Posts

Part of being a tennis player at level: LAUNDRY! So important!

Laundry and tennis players have much of it. Plus having to travel, many solos, no funds for coaching, carrying items, washing it. Tennis really is full-time support that requires very smart, independent, fit people. Most pro sports have teams that travel together and get bulk things, food, laundry, and hotels. SURE if one is Fed or Serena their big banks allow for many advantages. Advantages such as coaching. Nothing worse than no clean undies and no store open. Agassi had that issue, at least he said in his book! Good reads, as is Sharapova's book! Many other pros cannot afford those extras. Give me a break and earn it as rationale, all players on pro tour are TRYING to earn it. Sure some have different approaches, habits, and efforts but they are working hard the players I watched for many years from early qualies to finals of the main draw. Not all will make those big bucks but tours need them. A better distribution of prize money and NO COACHING. Too many pros cannot afford a c

Forehand Groundstroke

The forehand ground. WOW, it is a primary stroke in tennis. Its name stems from the ball hitting the ground first before the player makes contact. Whereas the volley doesn't hit the soil before player contact: exception (yes, I know those exceptions always around), half-volley does hit the ground some. OK, back to the purpose of this post to learn a little about the forehand groundstroke (forehand groundie) in tennis. The key is to understand the grips first and foremost. There are the eastern, continental, semi-western, western grips that most people pick from. So we are off to a good start if they can identify their grasp. Keep in mind I WILL NOT do the work all for you. You HAVE to research these terms, watch videos, read and learn. That is how a student improves and, of course, through lessons, practicing, and playing matches. OK, think about those grips and what they are and what questions come to mind. Now, if you have your tennis frame in hand, go ahead and do a handshake

The tournament before BNP Paribas 2009 in Indian Wells

Tournaments are a vital element to tennis; that is how we show our stuff. So yes, this posting is relevant to the primary grouping, Elements in Tennis. I went before it being BNP PARIBAS ; it was like Life Open or something in 1997, my first time. Then in 2006, I took myself . I met a tennis friend who came down from out of state and watched some weekend matches. Yet the weather canceled many games, which made for Monday to be PACKED. So all those canceled matches had to be caught up. So I went to an outside court, and Gisela Dulko played singles. Recall she had beaten Martina in 2004 on clay, then Martina lost that match (Martina was in her late 40s in 2004) and said something like she wants to play Dulko on grass. WELL better be careful what you ask for, as that happened at Wimbledon in 2004, and Dulko won again in three sets. Keep in mind Martina did win the last match in the main draw. The physical prowess of Martina has been proven by playing PRO singles matches in her late 40s

GOATladies+

Wow, that is a complex subject. Yet for me, Chris Evert upon looking at her first to last professional matches. The overall longevity of her greatness is unmatched. Consistently being #1 or in the top 4 of all the players in the world for her entire playing career. Evert had no bad years or even bad months. I put Monica Seles up there for a few years; she was on the same path won more slams way SOONER than the other greats. Seles was at her best, the pre, we all know what. So perhaps Seles for coming back, even if not at the same fitness level, conquering fear and the awful situation is GOAT. Note coming on that soon.  Thus, Seles is the only great to incur the AWFUL sporting assault by an individual during a live competition. Nothing else comes close. Broadcasted everywhere, the person just slapped on wrists. WHO could come back to the venue after such an AWFUL crime. Very few, yet Seles won another slam and some tourneys. Amazing. Sure Evert's health battle confirms how apprec

Info over my playing days, just a few of news articles

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Kevin's Tennis Bio

Hello, my name is Kevin Kauffman, and I have been playing tennis since 1987. I saw Wimbledon that year (watched on tv), Chris Evert and Stefan Edberg's matches caught my interest and my love of tennis began. Although I only took one private lesson before my 20s and a few group lessons. I could play enough to do pretty well. In my 20s thru 30s, I was able to get some fantastic coaching from a few coaches, which contributed to me winning a lot more tournaments and USTA league matches! Harold Jurgensen was the one coach, out of a few outstanding tennis instructors I met, who remains my coach to this day: really the only instructor who I have declared "is my tennis coach." I started teaching tennis in my early 20s. Since my first teaching job I have continued to teach when situations arise. Now teaching is more about finding the right mutual fit with the customer (s) where learning is done by me leading in a mutual, cooperative teaching structure. Here are some highlights: Wi