Tennis: free

Traditional tennis coaching follows a familiar pattern: the coach demonstrates the "correct" technique, the player attempts to copy it, the coach provides feedback on deviations from the model. This approach produces technically proficient players - but often players who struggle to adapt when things don't go according to plan.

Ecological dynamics offers a different approach: rather than prescribing technique, coaches design environments that guide players to discover solutions themselves.

What is Ecological Dynamics?

The theoretical foundations:

Movement emerges from constraints: Movement patterns aren't pre-programmed but emerge from the interaction between the player, the task, and the environment.

Variability is valuable: Traditional coaching sees variability as error to be eliminated. Ecological dynamics sees it as exploration that leads to adaptable skill.

Representative design: Practice should represent competition. Drills that remove decision-making remove the most important element.

Perception-action coupling: Technique and decision-making shouldn't be separated. Players need to practice reading the game while executing skills.

Constraints-Led Coaching

Coaches manipulate three types of constraints:

Task constraints: Rules of the game, equipment, targets. Examples: play only with topspin, hit to the backhand side, rally must include a drop shot.

Environmental constraints: Court surface, weather, opponent behaviour. Examples: practice on different surfaces, add wind, use different ball speeds.

Individual constraints: Player's physical capabilities, experience, psychological state. Examples: handicap stronger players, adjust court size for ability.

Practical Applications

How to apply ecological dynamics in tennis:

Games-based practice: Replace isolated drilling with modified games. Players learn to serve by playing games where serving matters, not by hitting into an empty service box.

Target manipulation: Instead of telling players where to aim, create targets that guide them there. Scoring zones encourage certain patterns without explicit instruction.

Equipment modification: Slower balls, smaller courts, different rackets. These constraints guide technique without prescribing it.

Opponent variation: Practice against different styles of players. Each opponent presents different problems to solve.

Discovery Learning

The coach's role changes from prescriber to designer:

Ask, don't tell: Instead of "bend your knees more," ask "what happens if you get lower?" Let players discover the relationship.

Problem presentation: Present problems for players to solve. "Your opponent keeps lobbing you - what could you try?"

Attention direction: Guide attention to relevant information rather than prescribing solutions. "Watch where they're standing before you hit."

Allow exploration: Players need freedom to try different solutions, including unsuccessful ones.

Benefits of the Approach

Adaptability: Players who have explored solutions transfer better to new situations. Match play is never exactly like practice.

Creativity: Players develop unique solutions suited to their bodies and games, not copies of a model technique.

Engagement: Games and problem-solving are more engaging than repetitive drilling. Players practice longer and with more focus.

Retention: Self-discovered solutions are better retained than prescribed techniques.

Challenges and Limitations

Ecological dynamics isn't a complete rejection of traditional coaching:

Time requirements: Discovery learning can take longer than direct instruction for basic skills.

Coach expertise: Designing effective constraints requires deep understanding of the game and skill development.

Player frustration: Some players prefer being told what to do. Managing frustration during exploration is important.

Balance needed: Most coaches blend approaches - some direct instruction with discovery learning.

Designing Practice Sessions

Principles for constraints-led session design:

Start with the game: What do you want players to be able to do in matches? Work backward from there.

Add context: Even technique work should include decision-making elements.

Vary conditions: Don't let players groove one pattern. Change something regularly.

Reflect and discuss: Ask players what they noticed, what worked, what they might try next.

Key Coaching Points

  • Movement emerges from constraints - design the environment, not just the technique
  • Variability in practice creates adaptable players
  • Games and problem-solving develop decision-making alongside technique
  • Ask questions rather than giving answers - guide discovery
  • Balance exploration with direct instruction based on player needs

Drills for Adaptable Development

VIEW ALL GAMES-BASED DRILLS

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 1200+ tennis drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans
free DRILLS
View All
Unfortunately there were no results for your search! Please try again
free ANSWERS
View All

Is there a place I can download a free draw sheet for?

Is there a place I can download a free draw sheet for a 16 player tournament? I need to be able to edit it online then print it out. Thanks.

Archived User Coach

whats the benefits of upgrading membership?

whats the benefits of upgrading membership?

Archived User Coach

Does it cost me anything to be a member for this website?

Does it cost me anything to be a member for this website?

Kim Gadwood Coach, United Arab Emirates

Drills with Lock sign

Hello Team, I am new to this site and have signed up for free individual membership. In a few drills, I see a lock sign however can see the videos post clicking on it. Would like to understand if these are available for free or if there is a cost associated with it. Thank you, Bhumit

Bhumit Coach, India

What do I get with free membership?

Archived User Coach

Where do I find my free gift

I was to receive gifts when purchasing the membership. I can not find ??

nadene simpson Coach, Australia

The monthly charge for Sportplan?

After the free joining fee, how much is the monthly fee for sportplan?RegardsJM

JM Coach, England

SESSION PLANS

How can I access session plans as only some are avaiable to view

niki Coach, Wales

change sports

hi l like to get rugby league as my sport my account seems to be logged onto rugby union how do l change it to rugby league

Michael Allard Coach, Australia

voucher problems

I had a free membership and am trying to add a voucher provided by my hockey club Forestville. I think I have foolwed the steps.... when i try and add in the club password , it tells me my log in has already used this password. How do I get help with this ?

Susie hewitt Coach, Australia

3 months free subscription

Good morning I signed up to a three month free subscription plan on 7July 22. By my account I'm not due to pay a fee until 7 Oct 22. Yet I've been charged as of 16th August a fee of £26.99. Please refund and adjust your records accordingly. many thanks

ian booton Coach, England

free access to agility and fitness

I was offered free access to agility and fitness library. but it says locked, upgrade.

Julie Lumb Coach, England

Starting annual membership for netball

Please could you tell me know I change the account to have a subscription, rather than free, to access all of the netball content?

Hannah Hendrick Coach, England

free trial

Hi! Do you offer a free trial, so people can get to know what you offer?

Sam Makelele Coach, Finland

subscription

I would like to request that the last payment be refunded. I haven't used the system and thought I had already canceled my subscription. I'm not sure why the payment is still being taken out. thanks for your assistance. My kid used it for her football lessons and we thought we changed it over to her bank account, so I would like to cancel the subscription and receive a free refund please, because that £26 we need to provide for them

Olivia White Coach, England

Upgrade Subscription

How do I upgrade from free to paying?

Sharon Coach, New Zealand

What is my fault? Difficulty c...

Helo, my name is Fernando, I am a Spanish tennis teacher who started teaching six months ago. I am working in a public sportcenter and I am having some problems with adults. When I started I realiced that the students were used to playing tennis without any control. Young students told me that the other teacher only used to leave them play - he rarely explained them how to hit the ball. Consequently the do enjoy my clases and they are learning a lot and impoving their level of tennis. So far so good, but the problem is that with the adults I have the impression that they don´t like my clases. In fact some of them left the group at the begining. I try to mix different kinds of drills during the class and I usually finish it with a game like for example 21, winner........ But it seems that they don´t enjoy it. During the exercises most of them don´t try to do what I tell them. As a result, they don´t have a good level of tennis. But as far as I know, the other teacher was a tennis player who uses to play against them during the clases. As this is my first time teaching tennis, I don´t fell confidence and that is the reason whay I do´t like to play against them. Appart from that I think that this is not my role as a teacher. So I would like you to tell me how to deal with that situation. I don´t care if they leave me because this is not going to affect my job, but i wouldn´t like them to leave just because I like tennis and I like teaching tennis. Thank you very much for your help. I am sorry for my English. Best wishes!!!!

Fernando Coach, Spain

Permanent lines for U10 tennis...

I would like to add permanent lines for Under 10 tennis and am wondering if anyone has any experience doing this and can help me avoid problems with adult members?

Archived User Coach

How do I coach 14 girls (varyi...

How do I coach 14 girls, all of varying levels from beginner to advanced on just two courts?

Archived User Coach

Best player - bad attitude/det...

I have a learner that is super talented, he gets the game, he handles pace, power and depth well. He is aggressive and tennis just comes naturally when it comes to this kid but he lacks determination. I am really struggling to keep him motivated not to loose focus or to let one mistake make his shoulders hang for the rest of the lesson. Footwork is unfortunately a big problem and when he loses a point it's even worse, this kid is just draining me mentally every session, its a mental thing but i'm having trouble defeating it. If i'm too hard on him, he closes down and might as well stop and if i play too much and don't push him, he plays with no effort and just hit very sloppy shots. I do know that his situation at home is not good and i think it has a lot to do with his bad attitude on the court but i really need some advise, this is my hardest lesson to plan, what is most important about my lesson with a student with a bad attitude, no temper but just unmotivated and i don't want to give up because this kid really has the talent...he really can be the next junior champion in Africa if he really wants to. Would really appreciate some tips from the professionals that dealt with this before.

Archived User Coach

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 1200+ tennis drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans

Sportplan App

Give it a try - it's better in the app

YOUR SESSION IS STARTING SOON... Join the growing community of tennis coaches plus 1200+ drills and pro tools to make coaching easy.
LET'S DO IT