Teaching children
 Creating a program
 Lesson plans
 Drills for thrills
 Games kids play
 Little Tennis Tips
 Schools program
 Little Tennis Olympics
 Court stuff
 Find-a-Pro
 Little Tennis DVD
 Back to Pros
 Go to home page


Rock ’n’ roll to the ‘Jolly Rancher™ Challenge’

If your players are between the ages of 7 and 10 years old, they’ll love the excitement of winning points off you! Try this rock ’n’ roll drill. Line up three or more doubles teams behind the baseline and place a basket of Jolly Rancher™ candies near the back fence.

Seven seconds of heaven

Make sure you have a bucket of “seven seconds of heaven.” (That’s any bubble gum that loses its sugar in seven seconds!) This game gives new beginners instant success.

Sharks and minnows

This is a great game for ending a group lesson and for developing eye-hand coordination. Sharks are the catchers and minnows are the hitters.

How to get kids hooked on tennis

1. When a child is 4 years old, parents should take him out on the courts, driveway or to the park and throw him a few balls.

Treats for the sweet-spot

Empty tennis cans make a great container for treats like popcorn, Dum-Dum suckers, bubble gum, wrist bands, chapstick or whatever at the end of any group session, camp or clinic. Take a knife and slit the plastic top.

Beach ball groundstrokes

Find a partner with blue eyes. Find a partner with pigtails.

Stick it to ‘em

Velcro pads have lots of uses:

1. Serving arm warm-up – In a private or semi-private lesson before serving, each of us puts a Velcro pad on the non-dominant hand.

Ball blasts

Cut an old tennis ball in half, fill with a spoonful of flour and reseal ball with glue. During a group lesson on the serve, tease the students that you can blow up a ball with your serve.

Stop and squash

As my Little Tennis students move from hitting stationary groundstrokes to hitting on the move, I find it is difficult to get them to stop and set their feet. They invariably either run into the ball or spin around as they move through it.

Make a save
Students in the 5- to 7-year-old group will sometimes miss striking the ball entirely. One way that I have found to reduce the frustration of these young students when they swing and miss a ball is to play the "make a save" game.

  Next 1 >>
 

 Home |  USPTA.com |  Contact us |  tennisresources.com