🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Understand how tactical thinking differs from physical play
- Learn the mental framework for reading a match
- Develop your pattern recognition skills
- Build your opponent-scouting system
🎻 Pattern Journal
After each practice point, write down: what pattern did I play, did it work, why?
- Play 10 practice points with a partner
- After each, pause and note the pattern used
- Review at end of session, which patterns won most points?
- Repeat daily for 2 weeks
🎻 Opponent Watching Drill
Watch 15 minutes of a match (live or video) focusing only on patterns, not scores.
- Pick a player to follow
- Note their go-to pattern from deuce court
- Note their go-to pattern from ad court
- Identify what triggers their pattern changes
❌ The Problem
Players try to hit winners before they have created an opening, leading to unforced errors.
✓ The Fix
Build patterns patiently. Create the opening first, then attack when the opportunity appears.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Cone Target Drill
Place cones in the four corners of the court. Hit to each cone in sequence using cross-court and down-the-line combinations.
- Start at the baseline centre
- Hit cross-court to cone 1
- Recover to centre, hit down-the-line to cone 2
- Rotate through all four corners, 20 balls each
🎻 Angle Creation Rally
Rally with a partner where one player must always hit cross-court and the other must redirect down-the-line.
- Player A hits only cross-court
- Player B must redirect every ball down-the-line
- Switch roles after 10 minutes
- Progress to free-choice after drill phase
❌ The Problem
Players hit down-the-line from a defensive position, giving opponents an easy putaway.
✓ The Fix
Use the cross-court rally to neutralise defence. Only go down-the-line when you are in control or attacking.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Warm-Up Scouting
Use the 5-minute warm-up to gather information, not just to warm up your shots.
- Feed balls to the backhand and watch grip and footwork
- Note toss direction during serve warm-up
- Check how they move to wide balls, split step timing?
- Identify any shot they avoid or look uncomfortable with
🎻 In-Match Pattern Tracking
During changeovers, mentally review the last 4 games.
- What is their most used first serve?
- What shot do they hit under pressure?
- What pattern have they used at 30-30?
- What have I not tried yet that might disrupt them?
❌ The Problem
Players stick to one game plan even when it is clearly not working against a particular opponent.
✓ The Fix
Review every 4 games. If your plan is not working, make one specific adjustment and track the result.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Learn the high-percentage game and why it wins matches
- Understand cross-court vs down-the-line decision-making
- Identify and develop your signature pattern of play
- Build a game plan you can execute under pressure
🎻 Cross-Court King Drill
Play points starting from a rally, winner is the player who successfully changes direction with purpose.
- Start rally cross-court from baseline
- First player to successfully redirect down-the-line at the right moment wins the point
- Restart after each point
- Play 20 points, track direction-change success rate
🎻 Error Tracking Session
Play a practice set and track unforced errors by shot type and direction.
- Keep a tally: FH cross, FH DTL, BH cross, BH DTL, serve, volley
- After the set, identify your two highest-error categories
- Dedicate next session to drilling those specific shots
❌ The Problem
Players go for too much on every ball, leading to a high unforced error count.
✓ The Fix
Identify your three highest-percentage shots and build your game around them. Add risk only when you are in control.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Direction Decision Drill
Coach feeds balls alternating between central and wide positions. Player must call "cross" or "line" before hitting based on ball position.
- Coach feeds alternating central and wide balls
- Player shouts their shot selection before contact
- After 20 balls, review: was every call correct?
- Slow the drill down where decisions were wrong
🎻 Pattern Sets
Play a practice set with strict rules: can only go down-the-line when the ball is short (inside the service line).
- Set the rule before starting
- Play a full set following the rule
- Debrief: how many times did you break it?
- Why did you break it? Pressure? Habit?
❌ The Problem
Players go down-the-line from wide positions, leaving the entire court open for a winner.
✓ The Fix
From wide, always hit cross-court to recover court position. Only redirect down-the-line from central or inside-out positions.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Pattern Discovery Session
Play 30 points with a partner and track which sequences win most often for you.
- Play points and have a third person track: shot 1, shot 2, shot 3 of each point you win
- After 30 points, look for the most common winning sequence
- That is the start of your signature pattern
- Test it in your next five practice sessions
🎻 Pattern Drilling
Isolate your best two-shot combination and drill it 50 times at match pace.
- Set up your go-to starting position
- Execute your two-shot combination at full speed
- Reset after each rep
- Track how many times you land both shots in the target zone
❌ The Problem
Players play without a clear pattern, reacting to each ball rather than constructing points.
✓ The Fix
Identify your best two-shot combination and consciously look to set it up on every point. Make opponents beat your strength.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Master the three serve targets: T, body, and wide
- Develop your serve-plus-one game plan
- Build a reliable and aggressive second serve strategy
- Connect serve selection to first-ball attack patterns
🎻 Three-Target Serve Session
Serve 30 balls to each of the three targets in succession: T, body, and wide.
- Serve 30 balls targeting the T (centre of service box)
- Rest 2 minutes
- Serve 30 balls targeting the body (hip of receiver)
- Rest 2 minutes
- Serve 30 balls targeting wide corner
- Track in percentage how many land in each zone
🎻 Pattern Serve Drill
Serve to a specific target then play out the point using your pre-planned pattern.
- Choose: serve wide, then attack the open court
- Execute serve and follow with the planned next shot
- Play 20 point sequences focusing on the serve-plus-one combination
❌ The Problem
Players serve to the same spot every time, making it easy for returners to anticipate and control the return.
✓ The Fix
Use at least two serve targets per game. Mix pace, spin, and direction to keep the returner guessing.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Serve and Setup Drill
Serve to a specific target and predict where the return will go, then set up for your planned response.
- Serve wide from the deuce court
- Predict the return cross-court (highest probability)
- Move to inside-out forehand position before the return lands
- Execute inside-out forehand to open court
- Repeat 20 times, track how often the sequence works
🎻 Video Analysis Exercise
Record your service game in practice and watch the third-ball decisions.
- Record a full service game
- Watch every third ball: where did you hit, did you have a plan?
- Identify how many third balls were reactive vs planned
- Set a target: 70% planned third balls by next month
❌ The Problem
Players serve and then wait to see where the return goes before deciding what to do next.
✓ The Fix
Decide your first ball plan before you serve. The serve creates a situation; your job is to arrive in position before the return lands.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Kick Serve Development
Build a reliable kick serve that kicks high to the returner's backhand.
- Toss slightly behind and to the left (right-handers)
- Brush up and over the top of the ball at contact
- Aim 2 feet above the net at the centre strap
- Land 80% in the service box before worrying about placement
🎻 Second Serve Pressure Drill
Serve practice sets where every first serve is called out, forcing second serves only.
- Play a 10-game practice set using second serves only
- Track how many double faults
- Track how often the opponent attacks the return
- Identify if depth or placement is your bigger problem
❌ The Problem
Players push their second serve timidly to the centre of the service box, giving opponents an easy high-ball attack.
✓ The Fix
Place your second serve with intention, kick to the backhand or slice to the body. Depth and direction matter more than pace.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Train to read serve direction before contact
- Develop a compact neutralising return against big serves
- Build an aggressive attacking return off second serves
- Create return-plus-one combinations
🎻 Toss Watch Drill
Stand at the service line and watch a partner serve 30 balls without returning. Call the direction before contact.
- Partner serves from baseline
- You stand at service line and call: T, body, or wide before contact
- Track your prediction accuracy
- At first expect 40% accuracy, build to 70%+ over two weeks
🎻 Shadow Return Drill
Shadow the return movement based on your prediction before contact, then actually return.
- Use your prediction to start moving before the serve is hit
- Shadow the return footwork (split step, load, swing)
- After 10 shadow reps, add the actual return
- Focus on getting your feet right before contact
❌ The Problem
Returners wait for the ball to reach them before reacting, giving them no time to set up.
✓ The Fix
Use split step at ball toss moment and begin reading direction from shoulder angle. Move your feet before the ball crosses the net.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Block Return Drill
Partner hits flat fast serves. Return using a compact block with minimal backswing.
- Stand 1 metre behind the baseline
- Shorten your backswing to almost zero
- Use the incoming pace to redirect
- Focus on depth, land in the back third of the court
- Drill 30 returns, track how many land deep
🎻 Moonball Return Practice
Against big serves, use a heavy topspin return that lands deep to neutralise the serve advantage.
- Take the ball late and brush up heavily
- Aim for high net clearance
- Target deep to the corner
- Practice 20 returns with this technique
❌ The Problem
Players try to rip a winner off a big serve and spray it wide or long.
✓ The Fix
Focus on depth and direction only. Reduce backswing, use block technique, reset the point, and create your pattern from the next shot.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Aggressive Return Sets
Play return games where every second serve must be attacked, move inside the baseline.
- Stand on or inside the baseline
- Take the ball early, on the rise
- Drive through the ball with full swing
- Target deep cross-court or DTL with pace
- Track how many returns force short balls
🎻 Return and Attack Drill
Return the serve then follow the ball to the net on the next short ball.
- Return aggressively cross-court
- Move forward as opponent hits their first ball
- Attack any ball landing inside the service line
- Play the point out from the net
❌ The Problem
Players stand too far back on weak second serves, giving opponents time to recover and dictate.
✓ The Fix
Step in 1-2 metres inside the baseline on second serves. Take the ball early and drive aggressively cross-court. Make the server feel pressure.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Master baseline depth and cross-court rally construction
- Understand defensive vs offensive situational tennis
- Learn to open the court with direction changes
- Develop inside-out forehand as a baseline weapon
🎻 Deep Ball Baseline Drill
Rally with a partner. Any ball that lands short of the service line loses the point automatically.
- Rally cross-court from the baseline
- Any ball landing short of the service line loses the point
- Play 15 minutes
- Track how many times each player hit short
🎻 Inside-Out Forehand Pattern
Set up the inside-out forehand from the centre of the court.
- Run around your backhand in the centre
- Hit inside-out to the deuce court corner
- Look for the short ball response
- Attack down-the-line or inside-out again
❌ The Problem
Players rally without a target, hitting balls wherever they land without controlling direction or depth.
✓ The Fix
Every rally ball should have a purpose: build depth, shift direction, or create an angle. Never hit without intention.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Situation Awareness Drill
Play points where coach calls "defend" or "attack" after each ball lands, and player must respond accordingly.
- Play rally points
- After each shot lands, coach calls: DEFEND or ATTACK
- If DEFEND: hit deep, slow, high over net
- If ATTACK: drive through, aim at corner, come forward if possible
- Switch roles after 10 minutes
🎻 Recovery Position Drill
From a wide running ball, practise recovery before the opponent's next ball arrives.
- Partner hits wide ball
- Player sprints and returns
- Immediately recover to centre T
- Partner hits next ball, player must be in position
❌ The Problem
Players attack from defensive positions, going for winners from wide on the run.
✓ The Fix
When out of position, your only goal is to get back into the rally with depth and height. Reset the geometry, then look for your pattern.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Direction Change Pattern
Rally cross-court then redirect down-the-line when in control, then cross-court again.
- Rally cross-court 3 balls
- On ball 4, drive down-the-line
- Opponent returns cross-court (usually)
- Drive down-the-line again OR inside-out
- Look for the short ball
🎻 Open Court Attack Drill
Practice hitting to the open court after pulling opponent wide.
- Hit ball wide to the corner
- Opponent returns from wide position
- Open court is now available cross-court or centre
- Drive to the open court
- Play the point out
❌ The Problem
Players hit to the open court every time, making their pattern predictable and easy to anticipate.
✓ The Fix
Mix direction changes with balls back in the same direction. If they anticipate your change, punish them by going back the same way.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Identify the correct moment to attack the net
- Develop a clinical approach shot with direction
- Master volley placement for finishing at the net
- Understand approach-volley positioning angles
🎻 Approach Shot Trigger Drill
Rally until you get a ball landing inside the service line, then attack forward.
- Rally cross-court from baseline
- Any ball landing inside the service line is your trigger
- Approach to the net with a deep approach shot
- Play the point out from the net position
- Track: how many approach shots forced a weak response?
🎻 Volley Finishing Drill
Start at the net and finish off balls fed from different positions.
- Partner feeds from the baseline
- Volley the ball away to open court
- Vary: DTL volley, cross-court volley, angled volley
- Focus on punch technique, no full swing
❌ The Problem
Players approach the net on deep balls, giving opponents time to set up a passing shot.
✓ The Fix
Only approach the net off short balls (landing inside the service line) or after a wide ball opens the court. Take the ball early and close quickly.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Approach Shot Direction Drill
Hit approach shots to specific targets while moving through the ball.
- Feed is placed inside the service line
- Hit approach DTL (safest angle to close)
- Close immediately to net inside the singles sideline
- React to partner's passing attempt
- Repeat 20 times DTL, then 20 times cross-court
🎻 Approach and Cover Drill
Hit approach shot and position correctly to cover passing shot angles.
- Approach DTL to the corner
- Cover the DTL passing shot by standing inside the sideline
- Leave cross-court open (smaller angle)
- Volley any ball that comes to you
❌ The Problem
Players approach down-the-line but stand in the centre of the court, leaving both angles open.
✓ The Fix
After a DTL approach, move to cover the DTL passing shot. You can leave the cross-court angle open as it is shorter and harder.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Four-Corner Volley Drill
Place cones in four corners of the service boxes. Hit volleys to each corner in sequence.
- Stand at the net
- Partner feeds alternating low, high, wide balls
- Redirect each volley to a specific cone
- Rotate through all four corners in succession
- Track accuracy percentage
🎻 Angle Volley Drill
Practice the sharp cross-court angle volley that lands in the service box at a tight angle.
- Set up close to the net inside the service box
- Partner feeds from baseline side
- Create a sharp cross-court angle that pulls opponent off court
- Ball should land near the service line intersection
- Drill 20 balls each side
❌ The Problem
Players swing at volleys as if hitting groundstrokes, sending them long or into the net.
✓ The Fix
Shorten your backswing to nothing. Use a firm wrist and punch through the ball. Your volley power comes from the incoming pace, not your swing.
✅ Module Checklist
🎯 Module Learning Objectives
- Develop strategies for managing momentum swings
- Build a big-point system you can execute under pressure
- Learn to make targeted mid-match tactical adjustments
- Create a complete match management routine
🎻 Momentum Reset Routine
Develop a between-point routine for when you feel momentum shifting against you.
- Identify your warning signs: errors mounting, opponent getting louder, you speeding up
- At next changeover: breathe, walk slow, review your game plan
- Pick ONE tactical adjustment to make
- Execute it for the next 4 points before evaluating again
🎻 Momentum Press Practice
Play practice points where the winner of the previous point must press immediately.
- Play rally points
- Winner serves immediately (no rest)
- Loser gets 30 seconds
- Discuss after 20 points: how did momentum feel?
❌ The Problem
Players try to make dramatic tactical changes every time they lose a few points, creating confusion and errors.
✓ The Fix
Make only one tactical adjustment at a time. Give it 4 games before changing again. Consistency of plan outperforms constant changes.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Pressure Point Simulation
Play practice sets where coach announces pressure points and tracks how each player performs.
- Play a standard practice set
- At 30-30 each game, coach announces "big point"
- Player must state their plan before the point is played
- Track: how often does the plan get executed?
- How often does the player revert to their favourite shot under pressure?
🎻 Clutch Serve Practice
Practise serving under simulated pressure with consequences.
- Set a target: 10 first serves in a row to the T
- If you miss, restart from zero
- Progress to: 10 second serves kick to the backhand in a row
- Add peer pressure: someone watching
❌ The Problem
Players abandon their tactical plan on big points and try to hit winners they have not practised.
✓ The Fix
On big points, revert to your signature pattern. Your most practised shots under your most reliable pattern. Boring wins matches.
✅ Module Checklist
🎻 Tactical Timeout Drill
In practice sets, take a 90-second timeout every 4 games to review and adjust.
- Play 4 games
- Take 90-second tactical timeout
- Answer: what is working, what is not, what will I change?
- Play 4 more games with the adjustment
- Repeat
🎻 Opponent Pattern Counter Drill
Partner announces their game plan, you practise countering it.
- Partner states: "I will attack your backhand all match"
- You develop and drill your backhand counter pattern
- Next round, partner changes plan
- You must identify and adjust within 10 points
❌ The Problem
Players make no adjustments during a match, continuing to do the same thing even as it fails.
✓ The Fix
After every 4 games, ask: what is my opponent's pattern? What can I do differently? Make one targeted change, not a complete overhaul.