Tag Archives: tennis training

Tennis Parents Master Class Series #1 

Frank Giampaolo

Sunday, August 25th 4pm – 7pm

Presented by the Southern California Tennis Association

For the first time, an advanced tennis system is available to you and your athlete. If your athlete is not getting the results they capable of, now’s the time to put proven methods in place to maximize potential at the quickest rate.

Topics: 

  1. Customizing your athletes, developmental plan
  2. Focusing on systems over goals
  3. Designing your athlete’s tennis identity/playing style
  4. Organizing their top pattern
  5. Developing your athlete’s tennis IQ
  6. Uncovering, mental toughness secrets
  7. Solutions for choking, panicking & performance, anxiety. 
  8. Organizing game plans to beat different styles of opponents
  9. Life Skills and character traits 
  10. Organizing your entourage of coaches/trainers and hitters
  11. Uncovering your athlete, genius through personality profiling
  12. The inner Games solutions

This Three-Hour Comprehensive Seminar Also Includes: 
Each athlete receives their own customize evaluation book. 
Athletes and their primary coach are invited to attend for free.
Attendees receive for free Frank’s best-selling books:
The Tennis parents Bible, The Psychology of Tennis Parenting Preparing for Pressure and Emotional Aptitude in Sports.

When: Sunday, August 25th, 4pm – 7pm

Where: The Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club 22921 Ridge Route Dr. Lake Forest, Ca. 92630

Register Now! Limited Spots Available

Register at www.maximizingtennispotential.com via PayPal $300 per Family

Contact Frank Giampaolo: FGSA@earthlink.net or 949-933-8163.

Player development should be called parent management.”

Patrick McEnroe, Past USTA Director of High-Performance Tennis

As important as the tennis coach’s role is, the tennis parent’s role is tenfold more important.” 

Nick Bollettieri, IMG Academies

Pro tour players rate their parents as playing the most significant role in their overall development.” 

David Hemery, Sports Excellence

The most common element found worldwide in developing a tennis champion is the foundation of well-educated tennis parents.”

Michigan State University USTA Research Grant Executive Summary 

Pre-Order Now- Only $2.99 Release Date July 16

THE ART OF EXCEEDING: Building High-Performance Athletes

Click Here to Pre-Order your E-book Copy

Frank’s New Release- The Art of Exceeding: Building High Performance Athletes is now ready to pre-order the E-book version for a Special New Release Price of Only $2.99

Embracing Your Identity

THE ART OF EXCEEDING: Building High-Performance Athletes

Click Here to Pre-Order your E-book Copy

Frank’s New Release- The Art of Exceeding: Building High Performance Athletes is now ready to pre-order the E-book version for a Special New Release Price of Only $2.99

The following post is an excerpt from THE ART OF EXCEEDING: Building High-Performance Athletes.

Embracing Your Identity

Each individual brings a unique set of physical attributes, personality traits, and playing preferences to their game. As you progress in your journey, embrace your superpowers and tailor your performance style to align with your strengths.

“Be smart enough to find yourself and brave enough to be yourself.”

Frank Giampaolo

1 Building Your Identity

Staying true to yourself emphasizes the importance of authenticity in developing an identity. Training to play the systems that align with your personality profile maximizes potential. Embracing your personality enhances enjoyment and fulfillment.

2 Finding Your Game

Your identity begins with choosing the right style of play that fits your personality and body type. A typical battle cry from parents and coaches is, “Play Your Game!” Knowing your true identity is your game. Practicing in the manner you’re expected to perform is called “situational training.”

Training your response to typical situations requires you to know who you are? What reoccurring situations cause difficulty? Listing and embracing your unique responses to those “moment” is finding your game.

3 Developing Your Signature Shots and Strategies

Signature Shots and patterns are your go-to preferred plays. Exposing your strengths is a proactive approach. Everyone has signature shots; applying them on big moments is a great strategic intention. Plan on spending a lot of time strengthening your weapons.

4 Leveraging Innate Qualities

Identifying your strengths begins with reflecting on the four pillars (techniques, athleticism, mental and emotional). Begin by deciding to capitalize on your strengths in the four pillars of your game. Addressing weaknesses starts with an honest assessment of the game’s four pillars. Work with your coaches to design targeted training programs to overcome those weaknesses.

5 The Impact of Mental and Emotional Alignment

Embracing the development of your software components is a crucial aspect of peak performance. Identify and understand the strengths and weaknesses of your mental (thinking) and emotional (feeling) components. Hire an experienced mental coach to help align your playing style with your personality, which leads to quicker gains.

As you build your competitive identity, stay true to yourself. Nurture a style that brings joy and fulfillment to your game.

By combining individuality with strategic adaptability, you’ll create a distinctive playing style that sets you on the path to success in the world of high-performance.

The Philosophy of Competition

Frank’s New Release- The Art of Exceeding: Building High Performance Athletes is now ready to pre-order the E-book version for a Special New Release Price of Only $2.99

Click Here to Pre-Order your E-book Copy

The following post is an excerpt of The Art of Exceeding.

The Philosophy of Competition

INTRODUCTION

This Playbook, The Philosophy of Competition, illuminates the inner world of competition. By exploring the wisdom of the ancient Stoics, you’ll navigate competition challenges with clarity and composure, enhancing your personal growth.

The ancient Stoic philosophers provided valuable insights into the underlying nature of modern-day competition. By embracing stoic principles, you can change how you engage in competition, ensuring that it becomes a source of growth, self-improvement, and, ultimately, fulfillment.

Stoicism, a school of philosophy originating in ancient Greece, offers valuable insights into how you’ll navigate competitions in the future. The Philosophy of Competition encourages you to cultivate these ancient virtues in your progression into the higher levels of the sport.

THE ART OF EXCEEDING

Frank’s New Release- The Art of Exceeding: Building High Performance Athletes is now ready to pre-order the E-book version for a Special New Release Price of Only $2.99

Click Here to Pre-Order your E-book Copy

NEW RELEASE JULY 16

THE ART OF EXCEEDING: BUILDING HIGH PERFORMANCE ATHLETES

THE ART OF EXCEEDING:
Building High-Performance Athletes

PLAYBOOK SERIES

The Art of Exceeding playbooks are not just another set of resources. They are a unique compilation of short books that draw upon 2000 years of stoic wisdom, sports psychology, and 35 years of coaching experience. These playbooks are designed to develop the mental strength essential for high performance, providing breakthrough resources and a shared language for anyone interested in maximizing their potential in sports and life. They empower athletes with the mental tools needed to thrive in the competitive world of high-performance sports.

For too long, the sports teaching world has focused on hardware development, neglecting the crucial aspects of software development, mental and emotional. The Art of Exceeding playbooks aim to bridge this gap by providing the mental training necessary to enhance athletic performance. But it doesn’t stop there. This training also cultivates life skills, positive character traits, and a moral compass that’s genuinely needed to excel in sports and life.

The Art of Exceeding, Volume 1, presents five transformative topics, each unlocking a different facet of software skills. In Discovering Your Game, readers embark on a journey of self-discovery, uncovering their unique, inborn strengths and weaknesses to optimize performance. The Philosophy of Competition delves into why some athletes wilt under pressure while others thrive- illuminating how mindset shapes our approach to challenges. The Morning Mastery Plan offers a blueprint for starting the day with purpose and intention, setting the stage for success in every endeavor. The Paradox of Habits challenges conventional thinking, exploring how to harness choices, habits, and routines to ignite improvement. Finally, From Champions to Leaders transcends individual success, guiding athletes towards becoming inspirational leaders who shape their teams and communities. With these first five playbooks, The Art of Exceeding empowers individuals to master their minds and set the stage for future success.

Throughout The Art of Exceeding playbooks, you’ll notice the repetition of the most important topics. Planting and replanting these essential components into your subconscious mind helps you develop a solid base from which to draw.

Welcome to your new way of life as an elite, high-performance athlete!

CONGRATULATIONS FRANK!

FRANK GIAMPAOLO was honored with the

The USPTA Southern California Tennis Pro of the year

2023-2024!!!

Tennis: Benefits of Personality Profiling

To Order: The Soft Science of Tennis Click Here

Benefits of Personality Profiling

Caroline Sanchez was a top 50 ITF junior in her day. She played D-2 college ball in Florida and competed on the challenger circuit for three years earning her a world ranking of #676 on the WTA Tour. Caroline sounds like an experienced competitor, but is she the right fit for your player’s coaching needs?

Let’s take a more in-depth look at Caroline’s background. Caroline grew up on the slow red clay in Barcelona where her coaches demanded she train and play the “Spanish Way” – steady, retriever style. Caroline possesses solid groundstrokes, great lateral movement, and a 20-ball shot tolerance level.  She loves to camp 15 feet behind the baseline and extend points in a retriever fashion. Like her past coaches, she’s been nurtured to be an old-school drill sergeant style of coach and demands every student train and play in the style that she found to be most successful.

Coaches, is she a good fit for your program? Parents, is she a good fit for your child? The answer: No, not likely, unless all your athletes are wired with the same exact cognitive brain design, body type, and temperament which would be extremely rare. Coaches who only teach the system that they found to be successful regardless of the student’s needs are doing a disservice to the athlete. Tennis playing styles are an extension of the athlete’s brain design and body type. An athlete’s most successful style of play incorporates their inherent strengths versus their coach’s past strengths.

Devising an athlete’s developmental plan is the ideal time to incorporate their personality profile. Training and nurturing athletes to play the style that flows with their genetic predispositions and not against it will maximize their potential at a much faster rate.

As I travel around the globe, I notice that coaches and parents religiously focus on the development of the athlete’s hardware (strokes and athleticism) yet tend to neglect the critical development of their student’s software (mental and emotional). Personality profiling falls into the software or soft science of teaching tennis.

“Coaches and parents who understand the athlete’s personality in greater depth utilize a more comprehensive foundation from which to maximize performance.”

A simple analogy is a comparison between the four main tennis components (strokes, athleticism, mental and emotional) with a conventional four-legged table. A table with four-legs is not stable under stress without all four legs intact. The same holds true for your tennis athletes.

So, how does the understanding of the software development relate to you as parents, coaches, tennis directors or club managers? It develops a greater understanding of how others tick and that sets you and your players above the competition. Software assessment helps us to understand how individuals perform as tennis players. It assists coaches and parents in developing much more than strokes. It helps shape positive character traits, life skills, and a moral compass.

The Benefits of Personality Profiling Include:

  • Customizing the Athlete’s Developmental Plan
  • Assessing Mental Strengths and Weaknesses
  • Assessing Emotional Efficiencies and Deficiencies
  • Identifying Information Processing / Listening Skills
  • Facilitating Conflict Avoidance and Resolution
  • Empowering Communication Strategies
  • Encouraging the Development of Synergy and Harmony within their Entourage
  • Monitoring Self-Awareness and the Awareness of Other Personality Profiles
  • Acknowledging and Respecting Differing Brain Designs
  • Identifying Productive Communication Avenues
  • Assisting in Identifying Motivational Factors
  • Improving Productivity and Efficiency

Benefits to Athletes:

In the soft science realms of confidence, trust, and self-esteem, there’s power to be gained from athletes celebrating their profile. Gaining the knowledge of how they see the world makes the soft science of personality profiling helpful in working with varying styles of coaches and teachers. The quicker those athletes understand their cognitive design the more successful they will be at understanding their style of play and customizing their developmental pathway.

The following chapter gets into the nitty-gritty of how your athlete’s cognitive design affects their performance. Hold on tight because I’m about to blow your mind as I uncover commonalities of each typography.

Tennis- Creating An Exceptional Culture

The following post is an excerpt from Frank’s bestselling book-The Soft Science of Tennis

To Order: The Soft Science of Tennis Click Here

Creating an Exceptional Culture

Mr. Martinez is the tennis operations manager at Big Sky Country Club. A short time ago, he hired Richard as their new tennis director. Richard played college ball, graduated with a highly regarded tennis management degree and his resume checked all the boxes. On the technical side, Richard was microscopically detailed. He could spot a student’s opposing force vectors on their serve six courts away. He was adept at video analysis, organizing compass draws, teaching stroke fundamentals and eager to oversee the clubs racket stringing service. On paper, Richard was a good fit for a Country Club.

Sadly, within weeks, Richard turned out to be a nightmare. While he had tennis business knowledge, he possessed no interpersonal communication skills. Richard’s interactions with members and co-workers were so poor; it led to his termination just one month into the job. Let’s look into why Richard was let go so soon from Big Sky Country Club.

Richard had a pompous demeanor toward everyone all the time. When adult members would ask for his assistance, he would respond with a loud, disrespectful sigh.  When Mrs. Jones asked him to fill in with the ladies league for 15-20 minutes until Helen arrived, Richard shook his head in disgust and said, “My hitting rate is the same as my lesson rate. For me to go on court, it’s $120.00 an hour!” Richard even drew complaints from the parents of the junior program because he would scold the children if they smiled and laughed in their beginner’s clinic. Richard was a taskmaster, and to him, clinics were to work and not to play.

The clubs co-workers were also scared of Richard. His pessimistic problem-oriented view of his job made him uncomfortable to be around. The clubs assistant pros reported that he would consistently complain about the facility and the management staff directly to the members. His negative verbal and nonverbal communication reaped havoc throughout the club.

Richard was also incompetent at the most essential interpersonal communication skill:  listening.  For example, one Friday afternoon, Mr. Martinez, the club manager, handed two rackets to Richard and told him that he had assured junior club member, Joey, that both his rackets would be strung by Saturday morning at 8:00 am. He could pick them up on his way out-of-town to the tournament.  Although Richard was looking at Mr. Martinez as he took Joey’s rackets from him, Richard wasn’t listening. His focus was on a tennis match on the pro-shop television.

So Joey and his dad stopped in Saturday morning, and his rackets sat unstrung in the pro-shop. The members were obviously upset, and Mr. Martinez was furious with Richard.  Mr. Martinez addressed Richard about why they were not strung, and he snapped: “You didn’t tell me to string them yesterday!”

After multiple “red flags,” Mr. Martinez had no choice but to put Richard on probation. Richards’s lack of interpersonal communication skills continued to disrupt the clubs optimistic culture. Richard didn’t possess the ability to problem solve, adapt, correct issues or even care to attempt to fit into the clubs corporate guidelines. The final straw was when a member came into the pro-shop and complained that his children are no longer enjoying the clinics and they are considering going elsewhere for lessons. Richard took it personally, called the member an idiot, and instigated a shouting match, “If you want Mikey and Lauren to learn the correct strokes, let me do my job! If you want them to be hackers…then go! I don’t care!”

Richard’s lack of communication skills instigated his firing. He couldn’t apply appropriate decision making, empathy, analyze options or come up with win-win solutions. It was his way or the highway- period. Insulting the members prompted Richard’s demise. The members quit the club and Richard lost his job.

Interpersonal Communication

If technical knowledge is the science of teaching, interpersonal communication is the art of teaching. Interpersonal communication characterizes the interaction that takes place between two or more people. In the coaching world, gaining an understanding of the sports biomechanics is important, but mastering communication is essential. Is your athlete being nurtured interpersonal skills? The following is a laundry list of interpersonal communication skills that facilitate success in tennis and in life.

Accountable, Accuracy, Adaptability, Adept, Alertness, Ambition, Amiability, Analytical, Articulate, Assertive, Attentiveness, Business-like, Capable, Caring, Competence, Confidence, Conscientiousness, Considerate, Consistency, Cooperation, Creative, Critical Thinking, Dedication, Dependability, Detail Oriented, Determination, Diplomatic, Efficiency, Empathy, Encouraging, Energy, Enterprising, Ethical, Experienced, Flexibility, Hardworking, Helpfulness, Honesty, Imaginative, Independent, Industriousness, Influential, Innovation, Insightful, Intuitive, Leadership, Logical Thinking, Loyal, Management, Motivation, Nonverbal Communication, Optimism, Organizational, Passion, Patience, Perceptive, Positive, Practical, Problem Solving, Productive, Professional, Progressive, Punctual, Rational, Realistic, Reflective, Reliable, Resourceful, Respectful, Responsible, Sense Of Humor, Sincere, Sociable, Teachable, Teaching, Teamwork, Technical Literacy, Tolerance, Trustworthy, Understanding, Verbal Communication, Versatility, Visionary, Work Ethic…Whew!

Without a doubt, any parent or coach would love to have their athletes possess these personal skills.

Excellence begins with a positive culture both at home and at the club. In our sport, invested athletes don’t search out places like “Allen’s Average Tennis Academy” or “Mike’s Mundane Monday Night Clinic.” On a conscious level, parents and athletes seek excellent technical knowledge. On the subconscious level, they pursue meaningful interpersonal relationships.

The culture I recommend is solution-oriented versus problem-oriented. Athletes are much more likely to flourish in a solution orientated environment. Coaches that provide a solution-based program are teaching lasting life skills.

A Great Replacement Tip:

Occasionally trade in the old school, pre-hit stretching routine with an upbeat dance-off. Turn up the tunes and watch athletes laugh their guts out while they dynamically stretch their bodies. Trust me, even if they arrive tired, stressed or negative, as they let go, they’ll dance their worries away, and you’ll have 25 kids with 25 huge smiles!

A positive mindset is a precursor to a meaningful session. Parents, the preceding replacement solution also works wonders at home as a way to motivate the family to seek optimism.

“An exceptional culture creates the positive attitude and mindset that promotes growth strategies, which in turn sustains excellence in competition.”

It’s important to note that despite the student’s inherent athletic ability, level of play or commitment to the game, each student deserves the same sports science data, focus, and energy as a high performer. In fact, providing a rich culture of mentoring is precisely how average performers blossom into the high-performance category.

Over the past few years, I conducted an informal study on the culture of tennis facilities throughout my travels around the world. I came to some very predictable conclusions:

The programs with a positive culture were monitored and often reviewed by the owners. They were optimistic by design, and as a result, they achieved thriving, positive environments. They attracted top players organically via their triumphant athletes and their satisfied parents. They also acquired disgruntled clients from the negative cultured programs. As a result, the programs with a positive culture retained athletes up to three times as long as their problem-oriented rivals.

The programs with a problem-oriented drill Sargent culture struggled to keep coaches, to keep students, and to pay the rent. As a result, they had to partake in serious recruiting, sales, and marketing to just to keep their doors open.

The Soft Science of Tennis

The following post is an excerpt from Frank’s bestselling book-The Soft Science of Tennis

To Order: The Soft Science of Tennis Click Here

During the past three decades, the business of tennis coaching has become much more scientific. Biomechanics, technique, and technology have changed the hardware (strokes and athleticism) for the better, yet, the software (mental and emotional) have been routinely ignored.

I was fortunate to begin my career at The Vic Braden Tennis College as a tennis instructor. Back in the 1980’s stroke production was the focal point. As I opened and directed tennis colleges throughout the country, I had the opportunity to work with top nationally ranked athletes and touring pros. It was then that I realized that although stroke production was fundamental to the game of tennis, it was by no means the whole story. I found that the athletes with sound hardware (strokes and athleticism) and under-developed software (mental and emotional components) struggled in competition. So, for the past 20 years, I’ve immersed myself into the study of the athlete’s competitive software.

When Sergey Brin and Larry Page founded Google in 1998, they believed that only techies understood technology, so they set the companies hiring algorithms to employ computer science students from elite Universities. Fifteen years later Google began Project Oxygen to test their hiring methods. The conclusion of the research project shocked everyone. Among the seven most valued qualities of Google’s top employees, technical expertise came in dead last. Interestingly, what proved more important to their corporate culture were SOFT SKILLS.

The following are the seven essential personality traits Google prioritizes in their hiring process:

  1. Effective Coaching Skills
  2. Effective Communication and Listening Skills
  3. Empathy and Support for Others
  4. Effective Critical Thinking Skills
  5. Effective Problem-Solving Skills
  6. Ability to Connect Across Complex Ideas
  7. Technical Expertise

Since exposing these findings, Google takes soft skills very, very seriously.

Like Google’s search engine business, most of the tennis teaching industry assumes that hard skills (biomechanics and tennis technical knowledge) are most important. This book intends to share insights as to why soft skills matter and their significance may be more important than we were led to believe. The beliefs of athletes are directly influenced by their interactions with coaches and parents. After all, great coaching requires great collaborating, which is at the heart of The Soft Science of Tennis.

This book is designed to improve our tennis specific soft skills that are the behaviors that enable us to connect more efficiently. Soft science characteristics are learned behaviors, and when properly nurtured lead to more effective and harmonious development of our athletes.

In the two years, it took me to research and write this book, the one reoccurring theme throughout this journey was “invest in the person, not just the player.” Whatever industry your athletes choose, whichever position they desire, they’ll take their soft skills with them for the rest of their life.

INTRODUCTION to The Soft Science of Tennis

Let’s begin by using a computer analogy, if strokes and athleticism are the athlete’s hardware, mental and emotional skills are surely the athlete’s software.

We all know that mental toughness and emotional resolve are critical in competition. The Soft Science of Tennis is specially designed to improve the mysterious software skills. With this groundbreaking book, respect is developed, and trust is earned as coaches and parents create an exceptional culture, sharpen stronger communication techniques, and connect with each student at a much deeper level.

The Soft Science of Tennis identifies each athlete’s individual personality profile and unique cerebral design. Throughout these pages, we’ll expose how your athlete’s inborn genetic predispositions affect their behavioral attributes and on-court competitive characteristics.

Getting into the student’s world requires the open-mindedness to embrace how the student’s genetic predispositions impact their match play.

“You must first get into their world to change their world.”

This book challenges coaches, athletes, and parents to recognize that preferred learning styles and training requirements are unique to each athlete.

The science of profiling personality isn’t new or even unique. Today there are dozens of profiling programs including Disc, Social styles, Predictive Index, Profiles Int., HBDI, Strengthfinder, Keirsey Temperament, TTI, Human Metrics, and MBTI to name a few. These models all share in helping us better connect and communicate. The Soft Science of Tennis applies the Myers Briggs Type Indicator because it is the most widely recognized profiling application in use around the world.

MBTI is a registered trademark, and inside this book, I am simply sharing my unique, tennis specific understandings of their application.

Brain design awareness enhances our ability to customize our teaching approach to the different personality profiles found in the sport. While there are many interpretations of personality profiling, The Soft Science of Tennis aims to share techniques that I’ve found highly successful in my 30 years of coaching tennis.

Also included is the importance of nurturing positive character traits and life skills, and why developing a healthy moral compass matters. This soft science book dissects how to conquer essential performance anxieties such as overriding negative belief systems, eliminating internal judgment and building coachable athletes.

“In the coaching field, there is more to the story than teaching fundamental strokes. An athlete’s negative emotional state can and will derail great game plans and exquisite strokes.”

Rounding out this book, are several chapters uniquely focused on how to change fixed mindsets, managing fear and risk, and developing confidence and self-esteem. These are some of the favorite topics of high IQ coaches attending my conferences around the world. Consequently, the question, “Why doesn’t anyone else teach this stuff?” has become a reoccurring theme of discussion among coaches and parents alike throughout my travels. Within these pages, it is my goal to share everything you didn’t even know…you needed to know about the soft science of tennis.

More excerpts from The Soft Science Soon! Thanks, Frank