Remember Me
forgot your password?

4 Ways To Change Your Tennis Game To Play On Clay

As the Pro Tour moves from the American hard courts onto European clay, the players will need to make small adjustments to their game because of the different surface.

For some, these changes will be fairly natural, for others the change will be fairly un-natural, but changes will have to be made.

The same applies to you!!

Here are a few simple changes you may need to think about and follow when you make the transition to clay courts.

FROM THE BASELINE

This first change concerns your ground strokes and is this - hit them higher over the net with a bit more topspin.

It sounds like a no-brainer but you would be surprised how many people don't do it and for many people adding more topspin "at will" is something they need to work on.

If you can do this however, you will find that this will not only help with your consistency, but will also help to push the balls deeper into your opponents court as well as getting the balls up at heights that they may find difficult to handle.

The second change is to hit behind your opponent more often.

Hitting behind your opponent means hitting the ball back to the same part of the court that your opponent has just hit from.

It means not always going into the open court (unless you can obviously hit a winner of course) and has 3 big advantages.

1. With your opponent probably recovering towards the centre of the court the "behind" ball means they have to quickly change direction to go back again.

Doing this on clay is very difficult because of the slippery nature of the surface and so will end up with them struggling to maintain balance and footing and therefore struggling to control the ball.

2. You will also find that you make less errors as this often means a cross-court shot (more space to aim into and lower part of the net) and you are not "over hitting" in an attempt to put the ball away into the open space.

3. You will pick up a lot of free points if you can do this well as your opponent is sometimes forced into trying to end the point quicker than they would normally want to or they will be forced into a very defensive shot just to stay in the point while they slide around.

WHEN SERVING

Just like Rafa, focus on getting a high percentage of first serves into play.

Because the clay surface negates the power of even the fastest of serves, your second serve may well be vulnerable to attack.

So, getting more first serves into play will mean your opponent gets less "looks" at your second serves and therefore less chances to attack it.

If you don't do so already, you need to develop a good spin serve that you can be aggressive on as your first serve.

A slice is good but a good kick serve will be better as it will bounce up higher and be harder for opponents to attack.

AT THE NET

Remember I said earlier about the use of the hitting behind your opponent when playing from the baseline??

Well, I also said when you get the chance you should attack - and that can mean getting to the net to finish off the point.

Just be aware that volleying on clay is different to volleying on a hard court or grass court.

Because the ball doesn't "go through" like it does on other surfaces, you need to make a couple of small adjustments.

1. Use more angles and short/drop volleys

The lack of depth on your volleys will work in your favor as getting up speed and possibly changing direction will be hard for your opponent as they attempt to get to your shots.

2. Bodyweight into ball

If you do decide to play a penetrating volley, then getting your bodyweight behind the ball and moving it forwards into the ball will help it gain momentum off the court surface and away from your opponent.

MOVEMENT

I have found that the number one thing about playing well on a clay court has nothing directly to do with shots.

It is in fact about your movement, more specifically - SLIDING.

Sliding into the ball on a clay court is vital and is the one thing that the players who don't grow up on the surface find the hardest to add into their game.

In fact most people think that you have to learn to hit the ball and then slide.

No!!

You have to learn how to slide into your shots and then begin your recovery for the next ball - and that requires timing.

So how do you learn to do this?

Well, one of the best ways I have seen is to just get out there and slide around.

Getting a partner to throw a tennis ball onto the court in different directions while you run to and slide around to get the balls before getting the ball back to them is one of the best ways to work out how to move and recover on a clay court.

Just progress/transfer this game to when you have a racket and are hitting balls and you are well on the way to feeling comfortable and moving better on "the dust".

SUMMARY

So there you have it, a few simple things you can do to make your game more effective on clay.

Try to implement them slowly and you will be more successful over the season.

Here's to the best clay court tennis you've ever played!!!

Paul Gold
For more great reports and tennis info you can use TODAY!! - go to http://www.tennisinfoproducts.com
Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Sports and Fitness Articles
  • More from Paul Gold

CORE STRENGTH TRAINING FOR ENHANCED SPORTS PERFORMANCE

By: The Alpha Athlete | 03/01/2010
Core strength training is as the name suggests, the “core” or foundation of any sports fitness regimen. Requisite to generating explosive power or speed in movement, is establishing proper core strength.

VISUALIZATION AND SPORTS PERFORMANCE

By: The Alpha Athlete | 03/01/2010
Most people are familiar with the saying that sports is 90% mental and 10% physical. Why is it then that so many athletes fail to give attention to mental training? That 90% figure should be pretty hard to overlook yet it often is. By studying trancendant athletes and sports stars, it becomes apparent that the common edge they have over competition indeed does begin mentally.

A Short History Of Boxing

By: Ann Anderson | 03/01/2010
The world of boxing is certainly controversial and has had many problems over the years with lawsuits and a few boxers ending up in jail after winning national titles.

Yes Bowling - Bowling Ball Review

By: Sandy Hoffman | 03/01/2010
Yes Bowling is an ebook written by Eric Miller that will teach you the secret for throwing more strikes, picking up impossible spares, and humiliating your bowling buddies frame after frame.

Yes Bowling - How To Throw A Bowling Ball

By: Sandy Hoffman | 03/01/2010
Bowling is a game in which a heavy ball is bowled along a wooden lane in an attempt to knock over ten large wooden pins that are set upright at the far end. It is the name given to a sport in which a ball is rolled on a flat surface, at the end of which objects known as pins are placed. The aim of rolling the ball is to knock off as many pins as possible.

Yes Bowling - Fast Bowling Techniques

By: Sandy Hoffman | 03/01/2010
Fast bowling is sometimes known as pace bowling. It is one of the two main approaches to bowling in the sport of cricket. The main aim of fast bowling is to bowl the hard cricket ball at high speed and to induce it to bounce off the pitch in an erratic fashion or to move sideways through the air. These factors will make it difficult for the batsman to hit the ball cleanly, thus, it is an important skill to master.

Yes Bowling - How To Play Bowling Review

By: Andrei Felix | 03/01/2010
Do you want to play bowling and be successful in it but you do not know how? Well to start with you need a reliable and effective guide to help you with it. How can you start playing when you do not know anything about it? Well, here is a tip. Grab a good guide to help you out in bowling. I suggest that you get the Ultimate Guide in bowling, it is none other than “The Ultimate Bowling Guide” Yes, bowling guide to help you and be the bowler that you want.

Yes Bowling - Learn To Bowling

By: Andrei Felix | 03/01/2010
One of the most fun sports that one can play with their family and friends is bowling. It is a fun activity to share and learn with friends. If you want to learn bowling then you better do it with friends. You can either take this activity seriously or just some activity to help bond with friends. Invite friends to play it. You can compete with one another, learning from each other and enjoying the company of one another.

Tennis Skills - How Understanding How You Learn Will Help You Improve Quicker

By: Paul Gold | 27/10/2009 | Sports & Fitness
Tennis Skills - We all want to better them don't we? Yes, even if your name is Roger Federer, Maria Sharapova, Serena Williams or Rafa Nadal and you are used to playing at Wimbledon or the US Open, getting more tennis skills under your belt or just improving what you already...

Tennis Skills - How Understanding How You Learn Helps You Improve Them Quicker

By: Paul Gold | 07/10/2009 | Tennis
I was talking to a group of tennis players a couple of weeks ago when I mentioned something I thought would help them through the individual troughs they were experiencing. All I did was to explain the 4 stages of learning tennis skills - so here they are.

Tennis Conditioning - How To Nail It In 5 Easy Steps

By: Paul Gold | 08/09/2009 | Tennis
Tennis conditioning is important to all tennis players. With the power and movement demands of the modern game, changes in surface and equipment as well as the facility for players to play every day of the week if they wanted to, tennis players really need to address the need to train to play as opposed to play to train (as they tended to years ago). This is how to do it!

Why You and Other Tennis Players Should Be Taking Nutritional Supplements

By: Paul Gold | 26/07/2009 | Sports & Fitness
All the recent stories around the World in the press and other forms of media about contaminated vitamin and mineral supplements leading to positive drugs tests have led a number of players and indeed other athletes to abstain from using them, in particular, our tennis playing elite. You might assume that...

Federer vs Sampras 14 Tennis Grand Slams Each But Who is the Best?

By: Paul Gold | 20/07/2009 | Sports & Fitness
So just over one month ago all the so-called tennis experts (including you - probably!!) were all scratching their heads wondering whether Roger Federer would ever win another Slam and "BANG" he goes and wins the one we just didn't see happening - The French Open after beating Soderling pretty...

Is There Danger Ahead For Nadal?

By: Paul Gold | 11/07/2009 | Sports & Fitness
So Rafa Nadal finally lost at Roland Garros after 4 years. Just when he was in sight and everybody thought he would beat the record set by Bjorn Borg who also won the French Open 4 years in a row he lost to Swede Robin Soderling in 4 unbelievable sets. I just...

The Top 3 Ways For Federer to Beat Nadal

By: Paul Gold | 26/05/2009 | Sports & Fitness
It's not enough for Federer that Rafa Nadal is a great tennis player. It's also a challenge because Nadal plays left handed. The problem is that most people Federer (and you) play are right handed, so he and you become used to certain patterns of play and positions on the tennis court. When...

4 Ways To Change Your Tennis Game To Play On Clay

By: Paul Gold | 12/05/2009 | Sports & Fitness
As the Pro Tour moves from the American hard courts onto European clay, the players will need to make small adjustments to their game because of the different surface. For some, these changes will be fairly natural, for others the change will be fairly un-natural, but changes will have to be...

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.62, 6, w2)