Keith Hayes

Active Coach

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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
27.7s