Tennis: position

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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Judging Approach?

Which drills would recommend to work on judging the pace and speed of a ball coming across the net? Which drills would you suggest that would teach a player how to judge the height, speed and pace of a ball coming across the net and move into position to time the return in the proper position.Thanks

Sportplan Team Coach, United Kingdom

What can you do to help a player with their serve?

What can you do to help a player with their serve, when they say they want to get more power on it?

Archived User Coach

If the ball hits player's body

If the ball hits player's body and returns over the net, whose point is it?

Vincie Abbott Coach, England

How do you teach position anticipation?

My daughter has the fundamentals and strokes but lacks where to anticipate her position on the court to finish out the point.

Archived User Coach

Speed and agility in tennis

Why we need speed and agility in tennis?What we can do for speed and agility training?Can you gave me general information for speed and agility in tennis?

Can Deniz Coach, Turkey

Position of the coach when feeding

hi. My name is Letty . Im a young coach trying to get level1 (ITF). Kindly help me with the position of the coach when trying to get a player u12 to practice passing.is it wrong for the coach to be in the service box or not?

Letty Matenge Coach, United Kingdom

How to Improve Error Detection and Correction

HI there,I am an assistant coach for a small tennis academy. It has been 2.5 years since I’ve started. I do not have any certification of being a coach but I was a state player(representing my state) back when I was a player in high school. The only knowledge/experience I have as a tennis player was from when I had training back then and even so it was limited. A big issue/challenge I am facing right now is error detection and correction. I realized I am unable to identify the problems of my players which is beyond the obvious and I tend to correct the effect of the problem instead of the root cause of it. i believe what I don’t have is a coach eye, I was wondering if you have some kind of materials or course or even guidance on that matter. I am really keen on improve that part of me. I feel like that part is holding me back as I can give an accurate correction to my players which then hinders my player’s improvement. Hope to hear from you soon. Thank you

sesagi153 Coach, Malaysia

Positioning on the court

Positioning on the court can give us an advantage or put into really difficult situation. Players have to remember that right spot on the court is on the opposite side where they perviously hit the ball. can somebody please share some examples?

Nick Madahar Coach, Azerbaijan

I would like to cancel my subscription

I would like to cancel my subscription,as I have recently stepped down from my Position and am not continuing to coach, many thanks, Cathal O'Connor.

Cathal OConnor Coach, Ireland

Animator question

How can I add the position number to the players in the animator?For example in a scrum put the

Emmanuel B Mudryj Coach, United States

membership question

I just looked over my payment history and was charged 18.99 five times in 11/22. I only subscribe for a 3 month plan. and would like to know how I can get refunded for the extra money charged. I am retiring for my coaching position and want to unsubscribe.

Lori Coach, United States of America

Use The middle of The court

How to best use The middle of The court?

Costel Coravu Coach, Romania

throw in

When a player is taking a throw in, and they position their first foot at the correct position from the line, can they take a step to the side and lift the first foot before they throw the ball and enter the court?

Patricia P Gregory Coach, England

TopSpin Forehand

How should I put more topspin and depth and height on my forehand shots, I want to get it more consistent and practice putting more power on them.

stefo Coach, United States of America

high ball

hi what is the best drill to improve high ball contact point and footwork.

samala ashok Coach, India

group coaching

I want to design an 8 sessions for 2 beginners players

Asim 0 Coach, Qatar

Position of the coach when fee...

hi. My name is Letty . Im a young coach trying to get level1 (ITF). Kindly help me with the position of the coach when trying to get a player u12 to practice passing.is it wrong for the coach to be in the service box or not?

Letty Matenge Coach, United Kingdom

Positioning on the court | Spo...

Positioning on the court can give us an advantage or put into really difficult situation. Players have to remember that right spot on the court is on the opposite side where they perviously hit the ball. can somebody please share some examples?

Nick Madahar Coach, Azerbaijan

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