Video Library (40 videos)
| Name |
FPS |
Duration |
Crushing the Breaker (4 of 4)
Rafael Nadal's mental game animation from a neutral position, filmed from a court-level angle. After the point, his recovery routine includes a deliberate body reset and focused gaze that quickly returns to a ready, battle-oriented posture.
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28.6s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (10 of 13)
Jim Loehr’s mental game animation on “Love the Battle,” filmed from a presentation-style, front-facing angle. The player’s footwork and stance are illustrated conceptually, emphasizing an athletic ready position, small adjustment steps, and a consistent split-step pattern as metaphors for staying engaged under pressure.
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6s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (11 of 13)
Jim Loehr’s mental game lesson on “Love the Battle” focuses on embracing pressure as a trigger for full engagement rather than a threat. From this angle, you can clearly see how he links emotional “shoulder and trunk” responses—tightening, shrinking, or opening up—to specific thoughts and rituals that either restrict or free the kinetic chain under stress.
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4.8s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (11 of 15)
Gael Monfils’ forehand from a neutral baseline position, filmed from a side animation angle. His footwork includes a pronounced split-step into a wide open stance, with a strong push off the outside leg to load and then recover back toward the center.
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7s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (12 of 15)
Ana Ivanovic's forehand from the center of the baseline, filmed from a broadcast-style court-level angle. Her early, rhythmic split-step into a semi-open stance and quick adjustment steps into the ball emphasize committed footwork that supports an aggressive, battle-ready mindset.
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8.6s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (12 of 13)
Jim Loehr's mental game animation, focused on negative thinking under pressure, from a neutral presentation angle. The lower body posture contrasts tense, rigid hips and legs with a more relaxed, grounded stance to illustrate how physical tension mirrors a tight, negative mindset.
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6.9s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (13 of 15)
Ana Ivanovic’s forehand from the center of the baseline, filmed from a front angle. At contact, the racket face is slightly closed with the ball meeting the strings around waist height as the racket accelerates steeply upward through the hitting zone.
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9.1s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (13 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses a tennis player's between-point ritual and mental reset process, filmed from a front, interview-style angle. His relaxed wrist position and open hand gestures emphasize how loosening grip tension between points can help reset focus and reduce performance anxiety.
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26.6s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (14 of 15)
Ana Ivanovic’s forehand from a neutral position, filmed from an animated side angle. Her semi-western grip is clear as her wrist stays laid back through the racquet drop and then pronates sharply just after contact.
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7.8s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (15 of 15)
Jim Loehr’s mental game session on “Love the Battle” with Rafael Nadal focus, filmed from a presentation-style angle. From this view, you can clearly see Loehr emphasizing relaxed hands and reduced grip tension as a foundation for keeping the wrist loose and responsive under competitive pressure.
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27.3s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (1 of 13)
Jim Loehr’s mental game session with a tennis player, filmed from a front court-level angle. The player’s shoulders and trunk visibly relax and then re-engage in sync with Loehr’s cues, illustrating how emotional state and self-talk influence upper-body tension and release.
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46.1s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (1 of 15)
A tennis player’s forehand from a neutral central position, filmed from a front animation angle. The follow-through finishes high with the non-hitting hand extending back for counterbalance before the player resets into a ready position, reflecting Nadal-style fighting intensity and recovery focus.
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17.3s |
August 2008 Issue
Nadal’s full-point rally sequence from a neutral baseline position, filmed from a broadcast-style rear angle. His semi-western forehand grip is evident in the closed racket face and pronounced wrist lag before contact, followed by a strong upward wrist pronation to produce heavy topspin.
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24.9s |
August 2008 Issue
Jim Loehr analyzes Rafael Nadal’s mental approach during a point, filmed from a broadcast-style court-level angle. The video focuses on Nadal’s racket preparation and contact point, noting how early racket setup and committed swing path support his competitive mindset on each ball.
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24.9s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (2 of 13)
Jim Loehr’s mental game animation on “Love the Battle” focuses on reframing pressure as a positive challenge rather than a threat. The sequence contrasts positive and negative internal self-talk, illustrating how shifting the mental narrative changes body language, emotional intensity, and readiness to compete under stress.
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9.1s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (3 of 13)
An animation of a tennis player working through a pressure situation on court, filmed in a conceptual, instructional style. The follow-through and recovery emphasize resetting posture between points, with the player’s body language shifting from tension to a composed, ready position to model mental resilience.
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37.3s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (3 of 15)
Novak Djokovic’s mental game animation on embracing pressure and adversity, presented as a Flash-based instructional clip. The focus is on how his pre-point routines, body language, and between-point trunk posture support emotional control and competitive intensity under stress.
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5.6s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (4 of 15)
Rafael Nadal's serve ritual from the baseline, filmed from a front angle. His shoulders and trunk move through a consistent pre-serve routine, with a subtle forward lean and slight upper-body rock that rhythmically sets his coil before initiating the service motion.
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18.9s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (4 of 13)
Jim Loehr’s mental game session on “Love the Battle” focuses on building emotional resilience and competitive intensity under pressure, filmed from an instructional, front-facing angle. The video emphasizes how to mentally “pump up” your competitive energy at key moments, using specific self-talk and body-language cues to sharpen focus and commitment on every point.
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8.9s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (5 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses a tennis player's mental approach to pressure situations, filmed from an animated instructional angle. The focus is on how the player's internal dialogue and emotional "racket" at the moment of contact with stress can be reshaped to keep the mind face angle open to challenge rather than closed in fear.
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7.3s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (5 of 15)
Jim Loehr analyzes Rafael Nadal’s competitive mindset during a point, filmed from a standard broadcast angle. Nadal’s lower body intensity is evident in his constant small adjustment steps and aggressive leg drive into each shot, reflecting his commitment to staying fully engaged in every rally.
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11.1s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (6 of 15)
Jim Loehr talks about the mental game and competitive mindset, using animation and examples to illustrate how elite players handle pressure and adversity. From this angle, you can clearly see how the “mental grip” concept mirrors a player’s physical grip and wrist relaxation—staying firm enough to commit, but loose enough to adapt point by point.
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12.7s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (6 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses the mental game of tennis and performing under pressure, filmed from a presentation-style angle. He emphasizes recovering quickly from mistakes, mentally following through on routines, and returning to a ready mindset between points.
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12.1s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (7 of 15)
Dimitri’s mental game animation on “Love the Battle,” inspired by Rafael Nadal, is presented in a courtside instructional format. His footwork focus is on committing fully to each point with an engaged ready position and energetic split-step, reinforcing the mindset of embracing long rallies and physical struggle.
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7s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (7 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses mental discipline and emotional control for tennis players, filmed from a front, interview-style camera angle. His wrist and hand movements stay relaxed and open on his lap, with minimal gripping or clenching, reinforcing his message about managing tension under pressure.
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15.5s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (8 of 15)
Rafael Nadal’s mental routine between points on the baseline, filmed from a front court-level angle. His consistent, deliberate racket twirls and exact hand placement on the grip at rest emphasize a repeatable contact preparation ritual before every point.
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14.1s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (8 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses mental strategies for staying relaxed and focused under pressure, filmed from a front-facing interview angle. His seated posture and steady, grounded lower body emphasize a calm, composed “ready” stance that parallels an athlete’s balanced base before a point.
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5.4s |
Love the Battle: Rafael Nadal (9 of 15)
Rafael Nadal’s mental game discussion filmed in an interview-style setting from a front-facing camera angle. His steady eye contact and composed posture during answers reflect his recovery between points and commitment to resetting his focus before the next battle.
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12.8s |
Love the Battle: Pathways to Performing Under Pressure (9 of 13)
Jim Loehr discusses the mental game of tennis and how players can build optimism and resilience under pressure, filmed from a front-facing interview angle. From this view, you can clearly see how he uses hand and wrist gestures with relaxed, open palms to emphasize the importance of staying loose and confident during high-stress points.
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22s |
Jim Loehr: From Negative to Positive (2 of 2)
Jim Loehr talks through a “bad call” scenario from a neutral on-court position, filmed from a standard court-level interview angle. His body orientation and calm, grounded stance emphasize controlled breathing and composed posture as key elements of mental footwork in responding to perceived injustice.
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10.7s |
Jim Loehr: The 16 Second Cure part 1 (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr’s full four-stage between-point routine, filmed from a front courtside instructional angle. The sequence clearly breaks down how he uses shoulder relaxation and deliberate trunk posture resets between points to transition from emotional recovery to focused preparation.
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27.5s |
Jim Loehr: From Negative to Positive (1 of 2)
Jim Loehr’s mental game segment on “Give Me Another One” is presented from a front-facing, interview-style angle. His relaxed hip posture and grounded stance, with feet planted evenly, emphasize a stable lower-body base that reflects composure and reset between points.
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7s |
The Only Way to Win: Our Academy (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr speaks from a stationary position, likely mid-court, filmed from a standard front-facing or slightly off-center interview angle. His posture is upright with minimal movement, using subtle shifts of weight and controlled hand gestures that reflect a grounded, composed stance while discussing mental game principles.
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390.5s |
The Only Way to Win: Introduction (1 of 2)
Jim Loehr speaks in a front-facing interview format, filmed from a court-level angle. His relaxed wrist position and open hand gestures underscore a calm, controlled grip on his notes or microphone, reinforcing the composed mental approach he describes.
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346.5s |
The Only Way to Win: Introduction
Jim Loehr’s mental game introduction filmed from a front-facing, court-level angle. His upper body remains relatively square with minimal shoulder rotation, while his trunk stays stable and upright to emphasize posture and breathing as foundational elements of the mental routine.
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346.6s |
The Only Way to Win: What Our Academy Players Do (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr speaking on tennis mental game concepts, filmed from a front-facing interview angle. His seated posture and grounded lower body emphasize still hips and relaxed legs that support focused, controlled upper-body expression while he talks.
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278.6s |
The Only Way to Win: The Private Voice (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr speaks on the mental game and inner voice, filmed from a front-facing interview angle. His seated posture and grounded lower body emphasize stability, mirroring the calm, controlled physical base athletes aim for in their hip and leg positioning under pressure.
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351.3s |
The Only Way to Win: The Power of Story (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr speaks on the mental game from a seated position, filmed from a front court-level angle. His steady posture, measured hand gestures, and consistent eye focus forward emphasize composed follow-through in communication and a calm, grounded recovery between key points in his message.
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425.5s |
The Only Way to Win: Confidence (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr discusses competitive mindset and confidence in match situations, filmed from a front-facing interview angle. His steady eye contact and composed facial expressions at key points underscore the importance of maintaining a calm, controlled mental “contact point” under pressure.
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221.2s |
The Only Way to Win: American Junior Tennis (1 of 1)
Jim Loehr discusses mental toughness and performance psychology concepts for tennis players, filmed from a standard interview angle. His upright posture and steady, squared shoulders emphasize controlled breathing and trunk stillness as he explains how emotional regulation supports consistent competitive play.
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241.8s |