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How to master your own internal body clock: internal rhythm:defending your contact po

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  • How to master your own internal body clock: internal rhythm:defending your contact po

    When you defend your contact pt., you will begin to feel as if you can place the ball anywhere, at any pace/spin/ht you want, and you will begin to feel like a tennis god out there on the court!

    Who is the most adrenalized player you can think of? Nadal? Who is the smoothest player you can think of? Federer? They have extremely good control over their internal body clocks. Defending your contact point, with a relaxed upper body, tensed lower body, maintaining the same distance no matter what the incoming shot's speed, height, depth, is the surest path to consistency and mastery of your own internal rhythm. . The only thing you are varying, is which part of the ball you are hitting: straight back is for dtl, right side of the ball is for cross court, left side is for inside out shots. Of course, the point depends on groundies or volleys, and the grip.
    __________________
    We all have internal body clocks. Emotions are the fuel that shape this internal energy. “It’s fight or flight out there.” Every match is made up of many small energy bursts. These bursts power our body clocks during a match. Some of those bursts are lull energy based: medium, no risk, put your opponent to sleep type shots. Some of those bursts are jam based energy: they change the speed of the ball after the ball bounces, which can jam our internal body clock rhythm. Some of those bursts are finish based: they are clean winners.

    In each match we are under pressure of all types the entire duration of the match. Some of it is external: such as the shots we are facing up against, the wind, the sun, the heat, the court, the onlookers, our equipment. And some of it is internal: such as diet, digestion, the psych jobs we are facing up against, our emotions and internal match stress! These both react to create the matched energy flow within us at any given millisecond…. Our body clocks. Timing is everything in life and tennis. Uncle Tony once heard Jack Nicklaus say, “First learn to hit it far, then learn to keep it in.”
    Some of the things that jam our internal energy are: fear, tightness, frustration, anger, anxiety, over eagerness, physical conditioning, too much emotion, fear based adrenaline, not enough adrenaline, hatred, cramping, nerves, sickness, bad diet, may all combine in part to jam the timing of your internal rhythm. Have your feet ever stopped moving fast, due to the slow speed of the ball, and you ended up too far away from contact point, and framed the slow sitter with a fast swing? Your body clock was jammed and your energy was too eager and too tight! Give you another chance to hit the same sitter without match pressure, and you would no doubt crush it easily for a winner!

    Hate your opponent? That can damage internal rhythm. Has a psych job ever worked on you? Has an opponent called a ball out that was 6” in, and you went ape over it? Care too much about the win vs. the loss? Vulnerable to heat cramps? Did you change a stroke before the match? Are you trying a new stick or string or new tension or new pair of sneakers? Knowing your self isn't just knowing which shots you can hit under pressure…. It's knowing what jams you up, and how to prevent it.

    What jams you up? And how do you prevent that from happening?

    If your diet is not good, or if you are overweight, or out of shape, it won’t matter how good your strokes are. You will not be able to maintain a high quality adrenaline mode during a match….. One thing all top players have in common, is fitness of body and fitness of mind/energy modes. (Recently Mardy Fish just lost 30 lbs and won 16 of 17 matches.) If you've ever seen a match, where one of the players all of a sudden started playing better, you have seen a player regain control over his internal rhythm. You may have also seen a player suddenly start missing due to fearful nerves, and then lose a big lead… His adrenaline caused fear and fear caused tightness and tightness caused his body to become jammed!

    What are the most common Body clock Jammers? It’s the psych jobs and their resulting emotions. Emotional attacks on the surface and the hidden psych attacks as well….

    What energy are we striving for? The fast running, smooth burn of a fluid, flowing, fearless adrenaline. It’s an extremely relaxed yet very fast energy. Just enough adrenaline to make us faster and smoother than we normally are. This smooth yet quick energy, determines how relaxed we are, how disciplined we are at maintaining our contact point, and determines how freely we swing the stick, determines how accurate and powerful we are under pressure and how fast we move our feet. Good butterflies in the stomach! But it is up to us to realize that truth, and up to us whether or not we make the decision to use that knowledge to perfect our adrenaline flow! Some people call it intensity. We must polish our adrenalized energy just as much as we work on any other part of our game. This energy can even help you beat a superior opponent. The best internal body clock energy runs fast and free, like a torrent of water, during the point, when we are in the fluid/fast energy mode. When the point is over, the energy still is flowing fast! Fast fluid energy wins matches and protects our internal rhythm. This causes our feet and hands to attack the ball quickly and smoothly and confidently, on all types of shots coming in, without a jammed fear of missing. Fear can jam you badly, and jam up your internal body clock rhythm.

    Some matches are won before the first ball is struck. They are won in the warm ups. Most of us find out in the warm ups how consistent and how powerful our opponents are in that first five minutes. We make up our minds without realizing it, whether we have a chance to win…. The expert body clock jammers use the warm up to plant the fearful suggestion in the opponents’ mind, that they have no chance, to win the match. The expert psych artist will make great effort to not miss a single ball in the warm up. They will celebrate good shots. They will move fast and suggest they are in better shape than their opponent. They will fast serve you and work to under mine your confidence. They will insult you under the surface. The thin veneer of civilization is thinner in the worst cases.


    Every psych has the same objective: to jam your body clock up, and make you play worse than you would if you were loose and relaxed. Whether the opponent admits it to himself or not, whether he does it consciously or not, that is his goal. To jam the flow of your adrenaline by manipulating your emotions and your internal view of your own body…. It’s your emotions that determine the quality of your adrenaline, whether it is a fearful or whether it’s an excited flow…. Emotions can either jam us or super charge us! McEnroe and Djokovic and Nadal all play with a lot of emotion. He’s trying to make your feet move a little slower, to make your arms feel a little more tight, to make your core rotate a little slower, just enough to make you miss the next shot – and lose the next game.
    Currently, the best pro psych jammer is Nadal. He’s also the most adrenalized player and one of the most emotional players. For example, he always enters the court second. He makes his opp. Enter the stadiums before he enters. Always. He controls his opp. before a single shot is struck. He always antelopes up to the baseline just after the coin toss. He always vampires out a huge gloat after winning a big point. He vibrates his feet up and down on the change overs super fast. He scrapes the clay baseline clean after each game. He arranges his water bottles in a very particular manner. He makes his opp. wonder, “Is he on something, to be so fresh after 4 hours, when I am so tired?” Nadal is an adrenalinilized psych master! Not only does he use his game to jam your rhythm, he uses his whole emotional persona to free his own rhythm...No one can psych him. They are too busy defending against the Nadal psych…..”First learn to hit it hard, Rafa, then learn to keep it in.”, uncle Tony drilled Nicklaus’ wisdom into Rafa’s head over and over…Nadals body clock is jam proof.. No psych, works on him..The only time a shot can jam him is the flat ball, which is how Soderling, Federer, Murray, Delpotro, have all been able to beat him: by jamming down flat on his high top spin balls on faster surfaces.


    Aside from emotion: Psych jobs: Shots designed to cause us to be late or early in our contact point are: The shots that jam most of us: The most common shots that jam our clocks are the ones that change speed radically after the bounce. The American twist serve to our bh return, makes the ball speed up and change direction after the bounce. The heavy top spin shot that kicks in speed and height after the bounce. The heavy slice ball that either speeds up or slows down after the bounce. The flat ball hit hard and deep, that makes the ball skid low and heavy. The short drop shot that makes the ball kick back wards and side ways. The top spin lob that kicks hard and spins to the back fence. The slice serve that slides sideways and out of reach. To prevent these shots from jamming us, we must practice against them before the match ever begins. We must practice the transitions, from lull, to jam, to finish, every time out…Most errors are made in transition, and the contact point has to be error free, in terms of transition from a rally ball, to a jam or finish shot, off your bed.

    Defending your contact point, with a relaxed upper body, tensed lower body, maintaining the same distance no matter what the incoming shot's speed, height, depth, is the surest path to consistency and mastery of your own internal rhythm. . The only thing you are varying, is which part of the ball you are hitting: straight back is for dtl, right side of the ball is for cross court, left side is for inside out shots. Of course, the point depends on groundies or volleys, and which grip you are using.
    __________________
    Last edited by GeoffWilliams; 01-11-2011, 02:57 PM.

  • #2
    When your internal clock is getting jammed: Fear/anger based Emotion is a dead give away. If you are feeling too much of this type of emotion during a match, you are in danger of jamming yourself, and removing your smoothness and fully relaxed power. Fear of losing is related to: Nerves. Frustration is common. Anger over cheating or psyches is common. Fear of winning can also occur…. All of these can jam the fearless flow of adrenaline, and stop your feet from moving well, stop your hand from relaxing, and stop your torso from coiling.

    Decide to eliminate these fearful emotions. Use your will power to control and shape your emotional energy. The goal is to arrive at a fast footed, fast handed state, that feels relaxed, fearless, a controlled adrenalized state. Excited, but not too much so..

    It’s called motivation. Football coaches tell their teams, the other team is coming into their house, to take their belongings, and steal from them, and hurt their families. What the coach is really doing: is adrenalizing the team…. Focusing their emotional energy and raising their adrenaline levels so they move faster, hit harder than normal… He's focusing your emotional desire.
    When you back slide, decide not to anymore. It’s your emotions that determine your adrenaline flow during any match! Emotions can block or release the right hormones. Decide to be the master of your own emotions, and your own hormone flow. Fear jams the body clock. Hungry desire opens up the body clock.

    Discover what releases the right adrenaline into your own system on command. It’s not fight or flight. It’s fight or fear out there. Decide how much intensity you are going to feel. Coaches use imagination. The opp. is coming into your house! How many times have you heard a coach say, “This is our house.”

    You can learn how to prevent the ball from playing you, by attacking shots with quick feet as well as quick hands, even on slow or stopped balls, on short balls, on deep balls, and on heavily spinning balls. (Agassi was great at this, but only after Gilbert taught him the lull game.) You can learn how to deal with all psych jobs and deflect them all. If you want to win, you must be aware of all the weapons available, including the not so sportsmanlike mental ones….!


    When you master the contact point defense, within millimeters, you will begin to feel as if you can place the ball anywhere, at any pace/spin/ht you want, and you will begin to feel like a tennis god out there on the court! Your solidity will improve. Your control will improve. Your will as well. The intention to master the timing point, will distract you from: body tension: psychs: emotions: tiredness: length of the rally. You will finally reach your real potential for controlled power.
    Last edited by GeoffWilliams; 01-11-2011, 03:01 PM.

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    • #3
      whats the "lull game " gilbert taught aggassi????

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      • #4
        The lull game is a game where you are hitting a rally ball, with little risk, moving your opp. from side to side, rather than trying to outright hit a finish type shot or winner, that Agassi used to do before he hired Gilbert. Gilbert beat Agassi 2 and 1, in the SF indoor tournament, with that game, and made Agassi see the light! Murray, Nadal, Fed, Djokovic, are all expert lull game masters.

        Energy in the body: Lull energy Jam energy Finish energy


        Lull energy is when you are not trying to win the point outright, but just patiently waiting for the other player's body clock to go to sleep. Think of Simon, waiting for an opportunity to counter punch. He's just stroking the ball med pace, med depth, med angle or even right dtm. Every top player uses lull energy in every match. The goal is to let the other player beat himself by making too many ues. Lull energy is very relaxed, with no tension, or speed added into the body. It's like idling the engine. The body clock is running med and smoothly, as is the energy inside the body.


        Jam energy is ramped way up, ie, when you are trying to jam the other player with a shot that changes speed radically after the bounce. Think of Nadal. Super top or super slice, or a short drop shot, or a super flat shot, something that will jar or jam the other player's internal body clock, and either cause an error or a weak reply. Many players will make errors off the lull shots as well, and it might take 15 lull shots before the other player makes a ue, often, by going for a jam shot himself, and jamming himself in the process, by not relaxing while ramping up his own from his own lull energy. The jam energy must be relaxed or you run a way higher chance of making a ue on a jam transition. The jam transition, from lull to jam, is diff. to learn, how to relax while swinging out hard and full and freely, and not making the ue while attempting the jam.

        Finish energy is similar to jam, but, you are moving to finish, not jam, the other guy off. Requires a winner mentality, and a flat shot, or an extreme shot, to a line or a corner, or very short, or a topspin lob, or an outright passing shot, etc, think of Federer.... Also very diff. to learn the transition from lull to finish, or from jam to finish. Requires a faster internal energy. Quick movements of the muscles, yet, smooth. Extreme, yet repeatable. Is there such a thing a a reliable flat shot? If you have the shot you like. You must wait for the shot you like to finish energy. The body knows what it likes. It's diff. for everyone. It's not your mind that determines wins and losses:::: it's your body. How many players have you seen lose to relaxed pushers, who are not trying to win, just trying to watch the other guy lose? How many players go out and try to win the point on every shot they hit with their mind? And the body say, "What are you, crazy? You think I can hit a winner from every position? Why don't you video tape me and see what a dumb ass you are?" Whether it can change its energy from lull to jam to finish at will, from both sides, with all types of shots. Everyone's body clock and internal energy motor is unique.

        The transitions are more make-able, if you keep the feet moving fast on slow shots, med shot, heavy shots, jam shots, or finish shots, lull shots. Think of the cheetah, and its incredibly fast feet running down an antelope in the green veldt, volcanic crater. Think of a drunken monkey, and its happy looseness, lithe and fluid/flexy body, strong enough to rip your arm off.... Kuerten was a perfect example of the drunken monkey fast cheetah. The feet have to have the same speed for all of your shots, or you will end up making too many ues. Too many let the feet stop, on a stopped ball. Too many let the feet slow, on a slow ball, due to the body clock trying to match the rhythm of the incoming shot! The result: too many losses to inferior players who are not trying to beat you, but are trying to watch you beat yourself.......


        Go out and practice lull energy with intention, and the transitions to jam and finish, and see if you don't play with more intensity. The goal is to smoothly ramp up from med to extreme, and stay relaxed in the change, while moving the feet fast at all times, keeping the upper body relaxed at all times...... It's like two diff. engines driving and running the same car, at diff speeds, with diff intentions, simultaneously.....: Fast cheetah feet engine, drunken monkey torso/arms/shouders engine.......
        Last edited by GeoffWilliams; 01-11-2011, 02:49 PM.

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