|

By David Sammel LTA Head Coach,
Leeds National Academy.
One of the most difficult jobs for a coach is managing expectation.
Expecting too little of a player or too much can be equally damaging
to a players progress. The other mix in the equation are players’
own expectations which they need to learn how to manage and our
job is to give them tools to help this management process. Similarly
the coach may well find he also has to deal with the pressures of
3rd party expectations such as parents, management companies, sponsors,
governing bodies or even imaginary pressures.
Wouldn’t it be great if all parties involved understood expectation
in the same way and could discuss it using the same method of evaluation?
After years of trying many different ways and methods to manage
expectation I hit upon the idea of combining the long-term goals
with short-term goals and also the dreaded results versus building
the game for the future debate into one graph. This graph also has
the added advantage of giving players hope during the bad times
and a kick up the proverbial if they become complacent during a
good run of results.
Graph 1: Working hard to improve your game but
results are poor.
 |
– Anxiety and stress higher during this period due to
poor results. The longer a player has been playing the worse
this generally will be unless convinced the process will bring
results eventually.
–
Hard to believe in yourself when losing often.
–
Cannot see yourself winning. |
Building foundation – results lagging. Important to practice
and play matches with a positivism that one never knows when it
will turn around. Cultivate a feeling that progress is being made
in your foundation
Graph 2: Player gets on a roll and confidence is
so high that player overshoots their foundation – results
are achieved at a level higher than expected.
 |
- Everything clicks into place and luck runs with
you
–
Winning is a habit. Feel like you cannot lose
- Belief
is part of the foundation. If a player does not get complacent
or begin to over expect this is the perfect time to quickly
close the gap between the base and the results as it is easy
to learn when confident. Time to work harder because sport
is most fun when flying with momentum |
Graph 3: If a player gets complacent or begins
to have unrealistic expectations then after the first couple of
losses there is a drain in confidence. The player will quickly bypass
the foundation in a negative direction.
 |
– Player will often bluff, blame and make
excuses for this bad spell.
–
The player tends to be sulky and ask questions like ‘How
can I lose to this guy?
–
High stress detracts from good practice further damaging game
recovery. |
Graph 4: The key is the attitude to the work and
the understanding. Players and coaches need a spirit of continued
respect for the process of learning.
 |
– If the work ethic remains constant the process
remains important not only results
– The player and those around him have a good grip on
where a player is and what can be achieved if things go right
on the day. Positive but not predictive!
– High stress detracts
from good practice and although no player is ever without
stress the belief in their programme keeps a more laid back
attitude to challenges most of the time. |
It is important to realise that equality between the foundation
and results is never found. The ideal is steady improvement to the
foundation and the results tend to fluctuate a few notches either
way depending on confidence levels
Summary examples:
Player A is a hard worker with a great attitude. He finally has
a big move from 180 to 90 in the rankings but his game (foundation)
is not quite solid enough to warrant a consistent top 100 ranking.
The inevitable happens and he loses a few first rounds, confidence
drains and doubt creeps in and over a period of 6 months his ranking
drops back to 140. He works hard all through this period but apart
from the bad results his game seems to have deserted him no matter
how hard he tries to improve. Although frustrated his attitude to
practice is still positive and his poor play sometimes translates
into humour. Suddenly he wins a match he should have lost. Things
begin to click and he begins the roll of his life. He rises to 80
in the world and finds himself comfortable this time because his
foundation is now strong enough to cope. The meteoric rise continues
to top 15 over 12 months touching 10 in the world. The wheels begin
to slow and losses mount up. The ranking is higher than the foundation
but his work ethic throughout has taken his foundation a long way
so he drops back to around 30. The next time he goes to top 10 he
will stay but may overshoot to top 5 before slipping back to 8 or
9 etc.
It is important to understand that a player’s ranking will
eventually settle inline with his base foundation and results will
fluctuate according to confidence, momentum and experience.
Player B is a hard worker with a great attitude in spurts. He finally
has a big move from 180 to 90 in the rankings but his game is not
quite solid enough to warrant a consistent top 100 ranking. However
during his brief period in the top 100 he is complacent, spending
more money than he should and finds excuses to cut corners. He plays
a few matches where the going gets tough and instead of fighting
hard lets them slip, bluffing himself that he has earned the right
to pick and choose when he will give his all and besides he was
not feeling great etc. The pressure builds as his lifestyle is lived
like he will be top 100 forever yet he knows deep down that he cannot
sustain his ranking because his foundation is not that good and
worse he is not doing anything constructive to improve the foundation.
The inevitable happens and he loses a few first rounds and confidence
drains and doubt creeps in and over a period of 9 months his ranking
drops back to 180, steadies for a while but the attitude is still
a poor and he bluffs himself that he will soon be back when his
problems pass and he can work harder again. Everything becomes past
and future based with the key ingredient of working hard consistently
day-by-day missing.
The player becomes unsure of where his foundation actually is and
cannot establish this without the hard work and the ranking slips
to 400. It becomes certain that the player can never recover unless
he changes his attitude and work ethic and even then is the foundation
and confidence so shattered that fully repairing the foundation
is near impossible. Andre Agassi and Vinnie Spadea are good examples
of slipping way beyond their foundations in a negative direction
before getting it together to re emerge stronger than ever.
The above stories are based on real people and I’m sure you
can track any career and see the pattern of the relationship between
results and foundation emerging. Many players have struggled for
a year after winning a 1st Grand Slam on momentum and often overshoot
(Sampras and Becker) but when they come good again the game belongs
consistently at the highest level.
The graph is an excellent visual tool to help all involved with
a player to discuss results and progress with a similar understanding
and using the same method of evaluation?
 |
David is the Head Coach at the LTA Academy in
Leeds, northern England. He presides over some of the best upcoming
young British tennis talent. A former ATP player, world ranked
in singles and doubles, David has coached a variety of name
tennis players and took several British stars to career-high
rankings plus Davis Cup selection. Visit David Sammel's web
site, tennis4everyone,
which offers a goldmine of coaching tips and analysis, interviews,
emerging talents, tour diaries, coaching products and discounted
promotions.
|
We would like to thank Dave for supplying us with this great article
and recommend all our members to visit his web site. See what other
words of wisdom you can pick up, his site is full of them!
Best wishes,

|