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What Is A Top Tennis Coach Worth? | What Is A Top Tennis Coach Worth? |
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| Written by Sergio Cruz | |||
| Aug 08, 2010 at 01:58 AM | |||
What Is A Top Tennis Coach Worth? ! | |||
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This is a question that tennis players, parents, federations often have in their minds. The answer is, A Top Tennis Coach is worth millions! To understand my evaluation, you also have to understand that I am not talking about 'pretend tennis coach', 'bag carrier tennis coach', 'babysitter tennis coach', 'sparring tennis coach' and a horde of other types trying to put their foot in the door.To be a decent Coach you need experience, to be a Top Tennis Coach you need alot of experience and knowledge: - At least 10 to 15 years tournament play, national, international, open prize money, ATP, WTA. - A minimum combined 20 years experience of competitive tennis and coaching/teaching/training tennis. - Have/had a high ranking in your country or ATP, WTA. - Have/had played Davis Cup, Fed Cup and the junior international team and individual competitions of the time. - Be a true lover and student of the game. - Be an excellent scout and detect weaknesses and strengths at the blink of an eye. - Understand tactics and strategies and how to implement them successfully. - Be a great developer of the game. - Be open minded and get others to be open to learn and develop new concepts and ideas. - Understand game intelligence and coax others to use it. - Know the relevance of bio-mechanics and its use in tennis. - Master all tennis techniques and how to help others master them at the highest level. - Have extensive knowledge of physical training for tennis and other sports with transfer/interactivity possibilities. - Have good knowledge of regeneration techniques, massage, physio-therapy, injury prevention/recovery and anything that will help an athlete maximize his/her potential. - Understand what mental training is and know how to implement it, both out of competition, during competition and after competition. - Know and use effectively proper anchoring techniques. - Know all important diets/meals and types of supplements for pre-competition, during competition and after competition. - Have excellent leadership qualities. - Be attentive, caring, flexible, intelligent, creative, understanding, appreciative, friendly, humble and an impeccable role model. In fact a tennis coach still has to be much more then what I just mentioned, but for the propose of this article it highlights some of the crucial aspects of being a tennis coach. A little story will help here. Pablo Picasso was sitting in one of his favorite Cafés in Paris, when a Japanese tourist approached and asked him for an autographed sketch. In a few seconds Picasso obliged, handed it to the tourist and said: - Eight thousand dollars!. Stupefied the Japanese stuttered: - But...it only took you ten seconds to do it! Picasso replied with a grin: - Yes, it did take me ten seconds to do it now, but it took me thirty years to learn how to master it! Now in tennis, some parents, players and even federations do not understand or put the right value to a tennis coach and the immense amount of work, time, money and perseverance it takes to be a top coach, because they do not realize the following: - You pay a coach for one hour, but it took a life time for him/her to be able to give the right advice to his pupils and the actions of that coach can last for a life time and make the difference between success or failure forever. There are other reasons why so many complaints and so many failed programs by parents, clubs and federations happen, which stem from the fact that not just any coach will do, especially if you want to pay him little and when you can consider that some of the expensive ones are also incompetent. No need to mention that related to the last fact, the LTA (British Tennis Association), TA (Tennis Australia), DTB (German Tennis Association), the USTA (United States Tennis Association) and others embarked on the folly of the 'big name coaches' (who some of them do not set foot on court because they feel half a million and over a million is just not enough and they need to expand their sources of income elsewhere!). Those programs have completely failed to produce anything worthy of praise in recent years. One of these short-lived follies was the Mercedes Team concept some years back by the DTB (Germany) spearheaded by 'coaches' Boris Becker and Steffi Graff! At that time, the press reported salaries of at least two million per head a year! As just an observer I have been twiddling my fingers for the last 15 or 20 years to see the results of such 'big name' expensive projects! Pragmatic as it may sound, in spite of the failure, those Boris Becker's and Steffi Graf's are worth the two million and more but with performance conditions, which in that case were not set. Also I am aware that Brad Gilbert had a LTA £750,000 yearly contract to coach Murray, which was renegotiated very likely 'downwards' after Murray fired Brad...and Paul Annacone believed to exceed £350,000 a year. Nevertheless, however great Gilbert and Anacone's salary may sound, they are peanuts if one considers that their positions were to influence the direction of tennis of a whole Nation! In this case, England. If we consider that Wimbledon alone had a net income for the LTA (British tennis) of about $68 million last year alone and given that in 2009 Wimbledon spent £ 100 million in construction costs for new structures, a £2M a year salary for Anacone and Gilbert would have been still peanuts considering the scope of their National responsibilities! This brings me back to the initial question, 'What Is A Top Tennis Coach Worth?' Considering what I have already said and what I still will say, a top tennis coach is worth millions many millions of Dollars, Euros, Kwacha, Rupee you name it! Why? To begin, all you have to do is look at the salaries of any top coach in any professional sports league; N.B.A. (Jackson is paid over $10 million per year, N.F.L. Lovie Smith and Jeff Fisher, make $5.5 million a year) , Spanish Football League (Mourinho at the top ten million ++ Euro) and so on and so forth. Why do tennis coaches not fetch the same salaries? Several fundamental reasons: - There is no world wide professional organization dedicated to protect the interests of Tennis Coaches. - There is no world wide professional organization regulating the Tennis Coaches salaries. - There is no world wide professional organization regulating the Tennis Coaches qualifications. Here I am not talking about USPTAs or PTRs! - Tennis teachers and Coaches instead of supporting each other, often are the detractors of each other! - Any fellow that hits a tennis ball half way decent can be a tennis coach for $150 a week plus expenses! Sometimes for expenses only! Just to put the foot in the door! Ouch!! - Top Tennis Coaches themselves are responsible for their lack of credibility by groveling and accepting to train a player like Roger Federer 'to sit down and share some ideas'... This sounds like you give me your best coaching tips and then we say good-bye. Wonderful concept for a cunning player-pretty unfair for the coach! For goodness sakes, a coach is qualified or is not qualified! - There is no differentiation between a true tennis coach and a father/mother blessed with a gifted child that makes them think he/she is a fantastic tennis coach. If the coaches themselves do not take pride in their own self value and profession, what can they expect from greedy parents, exploitative players, agents and federations? Abuse obviously! Exactly what they get, a foot stuck in the door rather then getting in. Is there a justification for a better pay for Coaches? Sure, all you got to do is see the earnings of the tennis players they train: Roger Federer $56,249,204 Andy Murray $11,675,766 Rafael Nadal $32,730,442 Novak Djokovic $17,492,062 Robin Soderling $7,287,789 Nikolay Davidenko $13,811,463 Andy Roddick $18,531,118 How much will these players personal fortune be at the end of their careers with the help and support of their coaches? If we consider that a Boris Becker earning a lot less prize money than today's top earners, stands at a total of $25,080,956 and his fortune was estimated at 150m Euros ($146.5m) during his career. It is not unfathomable that Roger Federer has a reported $500 million (half a billion) combined income from endorsements and other fees! Neither is it impossible that a Nadal may have amassed a reported $200 million combined income from endorsements and other fees! No surprise that he wears a $500+ thousand dollar watch to play tennis! Of course I also understand there is the developing player, but for that there are parents with money, sponsors and federations with millions, that should compensate the coach/teacher proportionately. A super talented developing player is not the typical club player, in such cases in special written clauses a coach developing such a player, should be paid for what a future $56,249,204 earner is worth. As it is coaches get nothing! To complete the value of the work of a Top Tennis Coach, are the revenues that the ATP, WTA, ITF and others generate from the development of top tennis players: - U.S. Open around $200M In Revenue, $110-115M Profit - Wimbledon declines to disclose revenue or sponsorship figures, but says it had a net income of about $68 million last year.. - 13 Jan 2010 ... Australian Open revenue is forecast to grow to A$152 million ($140 million) - French Open a possible $250M in revenue, Profit undisclosed The WTA, ATP and ITF: In 2008 the WTA and the ATP reported prize money increases — 34 percent on the women's tour to $47 million and 18 percent on the men's side to $82.3 million. You do the math for the total revenue, when this represents more or less than 20 percent of the tournaments total revenue. Added to those figures are the millions perhaps even billions of dollars governments and the ITF give to each and every Nation around the world for the 'development of tennis' Next, the tennis industry as a whole is a multi-billion dollar industry which benefits: - Countries, cities, real estate developments, communities and more - Hotel, Resorts, Tourism, Travel Agents, Luxury. - Racket manufactures and employment. - Tennis shoe manufactures and employment. - Tennis accessories and employment. - Tennis ball machines and employment. - Tennis balls and employment. - Tennis court production and employment. - Tennis nets, net-poles, lines, umpire chairs, and employment. - Tennis construction of tennis halls, tennis clubs, tennis facilities and employment. - The construction of tennis stadiums and tennis centers of Roman grandeur and employment.. - Doctors, therapeuts, physical trainers, dieticians and employment.. - The lavish life style and income for officials, federations, tennis agents and entourages. - A horde of small and large industries and consequently several million jobs. All of this is created because of the dedication of the Top Tennis Coach 24/24 hour job and the selfless working machine the Tennis Teacher who spends 8 to 12 hours a day helping others reach their dreams and fortune. All of the above would be impossible if it was not for the Top Tennis Coach and the Tennis Teacher. As you can see through my words, I take enormous pride in what I do and above all I am proud of my great contribution and that of my peers to society. The only regret I have is, how obtuse the tennis system and tennis teachers and coaches are to allow themselves to be exploited for a pittance of money, when in fact they are the driving force of a whole industry and should be paid according to the incredible support they give to so many world-wide. Before I go to the 'office and give tennis lessons', I simply pick-up myself, straighten up my shoulders, lift up my head, stand tall, walk firm and think, 'I am one of the sustaining pillars of a whole industry and on my shoulders lay the livelihoods of millions of people and their families, I do not have millions but I am worth millions if not billions, I will do the best job I can for my pupils, I am proud of myself!' ...and so should every tennis teacher, tennis instructor, tennis coach on this earth, you are special! That Is What A Top Tennis Coach is Worth! Sergio Cruz.
This article was inspired from a post from Johan Kriek (Former ATP world ranked Nr. 7) on Facebook: 'Andy Murray needs a new coach and Anacone is now working with Roger and Daren Cahill is "too busy"...How about some advice from a hard nosed South-African "bushman" Andy...play to win ALL the way thru a match and play with fire vs conservative "holding back"...one may have to feel the pain of defeat in trying a new s...trategy to reach a higher "plateau" and reach true greatness......just my thoughts... Below are some Tennis Coaches and others comments to Johan's post: Richard Laver It is if you are federer or Agassi. 7 matches to
win a major . You have to be incredible at staying 10 feet
behind the baseline for 7 matches. He is good for 5 or 6 ,but at
some point some point a playher is going to go totally offensive
and break that system down. I am positive Andy would have won
that match in five sets,but it shows you if that happens early
in a major it wears you down by the final and vulnerable to
monster like Nadal etc http://tenniscruz.com/content/view/444/90/ Alon Moritz No one is "entitled" to win matches, and over
complicating things is not much good either, Cahil is smart to
be busy. Manon Bollegraf Oh so true Johan Johan Kriek Jake Putnam Couldn't agree more Johan, Id have to go with
someone like you...you punnished your opponets, you made them
pay...no one wanted to play you at the end of the day! Gavin Mkandla Murray needs someone in his box able to give him
that extra something that will allow him to go out and perform
to the best of his abilities.Johan Kriek could be a significant
value to Murray's quest for world domination.. Paula Smith Go for it Joha! What's the worst that could happen,
he gives you the finger?
If you liked reading this article and Tennis Video Exercises, feel free to subscribe with the button below, so you will not miss any future great articles on tennis fitness, speed development and injury prevention. Sergio Cruz
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Please read my DISCLAIMER and also make sure that you have supervision when exercising as well as you must have previous physical and athletic training before engaging in intense training or any training. Back from What Is A Top Tennis Coach Worth? to Tennis Articles Main Section Copyright © Tenniscruz.com®. All rights reserved.
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