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Welcome to the Atlanta Tennis Podcast.

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Every episode is titled "It Starts with Tennis" and goes from there.

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We talk with coaches, club managers, industry business professionals,

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technology experts, and anyone else we find interesting.

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We want to have a conversation as long as it starts with tennis.

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Hey, hey, this is Shaun with the Atlanta Tennis Podcast,

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powered by GoTennis. While you're here, please hit that follow button.

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And after you listen, please share with your friends and teammates.

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Also, let us know if you have questions or topics you would like us to discuss,

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and we will add them to our schedule.

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With that said, let's get started with 10 minutes of tennis.

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This is 10 minutes of tennis with World renowned tennis pro Justin Yeo, Australian,

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in Puerto Rico, and I am just a guy in Atlanta.

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But I will say, "May the courts be with you."

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And good morning. It's a rainy morning here in Atlanta.

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I'm sure the weather is beautiful as always there in Puerto Rico, Justin.

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But today's topic is talking about the fundamentals and when to get them right.

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Should I save them on the fundamentals for the end?

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That wouldn't make any sense to anybody, would it?

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So getting them right from the start just makes sense.

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So why do we have to even say it?

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Because it's the foundation of setting everything up.

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Get them right.

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The amount of people that I've met that, you know, I said, "Hey, can you read it?"

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And we got a round back, the knees are bent forward,

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grip is too tight.

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The old boys are tucked in to the rib gate.

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I mean, come on, right?

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That sets the tone in every single thing.

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So yeah, the fundamentals of fire is even just getting the ready stage.

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It's just so critical.

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And even just as people get older, if we want to talk about, you know,

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we used to have a ready stage move 20 and now we're 50, you know.

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I always used to be out now. I always arid.

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And we're sort of both comfortable to sit there like this.

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Like you're sitting on a toilet almost, you know?

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So, you know,

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What a Darrell Lewis call it, he called it the garden gnome.

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We're just going to be ending there watching, right?

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The garden gnome.

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Well, so, you know, and then, you know,

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just a simple fundamental to the tennises and golf.

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So, it's not feeding the ball right to the play out.

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I don't know.

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I'm very the ball.

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They've laid that perfect boy because the ball's sitting right there.

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But it's never going to be there all the time.

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So, anyway, they're not really the fundamentals.

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The fundamentals is, you know, you could just stand in the right rib stage.

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Making sure the racket is in the center.

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This is out to the side.

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You know, understanding that, you know,

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absolute people don't talk enough of how important the non-dominant hand is.

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I mean, the non-dominant hand is just as important.

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Setting the racket tone, making the grip that tension right.

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So, I mean, I'm just touched on standing still when the right ready stance is a fundamental,

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you know, without working on footwork and, you know, physicality and,

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you know, just making sure you can even rotate your body.

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If you can't rotate your body, you know, that was going to be the question is,

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okay, so walk me through a few of the fundamentals.

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The starting point is often the starting point, which we consider the,

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what am I going to do?

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The ready position.

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Right, right?

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So, walk me through the fundamentals that you want me to start with.

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And say, okay, here are you that we're going to get right from the start.

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I'm going to, I'm going to test show,

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boy, so it's just this guy in Atlanta.

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And we'll see how advanced he is as a coach.

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And you tell me that as the kid sits in ready stance,

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how do they get ready from forehand?

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What's the first step?

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What's the first step we tell them is they do a little split step.

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They bounce on their toes.

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Cool.

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That's a good fundamental.

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What's the next one?

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They pivot to the right or if they're a righty.

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So, they pivot to the forehand side.

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Okay.

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They can pivot, pivot what?

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Pivot what?

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They pivot on the balls of their feet.

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It's turning their, turning their body sideways.

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So, they spin the ball.

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It's odd.

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That's pretty advanced, man.

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What else do they pivot?

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What else do they pivot?

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Usually it's the shoulders that go.

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Foo go right there.

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That's what I was waiting for.

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I was going to say, have you hit record back up?

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It's saying record back up.

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We're going to punch in the head through the computer.

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No, no, no. So, we do that with the little, really little one.

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So, the three year olds that are just standing there and their racket has to be behind them,

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that's a different thing.

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But once we get the point that the kid can kind of move and put,

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there's a split step and a pivot.

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And the racket stays with the, in the shoulders.

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And if they tend to show this, they tend to show this little pivot to feet anyway.

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So, you know, the unit 10 is really what I was getting to.

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Unit turn is what you call it.

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Yes.

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The amount of people I have to correct that first,

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it's because they're still being taught, rack it back.

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I just like, it's so...

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No, Venus Williams made a pretty good career doing that.

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Hey, all right, let's look over there on that one.

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We thought about fundamentals.

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Richard tried the basics fundamentals of VHS tape.

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So, he did pretty well off that.

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Yeah, that's true.

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So, but yeah, you know, just modern game.

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Again, non-dominant arm, non-dominant hand, right?

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If it turns, if it turns, it loads the rope, but you know,

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if I you glutes, you're going to have more chances of weight transfer.

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You know, there's so many things that can actually, you know,

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if you get one thing right, if you almost do five or ten things for a person.

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And then they're just like, wow, what happened?

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I'm striking the bull in front, like, yes, because you stuck your left arm out, you know.

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What? Just by doing that, I'm like, well, let me tell you the ten things that happen.

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And that's always fun because there's a one thing.

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Say, okay, we'll do this one thing.

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What we call the magic mirror, where the racket comes up to the side.

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You just one thing and all of a sudden the shoulders turn and the hips go.

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And then you kind of spin, they have no choice.

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Even hand up to what's the wall.

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I mean, the other biggest shoe is obviously elbow up a little bit because everyone

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that tucks the elbow in, the racket goes around the back and you're locating and hitting a lake

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contact. So it's so many fundamentals, but it all starts with a good range stage.

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And as far as I'm saying, a really good unit turn is two of the biggest ones that I say,

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correcting in 3035s, 40, you know, I correct a lot of, a lot of ready stands.

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Even 45, 40-year-old players that have got lazy in their ready stands and can't understand

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why they're counting the ball like they used to. And it was all because they're ready stands.

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And you start doing that right, you know, the fundamental in the volley.

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You know, I've been working heavily on people but say, okay, I want you just working this at home.

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You're doing gauge your shoulders, engage a little bit of wrist part, but then you relax

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everything else and you have to practice that over and over and over.

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Because as soon as they engage the showers and bring their racket up, all the tension happens now.

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They're blocking the ball. So we're talking about some serious fundamentals here for

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the bit of bass, but that's how important they are. But when I like, you started with the ready

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position, which is starting, the volley, you know, in my mind is point of contact. So that's point of

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contact only. And I say, hey, you can do one thing on the volley. Use the point of contact.

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No follow through, no backswing, all that stuff, right? But for me, one of the things we talk with

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the kids about is one of the fundamentals is a follow through. And I say, the follow through fixes

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everything. Now, I know that's hyperbole, but if I can get somebody, any player, we work with mostly

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kids, but any player to get that follow through over their shoulder and get that racket pointed

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to the fence beside them. If I get that that snaps the wrist over, that finishes, it completes the shot

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and almost forces it to be low to high. So we tell them a lot that follow through fixes everything.

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So we often start with the end. Whatever, do whatever athletically you need to do in the beginning.

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But if you haven't got that racket over your shoulder, that's going to fix a lot of things as well.

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Yep. If I want to give a big shout out to any coaches, a big tip, stop spending time on backswing and put

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more effort into the forward swing. The forward swing is everything. It is everything. It's more than

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the follow through. Because what it does is it puts the person to perceive what the balls doing

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and matches the contact point in front and focuses on the forward swing. You don't get a big backswing

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if the balls come too deep in fast edge. It's as simple as that. But if the player is constantly

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focusing on backswing, they'll never get the perception of the ball of being able to match the

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contact point and meet the ball in front. It's just never happens. And if you look at it in a mindset

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of a brain, the brain can only focus on so many things at once. So if it's just watching the ball

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and matching the ball to contact point, then your forward swing is where the focus is.

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Not your backswing. I think that's actually what's telling the ball where to go, right?

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100% and there's going to be times where the balls coming a little deeper or lower or whatever.

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You ain't going to get a time to finish having your shoulder. You're going to focus just

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on the forward swing. That is where the professional focus on all the time. Matching the forward swing

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to the ball. And then we've got backswing. We've got point of contact. We've got follow through

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you've taken the point of contact to the next step, which is forward swing. So let's hold that in

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around the point of contact space. Just to know what's the fundamental. You're going to tell me

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one thing for today. Get the fundamentals right. If you could pick one most important fundamental

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that I'm going to get right from the start, I'm going to my coach today and saying, I'm going to work

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on this. What is it? Ready stance. You're ready stance at the baseline compared to your ballie

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attuned it for ready stance, right? But get your athletic face right and get your ready stance,

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right? Here you go. I like it. Call your coaches just in your 10 minutes to tennis. We'll see you next

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week. Thanks, mate. Cheers, mate. See you.

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Well, there you have it. We want to thank reGeovinate.com for use of the studio. And be sure to hit that

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follow button. For more tennis related content, you can go to Atlantatennispodcast.com. And while you're

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there, check out our calendar of tennis events. The best deals on Technifiber products, tennis

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merchandise to the Atlanta tennis world. And with that, we're out. See you next time.

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