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Coach Bassett had a system. Everything earned, nothing given. Win, you move up. Lose, you move down. Pretty simple, don’t lose, don’t get dropped. Fair. Like a lot like my tennis growing up. Don’t miss. Don’t get yelled at. I thrived on negative incentive. Being low man in the line-up though, I had no margin for error, or to the bench I would go.
Season starts. Matches and more matches. I kept winning at six. Finally Blaine Willenborg at five loses. I’m moved up. My college tennis learning curve was steep. I knew few of the players, many of them 3-4 years older than myself with tons of experience and everyone could play at this level.
My opponents were grown young men. Myself, Half man, half child, trying to find myself. But I’m loving it, especially the practice regiment. Nobody to call anymore. Nobody cancelling, nobody dogging it. Drills and drills and drills. I’d never trained like this before. I’m getting super fit, feeling like I can go all day. Constant encouragement and support from the coaches, my team mates, our student body. And with all the winning, my belief in myself skyrocketed. And more matches. And more matches. And…