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Speaker:Welcome to the Atlanta Tennis Podcast.
Speaker:Every episode is titled "It Starts with Tennis" and goes from there.
Speaker:We talk with coaches, club managers, industry business professionals,
Speaker:technology experts, and anyone else we find interesting.
Speaker:We want to have a conversation as long as it starts with tennis.
Speaker:[Music]
Speaker:Hey, hey, this is Sean with the Atlanta Tennis Podcast,
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Speaker:With that said, let's get started with 10 minutes of tennis.
Speaker:[Music]
Speaker:This is 10 minutes of tennis with Justin Yo, world-renowned tennis pro in Puerto Rico,
Speaker:who is just off the pickleball court.
Speaker:Oh, wait, I'm not supposed to say that.
Speaker:[Music]
Speaker:Hey, sometimes we're going to test out the other things.
Speaker:You know, next week you might say you're checking out the platform.
Speaker:I don't even know a platform.
Speaker:Is it platform tennis? I don't know.
Speaker:Then you'll be playing paddle.
Speaker:You got to check these things out, Justin.
Speaker:Got to check them out.
Speaker:Yes, ruined my reputation, right?
Speaker:[Laughter]
Speaker:I said you came off the pickleball court.
Speaker:I didn't say what you were doing there.
Speaker:You might have just stopped into the court to have a lunch.
Speaker:Maybe just having lunch on the pickleball court.
Speaker:Anyone listening, I can't believe he brought up the pickle.
Speaker:[Laughter]
Speaker:It's 10 minutes of tennis.
Speaker:It is 10 minutes of tennis.
Speaker:Very true.
Speaker:He followed us right now.
Speaker:He did not just say this.
Speaker:I didn't mean what.
Speaker:I said the P word.
Speaker:I did.
Speaker:Well, I didn't even say paddle or platform.
Speaker:I did say--
Speaker:You just did a pickle.
Speaker:Now you put us in a pickle.
Speaker:Yeah, okay.
Speaker:Now we got to go there.
Speaker:Now we got three minutes.
Speaker:We're losing time.
Speaker:We've only got 10 minutes.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:So we will talk about functional tennis today on our 10 minutes of tennis.
Speaker:And Justin, catch me up on functional tennis is kind of an umbrella concept that has other things
Speaker:inside it underneath it.
Speaker:One of the more interesting concepts inside of functional tennis,
Speaker:you mentioned is mind mapping.
Speaker:Do you want to start there?
Speaker:Or do you want to give me a functional tennis overview and then dive down?
Speaker:Yeah, well, so mind mapping.
Speaker:I'll just correct that.
Speaker:You know, people think of mind mapping as a spreadsheet and all this drawn up clouds
Speaker:that everybody knows is a mind mapping in the tech world these days.
Speaker:When we talk about mind mapping in tennis, your brain--
Speaker:and actually, let me take that away--
Speaker:it's not just tennis.
Speaker:It's all sports.
Speaker:When a child at a young age does a lot of different sports,
Speaker:the brain itself is already starting to map what nerve systems,
Speaker:what exercise, what functionality, what kinetic chains,
Speaker:like all those different things are happening within the brain.
Speaker:And if they've done a lot of different sports and different activities,
Speaker:and when I say activities,
Speaker:it could be just climbing the tennis fence.
Speaker:You know, like when I was a kid that knew that,
Speaker:you know, we had little bad news on our shoes as a member.
Speaker:And if you weren't a member, you're supposed to get out.
Speaker:But they've locked the gate.
Speaker:So we would climb the fence to try a different court surface,
Speaker:but climbing the fence was strengthening your hair,
Speaker:strengthening your toes.
Speaker:And I'd ask people here to try to climb the fence,
Speaker:and they can't climb the fence.
Speaker:You can't stick their toe in.
Speaker:They can't pull themselves up and over a fence.
Speaker:So anyway, activities is what I'm talking about.
Speaker:And the earlier the activities,
Speaker:the more they have those function things in their brain.
Speaker:And I call that mind mapping, meaning they have things they have already.
Speaker:And then when you can find those teaching tennis,
Speaker:it makes tennis so much easier because you don't have your client
Speaker:or whoever you're working with doesn't have to think.
Speaker:They already know that function.
Speaker:You know, so like a baseballer,
Speaker:they already understand weight transfer.
Speaker:They already understand linear motion of the lower body
Speaker:and angular motion of the upper body.
Speaker:Right? So if you correlate that,
Speaker:they actually understand it.
Speaker:If you talk about a home run,
Speaker:they have to go low to high.
Speaker:So they start to learn all these functions already.
Speaker:Baseball is another great one for the serve because
Speaker:it's released a ball toss and then throw like it's on a center field.
Speaker:You know, so baseball a lot.
Speaker:If people haven't done baseball,
Speaker:it could be a ballerina dancer.
Speaker:She's got great footwork.
Speaker:You just got to teach her how to use it
Speaker:if you're correctly independently,
Speaker:not at the same time.
Speaker:You know, so there's sort of the things.
Speaker:I mean, I could talk about this all day long
Speaker:because as far as I can stand,
Speaker:I base it on my coaching.
Speaker:When someone comes to a lesson,
Speaker:I haven't seen them before.
Speaker:They're like, I really want you to help me.
Speaker:I really want you to fix me.
Speaker:And I have to get their past like,
Speaker:find out what they've done before in their sports.
Speaker:And then you correlate it.
Speaker:So that's it.
Speaker:We had someone mentioned that the other night,
Speaker:who was a high performance coach.
Speaker:And he talked about kids switching coaches
Speaker:and how it could potentially even take
Speaker:four to six months just to get to know somebody as a coach.
Speaker:And I think that might have been what he is referring to
Speaker:is really understanding how their brain works,
Speaker:how it relates to my brain as a coach,
Speaker:to be able to understand each other.
Speaker:What I'm saying.
Speaker:How does that functionally get into what you already know?
Speaker:Is that kind of where you're going with this?
Speaker:Yeah, well, so even profiling a player, right?
Speaker:I have right now a two, five, three, I lay.
Speaker:And she's like, so, you know,
Speaker:can you show me the grip?
Speaker:Can you show me all this stuff?
Speaker:Well, I just want you to hit the ball.
Speaker:And she's like, what?
Speaker:I'm like, yeah, I'm going to feed you.
Speaker:And in the first five to ten minutes,
Speaker:I'm going to pick up all the things
Speaker:that you have straights already
Speaker:and we're going to build off those versus trying to,
Speaker:you know, step by step, step by step, you know.
Speaker:And then look for just, you know,
Speaker:a lot of things is looking for a fundamental.
Speaker:Do they have an athletic base?
Speaker:Do they know what a ready stance is?
Speaker:Do they actually, it's amazing.
Speaker:Some people actually see the ball well
Speaker:and some people don't.
Speaker:You know, and when they don't,
Speaker:you have to get that perception right first
Speaker:because if you don't work on that,
Speaker:it's, you know, you're late back swing,
Speaker:late contact late.
Speaker:Everything's stiff.
Speaker:They want to put everything in the court.
Speaker:And it's all late.
Speaker:So, uh, yeah, I don't know.
Speaker:I've got a lot of people here in Puerto Rico
Speaker:that come to me from clinics and come for lessons.
Speaker:And when they come to lessons,
Speaker:they're like, I've heard you're the best
Speaker:and then I'm like, well, no,
Speaker:because all I focus on
Speaker:is the functionality of what you can do.
Speaker:And we build that to look at you,
Speaker:how to play versus just hitting a tennis ball.
Speaker:Um, and, and the last few people I've seen
Speaker:that come to me and they hit the ball and I go,
Speaker:I said, let's cause.
Speaker:Hit.
Speaker:You tell me what you watch TV.
Speaker:Does the tennis player look slim, stiff,
Speaker:slow and late?
Speaker:Just tell me, do they look like that?
Speaker:They're like, no, I'm like,
Speaker:so let's just focus on the opposites.
Speaker:Lose, early and fast.
Speaker:Please, let's just try that.
Speaker:And all of a sudden,
Speaker:ball, they start to change.
Speaker:So again, that's function function stuff.
Speaker:Well, like what you said about getting to know the player
Speaker:or just have them hit the ball in the beginning,
Speaker:we do the same thing when we first meet a kid.
Speaker:And I tell him, I said, all right,
Speaker:hit the ball over the net and they look at me.
Speaker:And what do you mean?
Speaker:I'm like, anyway, you want what's the first thing that comes to mind?
Speaker:Because sometimes I'm also going to learn the last thing they learned
Speaker:from their previous coach if they had one.
Speaker:But also they're going to, they're going to relate it from
Speaker:whatever sport they came from or whatever thing they did at home play
Speaker:and catch with dad or mom or whatever they were doing.
Speaker:And they're going to relate and say, okay,
Speaker:how am I going to use the stick to get the ball over the net?
Speaker:And I'm going to see just a little bit of a glimpse
Speaker:of how their brain works.
Speaker:And then I can say, okay, great.
Speaker:Let's add a follow through.
Speaker:Let's add a backswing.
Speaker:We can do those things piece by piece.
Speaker:And I guess in that case, we're just building the function.
Speaker:Yeah, we're building the function.
Speaker:And as far as mind mapping goes,
Speaker:you can see whether a child has good swing, but they don't weigh transfer.
Speaker:Right? So you would work on their base and you'd work on their legs
Speaker:and try to build that with the function that
Speaker:there already happens with good swing.
Speaker:Right? And so that all of a sudden changes their racquet path
Speaker:and the length of their racquet path because they're now transferring their body weight.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:So yeah, there's functional tennis and mind mapping.
Speaker:Again, there's two different things to end kids and adults.
Speaker:But really at the end of the day, you want to see what they already have
Speaker:that they understand that they already know and then you build off that
Speaker:instead of trying to build everything.
Speaker:And so in that case, it is a piece by piece concept.
Speaker:So if you're going to give some advice at the end of our 10 minutes of tennis,
Speaker:you're just saying, okay, here's minute 10.
Speaker:And we're going to say, all right, coaches,
Speaker:here's what we want you to look for, pay attention to, and players when you show up.
Speaker:You got one thing for the coaches and one thing for the players to say,
Speaker:coaches look for this, players expect that.
Speaker:I mean, coaches, you know, you know, you know, all your elements of tennis,
Speaker:but just know your fundamentals like, you know, I already stands,
Speaker:do they have good base, you know, or just get them to hit some balls
Speaker:and make sure you don't hit the ball right to them, make them move and see if they've got the functions
Speaker:of moving to the ball.
Speaker:I don't think a lot of people pick up on perception enough.
Speaker:A perception is everything, you know, if your eyes don't pick up things, you don't get the message to your feet
Speaker:and if feet don't get a chance to move.
Speaker:So I'm constantly telling them to watch the racket and I use the example of drop the vigil
Speaker:or time, because what does he do on the baseline?
Speaker:He's like this, you know, forcing his eyes to see the messages so everything else works.
Speaker:So that's what I would say is focus more on perception and the coaches.
Speaker:What's the second question?
Speaker:Players.
Speaker:Players.
Speaker:Players, um, I understand you again, understand what you do that.
Speaker:I understand your strengths and build off you.
Speaker:You know, we'll try and have everything.
Speaker:I see a lot of people saying I'm weak here, I'm weak here, I'm weak here,
Speaker:but where are your strengths as well?
Speaker:Because your strengths can get better and better and better, and your weakness can get, you know,
Speaker:so again, my strength here is like, yeah, my weakness will come up a little bit, you know,
Speaker:and then you just keep going this way.
Speaker:You can't be best at everything.
Speaker:It's impossible.
Speaker:So understand all the pieces of my own game and be able to walk into my coach and say,
Speaker:all right, functionally, I'm going to use that word a lot, because now we're going to,
Speaker:we're putting pieces together a little bit.
Speaker:We're going to say, all right, here's how my brain works.
Speaker:Here's what it wants to do.
Speaker:Here's what I can do.
Speaker:Here's what I can't do.
Speaker:Let's put it all together.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And for the next 30 seconds, it could us to my kiss at Roseville Couch Club.
Speaker:Great to hear from you, mate.
Speaker:And let's hear from all people, please, we'd love to just talk tennis.
Speaker:Here we go.
Speaker:Justin Yeung, 10 minutes of tennis.
Speaker:We'll see you next week.
Speaker:Thanks so much.
Speaker:Well, there you have it.
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