The Delicate Connection Between Fitness and Focus (Part II)

April 29, 2015 | By Carl Barnett
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In the January/February 2015 edition of Long Island Tennis Magazine, I wrote about our first Four Pillars in our Eight Pillars of a Champion. They are:

►Mind First—Think Success

►Dream Big—Achieve More

►Endless Effort—The Desire to Improve

►Make It Happen—Always Improve

Over the President’s Day holiday, I was joined at an L1 tournament by a good friend, Bob Litwin, to see one of my students play. Bob is a legend on the court with championships too numerous to mention. Bob is also the Gold Standard resource on the subject of focus.

My student had lost a very close first set and was behind 1-4 in the second set. Although one break was the difference in the set body language told us otherwise. Bob turned to me and said, “You know he is still in this match.” To which we said to each other in unison “But he doesn’t know it.”

This brings us to the next pillar developed in training.

I Can Do It—Everything Is Possible
This also brings us to an additional issue. Everyone will eventually lose focus. A champion will reel it back in. Hasn’t this happened to you? You play great in losing the first set and then fall behind immediately in the second set due to the disappointment from the first.

The great opportunity in losing focus is exercising the practice of regaining it. The more often you regain focus, the more practice and better you become at regaining it. My student’s opportunity at 1-4 was if he came back from one break down, he would have the momentum going into the third set. The problem was his body language and demeanor told both of us and his opponent he was visualizing losing.

Give 100 Percent … be Hungry to Succeed
There are so many times in training where the work in front of you seems impossible, yet you get it done. Succeeding in these situations leaves us with the confidence and access to the effort to complete the task.

Endless Effort: The Desire to Achieve
The will to play every point at 100 percent when facing an imposing situation is best dealt with one point at a time. Visualize the next point only. Try not to look down the road. Just keep matriculating one point at a time. Embrace this task and it will cease being imposing and will eventually feel manageable. Each point I am only focused on giving 100 percent on this point just as I am thinking of the next rep only, and not the 11 coming after it in the training room.

Remain Steady—Know the Secret
The player that remains steady in their approach on and off the court knows this is the key to success and repeated success. When you feel that you have achieved all eight pillars, go back to the beginning and repeat until you are winning repeatedly.


Carl Barnett
Started the Early Hit Training Programs at Glen Head Racquet Club

Carl Barnett started the Early Hit Training Programs at Glen Head Racquet Club six years ago. He may be reached by phone at (516) 455-1225 or e-mail earlyhit@optonline.net.

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