Video Library (10 videos)
| Name |
FPS |
Duration |
Family Tennis (1 of 34)
Keith Hayes' mental game animation on family tennis dynamics, filmed from a neutral instructional angle. The shoulder and trunk emphasis is on how emotional tension or relaxation in family interactions can subtly influence upper-body readiness and coil before each stroke.
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15.9s |
The Best Tip Ever (1 of 4)
Keith Hayes’s volley animation sequence from the net area, filmed from a side angle. The racket moves forward with a stable, slightly open face at contact, with minimal backswing and a compact punch through the ball.
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5.6s |
Head Hunting (1 of 4)
Almagro’s baseline rally ball from center court, filmed from a rear court-level angle. He uses a compact split-step into a wide, low base, then executes small adjustment steps to stay behind the ball in a neutral stance before recovering with a crossover.
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22.9s |
Family Tennis (2 of 34)
Keith Hayes’ mental game animation on family tennis dynamics, presented from a neutral instructional angle. Wrist and grip concepts are illustrated conceptually here, with simplified racket images emphasizing relaxed grip pressure and avoiding excessive wrist tension during family play.
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12.8s |
The Best Tip Ever (3 of 4)
Keith Hayes’ animation drill for the mental game is presented from a neutral, instructional camera angle. The lower body remains mostly quiet with minimal hip turn and leg drive, emphasizing a stable base and relaxed knees to support focus on visualization and timing rather than full stroke mechanics.
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9.5s |
Head Hunting (2 of 4)
Lendl's baseline neutral rally ball from the deuce side, filmed from a rear court-level angle. At contact his racket face is slightly closed with the ball struck just in front of his lead hip, and the racket head accelerates low-to-high on a committed, fully finished swing.
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17s |
The Best Tip Ever (2 of 4)
Keith Hayes' serve from a central baseline position, filmed from a court-level front angle. After contact his racquet finishes across his body while his weight lands on the front foot, quickly bringing both hands back to a neutral ready position for the next ball.
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4.5s |
Head Hunting (3 of 4)
Murray's forehand from the center of the court, filmed from a rear angle. After contact his follow-through finishes high across his body while his weight continues moving forward, bringing him quickly back into a compact ready position for the next ball.
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16s |
The Best Tip Ever (4 of 4)
Keith Hayes’ animated doubles point breakdown from a tactical overhead angle. The players’ small adjustment steps between shots, especially the synchronized split-steps at the opponent’s contact, make their net positioning and recovery patterns easy to see.
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11s |
Head Hunting (4 of 4)
Keith Hayes discusses mental game concepts for handling head-hunting tactics, filmed from a front court-level angle. From this view you can clearly see how a slightly firmer continental grip and relaxed wrist position are used as reference points when teaching players to stay calm and committed to their swings under pressure.
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27.7s |