Tennis: kid

May 2026

Every May, the tennis world turns to Paris. Roland Garros remains the most physically and tactically demanding of the four majors, and the surface itself is the reason. Clay slows the ball, takes the spin, and lengthens rallies. Power alone is rarely enough. The players who win on clay combine athletic movement, mental patience, and a deep understanding of how to construct points one ball at a time.

For coaches working with juniors or club players in the British spring and summer, clay is also a unique teaching surface. It rewards habits that translate to every other court - footwork, shot tolerance, and tactical discipline. Even if your players will mostly compete on hard courts or grass, a few weeks on clay can transform their development.

The Three Pillars of Clay Court Tennis

Top coaches who specialise in clay development talk about three non-negotiable qualities. Without these, a player cannot compete on the surface for long.

Sliding: Clay players do not stop, they slide. The ability to slide into a shot, plant the inside foot, and recover smoothly is the defining athletic skill of the surface.

Consistency: Average rally length on clay is significantly longer than on hard or grass. Players who go for outright winners early lose to opponents who simply make one more ball.

Endurance: Matches stretch out. Three-set contests can run beyond two hours. Aerobic conditioning, mental stamina, and the ability to recover between points all separate winners from also-rans.

Coaching the Slide

The slide is the single most distinctive technique on clay, and it is one of the few things you genuinely cannot learn well on any other surface. The key coaching point is that players should slide into the shot, not after it. The slide is the recovery footwork, not the celebration.

Stance and shape: Approach the ball with a wide, open stance. The outside leg drives across the body while the inside leg becomes the anchor. The ankle of the inside foot rotates inward, the entire side of the shoe collects clay, and the player stays low through contact.

Inside-foot recovery: Once contact is made, the inside leg pushes off to launch the recovery step. Coaches should drill this rhythm - slide, plant, push, recover - until it becomes automatic.

Don't slide everything: Beginners often try to slide every ball. Teach players that the slide is a tool for wide balls and emergency defence. On a comfortable ball in the middle of the court, a stable open stance is far better.

Patience and Point Construction

Clay punishes impatience. A flat winner attempted from neutral position is intercepted, hung up in the heavy air, and returned with interest. Players need to learn to set up the winning shot before going for it.

Build the rally: Use heavy topspin to push the opponent behind the baseline. Three or four deep, high-bouncing balls force most players into defensive positions before the attacking opportunity appears.

Move the opponent first: Width creates depth on clay. A wide ball that drags the opponent off court opens the entire court for the next shot. Direct attacks rarely succeed; sequential attacks usually do.

Recognise the short ball: The moment to attack is when the opponent's reply lands inside the service line. Drill this recognition: short ball means step in, take the ball on the rise, and finish the point at the net or with a clean drive into the open court.

Surface-Specific Shot Selection

Certain shots gain enormous value on clay, and others lose it.

Heavy topspin: The high-bouncing topspin forehand becomes a true weapon. Balls that would land in the strike zone on hard courts climb above shoulder height on clay, making them very difficult to attack.

Drop shot: Clay is the natural home of the drop shot. The ball dies on the surface and the opponent must cover a long distance to reach it. Teach the drop shot deliberately as part of a clay-court repertoire.

Slice for variation: A low slice that stays beneath the strike zone changes rhythm and forces the opponent to generate their own power. It is also the perfect approach shot on clay.

Flat winners less so: The big flat ball that finishes points on hard courts often becomes just another rally ball on clay. Teach players that aggression on clay looks different - it is about taking time away, not about pure power.

Physical Preparation

Clay tennis is a different physical challenge. Focus your conditioning work on:

Adductor and hip strength: The sliding action loads the inside leg heavily. Side lunges, Copenhagen planks, and lateral band walks build the muscles that protect against injury and produce stable slides.

Core stability: Hitting from extreme positions requires a strong, stable trunk. Anti-rotation work such as Pallof presses transfers directly to court.

Aerobic base: Long rallies and long matches require the engine to match. Two longer aerobic sessions per week underpin everything else.

Key Coaching Points

  • Slide into the shot, not after it - the slide is footwork, not flourish
  • Average rally length on clay is roughly double that on hard court - plan for it
  • Build points with width and depth before attempting the finishing shot
  • Heavy topspin, drop shots, and low slices all gain value on the surface
  • Adductor strength and aerobic conditioning are non-negotiable

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Tennis: Over and In. 'Budge It...

Intention: Assess forehand technique whilst developing the principles of rallying.Players start on their various courts. Each of which has a designated score that is progressive (eg 5, 7, 9) and at the discretion of the coach.Where space is limited, courts can be divided in half or thirds to create stations.One player ('The Sender') starts each rally with an underarm throw to a target area on their partners side of the court, which is situated half way between their partner ("The receiver") and the net.The 'receiver', who is positioned roughly two racket lengths behind the target area, with a racket, attempts to hit the ball after one bounce to a target area on their partner's side of the court, which is positioned roughly half way between their partner and the net.The pair must then continue to throw and hit the ball (after one bounce) until they achieve the score for their designated court/station.If the rally breaks down in any way, the pair must start the rally again from zero on the court/ station they are on.If the players successfully achieve the score for their designated court (or station), they progress upwards (one station) and 'Budge' the pair on the higher station down.If either of the pair lands the ball directly on the target area they automatically progress upwards (one station) and 'Budge' the pair on the higher station down.When a pair achieves the designated score on the highest (top) court they are awarded 1 'golden' point.When a pair successfully achieves a 'golden' point, they attempt another one until they are 'budged'.The game ends when a pair reaches a pre-set number of 'golden' points. Alternatively, the pair with the most 'golden' points at the end of a pre allocated period of time is the winner.

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kid ANSWERS
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I want to improve my tennis toughness & play more aggressively - any tips?

I used to play on clay court for 20 years, now it's been two years that I've been exposed to hard court. About my game%3A I have a very good technique on all my strokes including volley, good kick serve, I am 192 cm. My issue%3A I was not taught to play aggressively, now in my matches I don't take the net; consequently, in spite of executing a high level tennis, I loose to some players that I never should. I've read some tennis mental toughness books, I teach them, but I don't know how can I change my own mental set. When I hit top spin (groundies), I enjoy and feel secure, even though it results in my loss and sorrow. I'm ready for change but how?

Farhad Roshanaie Coach, United States of America

Best player - bad attitude/determination?

I have a learner that is super talented, he gets the game, he handles pace, power and depth well. He is aggressive and tennis just comes naturally when it comes to this kid but he lacks determination. I am really struggling to keep him motivated not to loose focus or to let one mistake make his shoulders hang for the rest of the lesson. Footwork is unfortunately a big problem and when he loses a point it's even worse, this kid is just draining me mentally every session, its a mental thing but i'm having trouble defeating it. If i'm too hard on him, he closes down and might as well stop and if i play too much and don't push him, he plays with no effort and just hit very sloppy shots. I do know that his situation at home is not good and i think it has a lot to do with his bad attitude on the court but i really need some advise, this is my hardest lesson to plan, what is most important about my lesson with a student with a bad attitude, no temper but just unmotivated and i don't want to give up because this kid really has the talent...he really can be the next junior champion in Africa if he really wants to. Would really appreciate some tips from the professionals that dealt with this before.

Archived User Coach

What to teach first?

Hello. I have question for you all. What to teach first, for example a kid who is 6 years old? I am starting tennis coach career, so I need advices of you all. Thanks. :))

Mateo Coach, Bosnia and Herzegovina

subscription

I would like to request that the last payment be refunded. I haven't used the system and thought I had already canceled my subscription. I'm not sure why the payment is still being taken out. thanks for your assistance. My kid used it for her football lessons and we thought we changed it over to her bank account, so I would like to cancel the subscription and receive a free refund please, because that £26 we need to provide for them

Olivia White Coach, England

Psychology in tennis HELP! My ...

Psychology in tennis HELP!!! I have a daughter who is an excellent player who only started playing tennis seriously last yr at the age of 13. She is a much better player than all the people she has completed against in matches but always loses due to over hitting and getting upset if the wrong call is made (which happens frequently due to how fast she hits and serves) do we need some sort of psychological help for this. what is the best way to get this... books, councilling ??? any help would be most appreciated thanks

Archived User Coach

I'm coaching middle school ten...

Coaching tennis to middle school athletes for the first time. How do I begin?

Rhonda R Lang Coach, United States of America

How do I coach 14 girls (varyi...

How do I coach 14 girls, all of varying levels from beginner to advanced on just two courts?

Archived User Coach

How to correct the bad habit o...

Hi Many times you find new beginners, especially kids, tend to do the easier way of forehand shots by under-spinning/slicing the balls to get over the nets. I've tried a few ways but it's not to easy to change a habit. Please help. Thanks a lot. KT.

KT Teo Coach, Singapore

How can I improve my player's ...

My player doesn't have a great fighting spirit in matches which leads to losing a lot of close games because of the lack of fighting spirit.

Ahmed el Essaily Coach, Egypt

What is my fault? Difficulty c...

Helo, my name is Fernando, I am a Spanish tennis teacher who started teaching six months ago. I am working in a public sportcenter and I am having some problems with adults. When I started I realiced that the students were used to playing tennis without any control. Young students told me that the other teacher only used to leave them play - he rarely explained them how to hit the ball. Consequently the do enjoy my clases and they are learning a lot and impoving their level of tennis. So far so good, but the problem is that with the adults I have the impression that they don´t like my clases. In fact some of them left the group at the begining. I try to mix different kinds of drills during the class and I usually finish it with a game like for example 21, winner........ But it seems that they don´t enjoy it. During the exercises most of them don´t try to do what I tell them. As a result, they don´t have a good level of tennis. But as far as I know, the other teacher was a tennis player who uses to play against them during the clases. As this is my first time teaching tennis, I don´t fell confidence and that is the reason whay I do´t like to play against them. Appart from that I think that this is not my role as a teacher. So I would like you to tell me how to deal with that situation. I don´t care if they leave me because this is not going to affect my job, but i wouldn´t like them to leave just because I like tennis and I like teaching tennis. Thank you very much for your help. I am sorry for my English. Best wishes!!!!

Fernando Coach, Spain

how can i correct a slapping f...

one of my student is playing is forehand , with slapping. pls let me know how to correct it. gana.

Coach, United States of America

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