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Written by Saspcruz
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Tennis instruction today is inseparable from the visual aspect of video analysis that it is key to improving your tennis. The game has become so fast that in order to understand it better and discover the secrets of how the ball is really hit, we need to slow it down. The best way to do that is by looking at video that you can control the speed yourself.
In all of our digital tennis video lessons you can just do that and study the strokes of ATP and WTA pros. Maria Sharapova, Justine Hennin, Serena Williams, Pete Sampras, Roger Federer, Andre Agassi, Rafael Nadal, Gayl Monfils, Andy Murray, Novak Dyokovic and many others.
We combine small instructional files with video so that you can quickly understand, the strategical, technical or tactical aspect of a particular stroke or action by a professional tennis player. Your advantage? You can apply it immediately!
Improve your game with tips, tennis video lessons and articles from around the world. We do our best to be a place for instruction, training and tennis information, from beginners to ATP, WTA, ITF, ETA players.

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Written by Sergio Cruz
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How Rome can be a stepping stone to winning Roland Garros?
If the best of 5 sets was played from round one and the draw was 128, it would be more difficult to win than Roland Garros which is undoubtably the hardest of them all.
We could ask the question 'What about the US Open on hard courts, the Australian in the searing sun and Wimbledon on grass? Yes, they are really tough tournaments to win, but given that any clay court match demands a lot more on physical, mental and technical resources from the players, I can not help but rank the Italian Open as very difficult if not more difficult to win than those.
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Written by Saspcruz
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Is the ATP calendar really that tough? And Did Rafael Nadal fall prey to it?
Today an injured Rafael Nadal falls prey to someone he has never lost to on clay, Juan Carlos Ferrero (J. Ferrero (ESP) d. [2] R. Nadal (ESP) 75 61).
Pretty convincing result and by Carlos Ferrero antics, dropping to his knees, it looked like a great win. But was it really? Or is it just a case of you take whatever you can get? To me it looked mostly like the second scenario and Rafael Nadal confirmed it at the press conference with the following:
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