Jeffrey McCullough
United States
Coach
Tennis teaching professional focused on player development and technique instruction.
Tennis teaching professional.
Video Library (36 videos)
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FPS |
Duration |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (10 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game instruction segment on peak performance is presented from a front-facing teaching angle. His follow-through in communication includes clear hand gestures and steady eye contact that reinforce key points before he resets calmly to continue the lesson.
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5.5s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (10 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from a neutral position, filmed from a side angle. After contact his follow-through wraps across his body while his weight continues moving into the court, and he quickly brings both hands back toward the center to re-establish a ready position.
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8.9s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (11 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough discusses mental game concepts for peak performance, filmed from a front court-level angle. His upper body remains relatively still with minimal trunk rotation, emphasizing how mental focus and routine can be trained independently of large shoulder and torso movements.
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3.7s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (11 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed FH from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. His footwork features a clear split step into a neutral stance, with a small adjustment hop before planting his front foot and a defined recovery step back toward the ready position after contact.
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6.1s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (12 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation, framed as a confident on-court presence, is presented from a front, eye-level angle. His hips stay relaxed and centered over a stable base, with knees softly flexed to suggest readiness and grounded lower-body posture as part of the confident body language.
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5.3s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (12 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed FH from the Deuce side, filmed from a CourtLevel Side angle. His shoulders rotate well past 90 degrees relative to the net on the unit turn, then the trunk uncoils ahead of the arms, creating a clear sequence from hip and torso rotation into the forward swing.
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11.9s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (13 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. The side view makes his semi-western forehand grip and stable, laid-back wrist position easy to see as he maintains consistent wrist lag through the forward swing into contact.
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8.9s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (13 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s pre-point ritual near the baseline, filmed from a court-level side angle. His hips stay relatively square to the net while his knees maintain a light, consistent flex, showing a stable lower-body posture as he prepares mentally between points.
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11.4s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (14 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough's breathing animation for mental game training is presented from a neutral, front-facing instructional angle. The contact point between breath timing and stroke rhythm is illustrated by syncing inhalation and exhalation with the imagined racket swing path through the hitting zone.
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9.6s |
The Favorite and the Underdog: Understanding Match Dynamics (1 of 4)
Jeffrey McCullough's strategic point-play sequence from a neutral baseline position, filmed from a high court-level angle. After each shot he finishes his follow-through quickly and uses efficient split steps to recover back to a balanced ready position in the center of the court.
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10.1s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (1 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from a central baseline position, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. At contact his racket face is slightly closed with the ball struck around waist height, and the racket head accelerates forward on a low-to-high path with both hands firmly controlling the face through impact.
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6.1s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 2 (5 of 5)
Jeffrey McCullough’s movement and stroke rhythm sequence from mid-court, filmed from a side angle. His hips and legs work in a smooth loading-unloading pattern, with noticeable knee flex and progressive hip rotation driving each step into the stroke.
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2.8s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (1 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game “pump-up” animation sequence, presented as an on-screen instructional graphic. The racket is shown in a simplified animated form, with contact framed as a confident, committed strike through the ball to reinforce an assertive mindset.
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7.1s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (2 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed FH from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side angle. His stance shifts from a neutral setup into a slightly closed position as he steps forward, with a clear adjustment of his outside foot to load before rotating into contact.
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6.2s |
The Favorite and the Underdog: Understanding Match Dynamics (2 of 4)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed backhand from a neutral position, filmed from a rear court-level angle. At contact his racket face is slightly closed with the ball struck around waist height, and the racket head accelerates low-to-high on a compact, linear swing path through the hitting zone.
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4.7s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 2 (2 of 5)
Jeffrey McCullough discusses mental game concepts for tennis performance, filmed from a front-facing teaching angle. His follow-through in explanation includes consistent eye contact and calm hand gestures that return to a neutral position, reinforcing a composed, ready-to-compete mindset.
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5s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (2 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation is presented from a neutral, front-facing instructional angle. The sequence emphasizes how relaxed grip pressure and a loose wrist are used as visual metaphors for staying calm, adaptable, and responsive under competitive pressure.
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6.9s |
The Favorite and the Underdog: Understanding Match Dynamics (3 of 4)
Jeffrey McCullough discusses Djokovic’s confidence and strategic mindset from an off-court, front-facing teaching position, filmed from a medium front angle. His relaxed continental-style hand position and neutral wrist alignment on the racquet emphasize a loose grip that supports feel and subtle wrist engagement rather than forceful tension.
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9.5s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (3 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed FH from the Deuce side, filmed from a Rear angle. After contact his follow-through wraps across his body with his weight transferring into the court, and he quickly resets both hands on the racquet in a compact ready position for recovery.
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3.2s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (3 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation sequence from a neutral court position, filmed from a front-facing instructional angle. The trunk and shoulders are depicted rotating together as a unified block, emphasizing a stable, centered upper body as the mental focus cues progress.
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6.7s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 2 (3 of 5)
Jeffrey McCullough’s animation of key stroke positions is presented from a neutral, instructional graphic angle. The contact point is depicted with the racket face square to the intended target line and the ball meeting the strings slightly in front of the player’s lead hip.
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5s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (4 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough’s two-handed forehand from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side angle. His footwork emphasizes a small adjustment hop into a neutral stance, with a clear split-step and controlled pivot on the front foot before driving through the ball.
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9.2s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 2 (4 of 5)
Jeffrey McCullough’s movement and preparation sequence from center court, filmed from a rear angle. His split-step is timed just before the opponent’s contact, followed by small adjustment steps into a neutral stance that keeps his weight evenly distributed for the next shot.
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3.8s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (4 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s split-step and ready position in the center of the baseline, filmed from a court-level front angle. His hips and knees move in a rhythmic flex-and-extend pattern, with noticeable knee bend and hip drop on the split-step that primes an explosive leg drive into the first step.
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12.6s |
The Favorite and the Underdog: Understanding Match Dynamics (4 of 4)
Jeffrey McCullough's serve motion from a central baseline position, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. The side view makes it easy to see his shoulders tilt steeply and his trunk arch backward as he loads, then uncoil in sequence from the hips through the torso into the arm during the racket throw simulation.
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5.3s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (5 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. His semi-western dominant hand grip with a firm, laid-back wrist creates clear wrist lag, while the non-dominant hand stays relaxed and drives through with a controlled pronation at contact.
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16s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (5 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s on-court coaching segment on peak performance is filmed from a CourtLevel Side angle. His own stance alternates between a relaxed neutral base and a ready athletic position, modeling how players should set their feet and posture between points to support their mental routines.
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3.9s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 2 (1 of 5)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation, focused on grace under pressure, is presented with an instructional overlay format. Wrist relaxation is emphasized conceptually here, with the visuals underscoring how a softer grip and reduced wrist tension support smoother, more resilient stroke mechanics during stressful points.
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2.7s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (6 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand taken on the rise from a neutral position, filmed from a side court-level angle. His hips stay closed through the loading phase with a pronounced knee bend, then drive forward as both legs extend aggressively into the court during contact.
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2.8s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (6 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation on commitment is presented from a neutral, instructional screen view. The trunk and shoulders are illustrated staying aligned toward the intended target, emphasizing a clear decision point where the upper body commits fully to the chosen shot.
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10s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (7 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game animation focuses on Nadal’s string-bed interaction, filmed from a front, slightly elevated angle. From this angle you can clearly see how the wrist stays relaxed through contact, letting the strings “grab” the ball as the grip pressure stays moderate rather than tight.
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6.4s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (7 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from the baseline, filmed from an over-the-shoulder rear angle. The contact point is slightly in front of his lead hip with a closed racket face and a steep low-to-high swing path that accelerates the racket head through the ball.
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1.9s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (8 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed forehand from a closed stance near the baseline, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. His hips stay closed longer with a pronounced rear-leg load and deep knee bend before driving forward, showing a clear transfer from back leg to front leg through contact.
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6.9s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (8 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s neutral stance forehand from the center of the court, filmed from a side angle. After contact he extends his racquet forward with a compact follow-through while his weight settles evenly and his non-hitting hand comes back toward his torso, preparing him to recover to a neutral ready position.
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5.8s |
The Two Handed Forehand: Past, Present, Future (9 of 13)
Jeffrey McCullough's two-handed FH from the center of the baseline, filmed from a side CourtLevel angle. His shoulders rotate well past 90 degrees relative to the net on the unit turn, then the trunk uncoils ahead of the arms, creating a clear sequence from hip and torso rotation into the forward swing.
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7.7s |
A Practical Guide to Peak Performance: Part 1 (9 of 14)
Jeffrey McCullough’s mental game instruction segment on peak performance is presented from a front-facing, interview-style angle. His upright seated posture and steady, grounded lower body mirror the composed, ready stance he encourages players to adopt between points to stabilize focus and emotional control.
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4.5s |