
  • Exhale for 4 counts
  • Hold for 4 counts
  • This is one box. Do 4-6 boxes before a match or during a changeover
🎻 Physiological Sigh

Learn the fastest way to calm your nervous system during a match.

  • Double inhale through the nose (quick second inhale after the first)
  • Long exhale through the mouth
  • This specifically deflates the alveoli in the lungs and activates the parasympathetic system
  • Can be done in 3 seconds between points
  • Practise 10 times before your next match
Key Coaching Cues
box breathingphysiological sighbreathe to calm4 counts in 4 outuse at changeover
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players try to calm themselves by thinking positive thoughts, which rarely works when adrenaline is high.

✓ The Fix

Thinking cannot override physiology under high pressure. Breathing can. When panic hits, do not think, breathe. Two physiological sighs will calm you faster than any thought.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Performing on Big Points
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The big point is not where champions are born. It is where preparation is tested. If your serve is reliable in practice, it should be reliable on match point. If your forehand is solid at 0-0, it should be solid at 5-5. The difference between players who deliver on big points and those who do not is almost entirely preparation and routine. Today we close that gap.
Practice Drills
🎻 Big Point Simulation

Create practice conditions where every point has exaggerated importance.

  • Play practice points starting at 6-6 in a final set
  • Before each point, state your tactical plan out loud
  • Execute the plan regardless of previous point result
  • Debrief: did the pressure change your decisions or mechanics?
  • What do you need to train more to close the gap?
🎻 Serve Routine on Big Points

Develop a fixed pre-serve routine for big points.

  • Before a big point serve, take 2 extra seconds
  • Bounce ball 3 times (not 5, not 7, always 3)
  • Take one deep breath
  • Look at target
  • Execute your planned serve, not your favourite, your planned one
  • Repeat this routine until it is completely automatic
Key Coaching Cues
routine is the shieldplan before big pointssame technique same routinepreparation not lucktrust what you trained
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players abandon their normal routine on big points, trying something different or improvising.

✓ The Fix

Big points demand your most reliable, most practised response. Revert to your routine and your signature pattern. Creativity is for practice. Reliability is for big points.

✅ Module Checklist
4
Module 4 ยท 3 Lessons
Emotional Control
Coach says: "Emotional control is not suppressing feelings. It is managing how quickly you recover from them. Learn anger management, error recovery, and the power of body language as a mental tool."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Map your anger triggers and plan responses
  • Build a 3-second error recovery protocol
  • Use body language deliberately as a mental performance tool
  • Create a peak state anchor for match day confidence
1
Anger Management On Court
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Anger is a concentration disruptor. A moment of anger, smashing a racket, arguing a call, berating yourself, costs you the next 2-3 points of focus. Your opponent knows this and may deliberately provoke it. Today we build an anger management system that keeps your focus intact regardless of what happens.
Practice Drills
🎻 Anger Trigger Mapping

Identify your three biggest anger triggers on court.

  • Write down the last 5 times you lost your composure on court
  • What triggered each episode? Bad line call? Own error? Opponent behaviour? Crowd?
  • Rank them from most to least triggering
  • For each trigger, write your planned response
  • Practice your planned response in the next 5 matches
🎻 10-Second Rule

Give yourself exactly 10 seconds of any emotion after a point, then reset.

  • After a point that triggers anger, allow yourself 10 seconds
  • Do not suppress the feeling, acknowledge it internally
  • After 10 seconds, begin your between-point routine
  • The routine is the reset switch
  • Practice timing 10 seconds on your watch during training
Key Coaching Cues
10 second ruleacknowledge then resettriggers are predictableroutine is the resetopponent cannot tilt you
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players let anger compound across multiple games, with each subsequent error increasing frustration.

✓ The Fix

Use the 10-second rule. Feel the anger, then reset deliberately. The player who controls their emotional recovery controls the pace and energy of the match.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Bouncing Back After Errors
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Every player hits errors. Every champion hits errors. What separates them from everyone else is not fewer errors but faster recovery from errors. The error is not the problem. The reaction to the error is. One unforced error should cost you one point. Not two, not four. One.
Practice Drills
🎻 3-Second Error Response Practice

Train a positive error response that becomes automatic.

  • After every error in practice, do this exact sequence: fist clench once, say "Next" internally, walk away
  • The physical release (fist clench) acknowledges the frustration
  • The word ("Next") redirects attention
  • The walk-away is your commitment to the present
  • Do this for every error in 10 consecutive practices until it is automatic
🎻 Error Count Challenge

Play a practice set with the specific goal of keeping errors to single impact.

  • Play a set with a partner
  • For every error, track how many points it actually cost you (directly or through lost focus)
  • A good mental game means every error costs exactly 1 point
  • A poor mental game means one error costs 2-5 points through follow-on focus loss
Key Coaching Cues
one error one point3 second resetfist clench then nextwalk away forwardmove on fast
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players hit one error then think about it for the next 3 points, losing those points from distraction rather than technique.

✓ The Fix

One error = one point lost. No more. Use your 3-second response protocol, physical release, reset word, walk away, and make your errors cost exactly what they are worth.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Body Language: Looking Confident When You Feel Nervous
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Your body language affects your opponent and it affects you. Slouched shoulders, slow shuffling, head down, these signals tell your opponent you are struggling and they tell your own brain to produce more stress hormones. Power poses and confident movement signal the opposite. Today we use body language as a mental performance tool.
Practice Drills
🎻 Power Walk Practice

Practise walking with athletic, confident body language between points.

  • Walk from one side of the court to the other with: head up, shoulders back and relaxed, purposeful pace
  • Do this regardless of the score
  • Have a partner film you and evaluate: does your walk signal confidence or defeat?
  • Repeat until confident walking is your default regardless of score
🎻 Peak State Anchor

Create a physical anchor for your best competitive state.

  • Think of your best match performance, a moment when you felt completely in the zone
  • Notice how your body felt: posture, breathing, tension level
  • Create a physical cue (fist pump, shoulder roll, cap touch) that represents that state
  • Every time you perform the cue, your brain begins to recreate that state
  • Use the cue at the start of every match and after every break point won
Key Coaching Cues
head up alwaysshoulders backpower walkconfident even losinganchor your best state
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players display defeated body language when behind, which signals weakness to opponents and accelerates their own mental decline.

✓ The Fix

A rule: walk as if you are winning, regardless of the score. Your body tells your brain how to feel. Confident body language creates confident feelings even when the score does not.

✅ Module Checklist
5
Module 5 ยท 3 Lessons
Confidence & Self-Belief
Coach says: "Confidence is not a feeling you wait for. It is a state you build through evidence, preparation, and deliberate mental rehearsal. This module teaches you to earn, maintain, and deploy confidence on match day."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build evidence-based confidence through a preparation log
  • Develop a pre-match visualisation protocol
  • Master positive and instructional self-talk
  • Replace negative evaluative self-talk with specific process instructions
1
Building Real Confidence
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Real confidence is not telling yourself you are great. It is the accumulated evidence of having done the work. It comes from preparation, from hours of deliberate practice, from competing in difficult situations and coming through them. False confidence ("I am amazing") collapses under pressure. Evidence-based confidence holds.
Practice Drills
🎻 Confidence Evidence Log

Build a log of concrete evidence for your tennis confidence.

  • Write 20 specific things you have done in tennis that you are proud of
  • Not vague ("I am good") but specific ("I held serve in a 6-5 tiebreak situation")
  • Include: training achievements, match performances, technical improvements
  • Read this log before every match
  • Add to it after every session
🎻 Preparation = Confidence Practice

Track your preparation quality before a match to predict your confidence level.

  • Before each match, rate your last week of preparation from 1-10
  • Note: sleep, nutrition, practice hours and quality, serve practice
  • Players with 8+ preparation scores enter matches with earned confidence
  • Identify: what preparation specifically builds your confidence most?
Key Coaching Cues
earned confidenceevidence basedpreparation builds confidencespecific not vagueread your evidence log
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players try to build confidence through positive thinking without backing it up with preparation.

✓ The Fix

Confidence is earned, not invented. Prepare more than your opponent. Know more about your game than they know about yours. Your preparation gives you the right to feel confident.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Pre-Match Preparation & Visualisation
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Champions do not arrive at the court and hope for the best. They have already played the match in their minds. Visualisation is not wishful thinking. It is neurological rehearsal. The brain fires the same motor patterns whether you are physically performing an action or vividly imagining it. Today we build your pre-match visualisation protocol.
Practice Drills
🎻 10-Minute Match Visualisation

Build a guided visualisation for the night before a match.

  • Sit in a quiet place, close your eyes
  • Visualise: walking onto the court with confident body language
  • Visualise your warm-up routine going perfectly
  • Visualise your serve hitting the target on the first big point
  • Visualise handling adversity, coming back from 2-5 down in the final set
  • End with: winning the last point and the feeling of achievement
🎻 Process Visualisation vs Outcome Visualisation

Understand the difference between these two and train the right one.

  • Outcome visualisation: "I imagine winning"
  • Process visualisation: "I imagine executing my game plan"
  • Research shows process visualisation improves performance; outcome visualisation increases anxiety
  • Practise 5 minutes of process visualisation before your next 5 sessions
  • Notice the effect on your confidence and focus
Key Coaching Cues
visualise process not outcomeneurological rehearsalnight before matchconfident arrivalhandle adversity
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players visualise winning (outcome) rather than performing their game plan (process), which increases pressure.

✓ The Fix

Switch from outcome visualisation to process visualisation. Imagine yourself serving to your target, executing your patterns, recovering from adversity. The win follows from the process.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Positive Self-Talk That Actually Works
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
The voice in your head is either your best coach or your worst critic. Most players allow negative self-talk to run unchecked during matches: "You are so weak", "Same mistake again", "You cannot serve". These statements reduce performance measurably. But the replacement is not hollow positivity. It is specific, process-focused instruction.
Practice Drills
🎻 Self-Talk Audit

Identify and categorise your most common match self-talk statements.

  • Write down 10 things you say to yourself during matches
  • Categorise each: positive instructional, positive emotional, negative evaluative, negative emotional
  • Count how many of each category you have
  • Negative evaluative (you are terrible) is the most harmful type
  • Make a plan to replace every negative evaluative statement
🎻 Replacement Statement Practice

Replace your negative evaluative self-talk with specific positive instructions.

  • Take your 3 most common negative statements
  • Write a specific instructional replacement for each
  • Example: "Terrible serve" becomes "Toss higher and drive through"
  • Practise saying the replacement immediately after the negative thought arises
  • Do this in 10 practices before expecting it to be automatic in matches
Key Coaching Cues
instructional self-talkreplace not suppressspecific not vaguecoach voice not criticprocess instructions
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players try to replace negative self-talk with generic positivity ("I am great!") which feels false and does not stick.

✓ The Fix

Use instructional self-talk instead. Replace "You are terrible" with "Toss higher." Replace "You always choke" with "Breathe and trust your serve." Specific instructions work; vague encouragement does not.

✅ Module Checklist
6
Module 6 ยท 3 Lessons
Competitive Toughness
Coach says: "Competitive toughness is a decision. It is choosing to fight on every point, to find a way to win on bad days, and to reset completely after losing a set. This module builds that fighting spirit systematically."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Commit to 100% competitive effort on every single point
  • Develop a backup game plan for when primary weapons fail
  • Build a first-set-loss comeback and reset protocol
  • Train the fighter mentality that wins ugly matches
1
Playing Tough: Fighting Spirit in Every Point
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Competitive toughness is the willingness to fight for every point, even when it is inconvenient, even when you are tired, even when losing looks inevitable. It is not talent. It is not technique. It is a decision. Today we build the framework for competitive toughness.
Practice Drills
🎻 100% Effort Commitment Drill

Play a practice set with a single rule: 100% effort on every point, no exceptions.

  • Before the set, commit to 100% effort on every point
  • Define effort: full sprint for every ball, full routine between points, full tactical intent
  • After the set, rate your consistency: how many points got 100%?
  • Identify which situations caused you to drop below 100%
  • Those situations are your mental training priorities
🎻 Fight-Back Practice

Start every practice set from 0-5 down and practise fighting back.

  • Start each set at 0-5
  • Play out the rest of the set fully
  • Track your win-back percentage over 10 sessions
  • The act of starting from a deficit trains fight-back mentality
  • Discuss: what happens to your mindset when you start 0-5?
Key Coaching Cues
every point matters100% effort alwaysfight from any scoredecision not talentcompetitive toughness is trained
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players reduce effort when they are far behind or far ahead, treating some points as less important.

✓ The Fix

Every point is 100% important because every point develops either good or bad habits. Effort is a habit that must be trained consistently, not turned on only when the match is close.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Winning While Playing Poorly
⏱ 12 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Every player has days when nothing is working. The serve misfires. The forehand is spraying. The timing is off. The question on those days is: can you find a way to win without your best game? Champions can. They adjust, fight, scramble, and grind out results on days when they have no right to win.
Practice Drills
🎻 Bad Day Game Plan

Build a specific game plan for when your primary weapons are not working.

  • Identify your two strongest shots on a good day
  • Identify what you do when those shots fail
  • Build a backup plan: if forehand is off, what is your alternative pattern?
  • Example: forehand off = rally with backhand, slice approach, come to net
  • Practise this backup plan once per week regardless of form
🎻 Ugly Win Drill

Play a practice set where you must win using only defensive and consistent tennis.

  • No attacking shots: baseline only, high percentage, minimal winners
  • Score: how many games can you win using only defence and consistency?
  • Discuss: can you win points without your weapons?
  • This builds a fighting mentality that has nothing to do with stroke quality
Key Coaching Cues
backup game plandefensive winningconsistency over brilliancefind a waygrind
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players give up mentally when their primary weapons are off, playing without conviction.

✓ The Fix

Develop a "day one" game plan for when your weapons are not working: maximum consistency, high balls, deep returns, and net approaches on any short ball. You do not need to play well to compete.

✅ Module Checklist
3
The Comeback: Overcoming a Bad First Set
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Losing the first set is not losing the match. At most levels, players who lose the first set win the match 30-40% of the time. But only if they reset mentally at the start of the second set. The changeover after the first set is the most important mental reset in tennis. Today we build your comeback framework.
Practice Drills
🎻 First Set Reset Protocol

Develop a fixed mental reset protocol for after losing the first set.

  • Sit down at the changeover
  • Take 3 box breaths
  • Ask: what one thing will I do differently in the second set?
  • Answer with something specific and controllable
  • Commit to it for the first 3 games of the second set
  • Evaluate and adjust if needed
🎻 Second Set Start Practice

Practise starting the second set fresh, regardless of first set result.

  • Play a set and deliberately treat the start of the second set as a new match
  • New tactics, new energy, new focus
  • Tell yourself: "New match, 0-0, let's go"
  • Track: how often do you start the second set stronger when you use this reset?
Key Coaching Cues
changeover reset protocolnew match mentalityone tactical change30-40% comeback ratefresh start second set
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players carry the emotional weight of the first set into the second, starting 0-0 but mentally at 0-6.

✓ The Fix

The second set is a new match. When you walk onto the court for the second set, your only focus is the first game of the second set. The first set score exists only as information for your tactical adjustment, not as emotional baggage.

✅ Module Checklist
7
Module 7 ยท 3 Lessons
Long-Term Mental Development
Coach says: "Mental toughness is not built in a week. It is built through daily practice, systematic review of losses, and goal-directed training over months and years. This module sets you up for long-term mental growth."
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
  • Build a daily mental training routine of at least 10 minutes
  • Develop a structured post-loss review system
  • Learn from losses quickly and move forward without dwelling
  • Create a three-level goal system for mental and technical development
1
Building a Mental Training Routine
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Physical fitness requires a training routine. Mental fitness is no different. Without deliberate mental training between matches, mental skills atrophy just like unexercised muscles. Today we build a daily and weekly mental training routine that fits around your tennis schedule.
Practice Drills
🎻 Daily Mental Training Plan

Build a 10-minute daily mental training routine.

  • Morning (5 minutes): read your confidence evidence log, set one mental intention for the day
  • Pre-practice (3 minutes): process visualisation for your main practice goal
  • Post-practice (2 minutes): journal, what was my mental highlight? What will I improve?
  • Weekly: listen to a sports psychology podcast or read one mental game article
🎻 Mental Skills Priority Practice

Assign one mental skill to each practice session.

  • Monday: focus and between-point routine
  • Wednesday: self-talk monitoring
  • Friday: competitive toughness (100% effort commitment)
  • Match day: pre-match visualisation and breathing protocol
  • Track: which session produces the best mental performance?
Key Coaching Cues
daily mental training10 minutes per dayjournal every sessionmental skill rotationconsistency over intensity
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players do mental training only when they are performing poorly rather than as a daily practice.

✓ The Fix

Build mental training into your daily schedule regardless of how you are performing. Ten minutes per day of deliberate mental practice compounds over a season into significant performance improvement.

✅ Module Checklist
2
Learning from Losses Without Dwelling
⏱ 8 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Losses are data. Champions treat them as such. They review what happened, extract the lessons, make adjustments, and move forward. They do not dwell, ruminate, or allow a loss to define their identity. Today we build a post-loss review system that extracts maximum learning with minimum psychological damage.
Practice Drills
🎻 24-Hour Loss Review Protocol

A structured review to be done exactly 24 hours after a loss.

  • Wait 24 hours (emotional distance is essential)
  • Write: what was the scoreline and key turning points?
  • Write: what tactical adjustments could I have made?
  • Write: what mental factors contributed to the loss?
  • Write: what is the one thing I will train this week based on this loss?
  • Put the notebook away. The review is complete. Move forward.
🎻 Loss-to-Lesson Reframe

Practise reframing losses as specific lessons.

  • Write your most recent significant loss
  • Identify 3 specific lessons from that match
  • Write each as: "I learned that I need to..."
  • Schedule when you will train that specific area
  • Losses that produce clear training targets are wins in disguise
Key Coaching Cues
24 hour ruleextract then move onloss as data3 lessons per lossclose the review
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players dwell on losses for days, repeating the emotional pain without extracting the lessons.

✓ The Fix

Review, extract, close. That is the system. 24 hours after a loss, spend 20 minutes reviewing it properly. Extract 3 lessons. Schedule when you will train them. Then close the book on that match permanently.

✅ Module Checklist
3
Goal Setting for Mental and On-Court Growth
⏱ 10 min
Coach Script
🎥 Video Script
Goals give direction to your training. Without goals, you practise without purpose. Without purpose, you improve slowly. With clear, specific, measurable goals, every session has a target and every match has a benchmark. Today we build a goal-setting system that drives both mental and technical improvement.
Practice Drills
🎻 Three-Level Goal System

Build goals at three levels: outcome, performance, and process.

  • Outcome goal: what do you want to achieve? (tournament ranking, winning a specific event)
  • Performance goal: what standard will get you there? (70% first serve, 3.0 UTR)
  • Process goal: what daily actions will achieve the performance? (100 serves per day, 10 minutes mental training)
  • Write one goal at each level
  • Review monthly, adjust performance and process goals, but keep outcome goal stable
🎻 Weekly Mental Goal Practice

Set and review one mental goal per week.

  • Every Monday: set one specific mental goal for the week
  • Example: "This week I will execute my between-point routine after 100% of errors"
  • Track daily: did I achieve my mental goal?
  • Review Friday: what was my success rate?
  • Adjust for the following week
Key Coaching Cues
three level goalsoutcome performance processweekly mental goaltrack dailyreview monthly
Common Mistake
❌ The Problem

Players set only outcome goals ("I want to win the tournament") which are outside their control.

✓ The Fix

Outcome goals inspire you. Process goals get you there. Focus 80% of your goal energy on process and performance goals, things entirely within your control. The outcomes follow.

✅ Module Checklist