Tennis: plans

February 2026 Sportplan Coaching

Tennis is one of the most physically demanding sports. Matches can last five hours. Players cover 3-5 kilometres per match in explosive sprints. They rotate their bodies hundreds of times, generating forces that stress muscles, tendons, and joints. The best technique in the world fails without the physical foundation to support it.

Modern tennis preparation addresses all components of athletic performance - not just "getting fit."

Physical Demands of Tennis

Understanding what tennis requires:

Intermittent power: Tennis is repeated bursts of high-intensity activity with brief recovery. Average points last 6-10 seconds with 15-20 seconds between points.

Multi-directional movement: Forward, backward, lateral, diagonal - often in the same point. Change of direction is as important as straight-line speed.

Unilateral loading: Dominant arm and leg do more work, creating imbalances that need addressing.

Duration: Matches can last hours. Maintaining quality in the fifth set requires aerobic fitness most players underestimate.

Strength Training

Strength provides the foundation:

Lower body: Squats, lunges, and deadlifts build the leg strength for explosive movement and stable bases.

Core: Rotational power comes from the core. Medicine ball throws, cable rotations, and plank variations are essential.

Upper body: Balanced development prevents shoulder injuries. Push and pull movements in equal measure.

Unilateral work: Single-leg and single-arm exercises address the asymmetries tennis creates.

Power Development

Strength without speed is incomplete:

Plyometrics: Jump training develops explosive power - box jumps, bounds, depth jumps.

Medicine ball throws: Sport-specific power development. Rotational throws mimic the power generation in strokes.

Speed training: Short sprints with full recovery. Quality over quantity.

Agility work: Ladder drills, cone patterns, reactive movement training.

Endurance Training

The aerobic base enables everything else:

Aerobic capacity: Long, steady-state training builds the cardiovascular foundation. Essential for match-long performance and recovery between points.

Interval training: More tennis-specific than steady state. Work/rest ratios that mimic match demands.

On-court conditioning: Drills that combine technical work with physical demand. Efficient use of training time.

Heat adaptation: For players competing in hot conditions, progressive heat exposure builds tolerance.

Flexibility and Mobility

Range of motion affects performance and injury risk:

Dynamic stretching: Pre-training movement preparation. Leg swings, arm circles, trunk rotations.

Static stretching: Post-training and maintenance work. Hold positions for 30+ seconds.

Targeted areas: Hip flexors, shoulders, thoracic spine, and hamstrings typically need most attention.

Foam rolling: Self-myofascial release maintains tissue quality.

Recovery

Training creates adaptation only if recovery is adequate:

Sleep: The most important recovery tool. 8-10 hours for developing athletes.

Nutrition: Adequate protein, carbohydrates to fuel training, hydration. Match nutrition is specific science.

Active recovery: Light movement promotes blood flow without adding training stress.

Recovery modalities: Massage, cold water immersion, compression - all have roles in tournament settings.

Injury Prevention

Training should reduce injury risk:

Shoulder health: Rotator cuff strengthening and scapular stability work protect against overuse injuries.

Ankle stability: Balance work and ankle strengthening prevent sprains.

Gradual progression: Training load increases gradually. Large spikes in volume or intensity cause injuries.

Movement quality: Proper technique in training exercises prevents compensation patterns.

Periodisation

Training must be planned across the year:

Off-season: Higher volumes, building foundations. Less tennis, more physical training.

Pre-competition: Transition to sport-specific work. Intensity increases, volume decreases.

In-season: Maintenance focus. Enough to sustain fitness without compromising match performance.

Tournament blocks: Minimal physical training during competitions. Focus on recovery.

Key Coaching Points

  • Tennis demands a unique combination of power, endurance, agility, and flexibility
  • Strength training provides the foundation for all other physical qualities
  • Recovery is training - sleep, nutrition, and rest days are not optional
  • Injury prevention must be built into every training programme
  • Training periodisation matches physical preparation to the competition calendar

Drills for Athletic Development

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Are there tennis lesson plans on Sportplan?

Hi,are there lesson plans on the website,.Thanks

Archived User Coach

Are there coaching plans for children's tennis?

Are there any drills or lesson plans for coaching children's tennis?

Archived User Coach

Sharing session plans

hi,How do I make my finished session plans public?

Volda Fotball Coach, England

How do I upload a Youtube Video to my session plans?

How do I upload a Youtube Video to my session plans?

Nick Gall-Tomassen Coach, England

How do I make my session plans private?

How do I make my session plans private? or do they stay private unless i share them?

Kane Wintersgill Coach, New Zealand

Can't see my sessions on the iPad

I create my session plans on a desktop. For some reason, when I log into Sportplan on my tablet, it doesn't appear to update so my plans are not visible there so I cannot deliver the sessions "interactively" and have to rely on printing the session out and delivering it via paper form. Can you advise why it doesn't appear to be updating?

Gemma Braga Coach, England

How do I save and print my Session Plans?

Steven Portplan Coach, England

unable to access plans

Hi I have full access on tennis but unable to view the Plans. whenever I try to view it, it's asking for the payment or upgrade pls advise.

janardhana sathyanarayana Coach, England

Need help with yellow ball clinic.

I need help with a game plan for yellow ball clinic that’s 12 weeks long Asked using Sportplan Mobile App

Charles Heard Coach, England

locked out of sessions

Hi, I have paid for a 3 month deal but can't view plans as it says l have to upgrade, l was upgraded to advanced so not sure why l can't access plans, please advise.

Melanie Rice Coach, England

Plans

I have a premium membership. I show plans locked which I thought the premium membership would give me access to.Also, plans that I created 6 months to a year ago do not open for me to edit.

GF Coach, England

Adding team members

I am looking to add an assistant coach to my team. Will they be able to assist with creating coaching plans with this access, or do they have to have their own membership? We are trying to keep all of our videos and practice plans in a centralized profile, so it would be helpful if they coudl create from my profile as a team member.

Jesse Dominguez Coach, United States of America

SESSION PLANS

How can I access session plans as only some are avaiable to view

niki Coach, Wales

Create Session Plans on Tablet?

Hi there,Does this app work on tablet devices, and can you create drills and sessions plans on said devices please?As I cannot do this on my iPhone.Thanks

Ben Ledger Coach, England

cancelling membership

Hello,If I cancel my memebership will I still have access to the drills etc I have saved?Thank-you,Lee .

Lee Edwards Coach, Australia

Issue with plans

Hi I have premium subscription but cant open the plans😡 It keeps saying I must subscribe

Tanya Coach, South Africa

Best player - bad attitude/det...

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

Permanent lines for U10 tennis...

I would like to add permanent lines for Under 10 tennis and am wondering if anyone has any experience doing this and can help me avoid problems with adult members?

Archived User Coach

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 make a 4 week plan f...

how can i make a 4 week plan for preparation for tennis tournament i'll play

Archived User Coach

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