Why your child is not improving in sports | Tennis Coach's Perspective

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In this video I go over some things that might affect your child's progress in any sport. There are many reasons why your child can stop improving in the sport of their choice. I discuss many of those based on my experience as a high performance tennis coach. I hope it will help tennis parents as well as other parents whose child plays sports.
Check out my website to learn about me. I also offer various online services that can help improve your child's tennis. To book a consultation or another service please visit my website:
bogdangrygorenko.com/

Пікірлер: 36

  • @gettoneinternational4154
    @gettoneinternational4154Ай бұрын

    Good insight...in regards to the player retaining information also has to do with the coaching in terms of the approach and how you're communicating information to the student to learn

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Ай бұрын

    100% agree. Coaches love to complicate things and sometimes use language not suitable for the person in front of them. Great point.

  • @BogdanGrygorenko
    @BogdanGrygorenko3 жыл бұрын

    I completely forgot to add one more reason that might decrease improvement. When your child goes through puberty and their body starts to change you will see a decrease of performance. It will take some time for an athlete to get used to their new body. This is completely normal, and there isn’t something you can do really other than understanding that it’s ok and continue working.

  • @jesuscomes970
    @jesuscomes9702 ай бұрын

    Hey Bogdan! Great insights! My daughter would prefer to sleep on the tennis courts in our club man, ans it looks like 100 percent her passion and she wants to get number one one day, but at the same time she has problemes to follow some of the tips that i give her when playing tennis! Like for instance the most difficult part ist, footwork! you know the normal things, kneeing, open stance, when swinging hip moving plus shoulder rotation, split step, that everyone should constantly perform after every shot of the opponent! We train 2-4 hours every day, but those basic things, to use her body, is something that she is almost not willing to do and to train! She started 1 years ago in a club in Bonn, Germany and aftet only 1 year at 11 will be now playing with the 14 years old girls and she is destroying all the boys and girls till 12 years of age, which most of them have trained more than 5 years, some more! She loves tennis, watches every match, highlights, know everything about every player, women and men, which racket, what age, where they played, you know, etc. So my question to you is, how can I make her start liking those body movements, which are so important and how can i make foot work for her interesting so that she wants to do it the way it is supposed to be done! I will be very thankful if you can give me some tips and or show me resources of interesting drill for an amazing footwork development and also for a decent serve for a child like her at 11! Thanks bud!

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for your comment. Kids are typically stubborn and don’t like to change their habits. The way I like to do it is to show the benefit of a new technique. And explain how exactly and why we’re gonna spend the next X amount of sessions improving it. Also sometimes it’s good for development purposes if a player loses because they’re not able to execute certain skill and that can create a perfect opportunity to sell the idea of improvement. Hope it helps!

  • @thewarriorking5183
    @thewarriorking51833 жыл бұрын

    Great info coach, I'm a tennis dad of a 8 and 6 year old. Thanks 👍

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot. Appreciate it and glad you found it interesting 🙏💪

  • @raviravi-ru6rb
    @raviravi-ru6rb3 жыл бұрын

    Bogdan another great video👏 you need to promote your channel. These are invaluable advises every athlete and parent must watch. Especially multiple sports is a must to succeed in any sport at the highest level not just fitness. That's a great point u keep mentioning in most of your videos. Keep them coming 😎🤝👍

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ravi thanks a lot! Yeah without promotion is hard, but I’ll get there :)

  • @sergioalonso3118
    @sergioalonso31182 жыл бұрын

    This is the first video I've seen from your channel. Great advice, Bogdan. I agree 100%. Although I must admit I was a bit shocked by the 2h/day = recreational :D Subscribed!

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ahah thank you Sergio! Let me know if you got any questions :) more videos to come soon

  • @davidsolano5513
    @davidsolano55137 ай бұрын

    What you say makes soooooo much sense,thanks champ

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    7 ай бұрын

    Much appreciated 🙏 thank you for your support

  • @davidsolano5513

    @davidsolano5513

    7 ай бұрын

    @@BogdanGrygorenko my pleasure

  • @fmtien
    @fmtien4 ай бұрын

    Great video. Lots of accurate info that applies not only to kids but adults players who take lessons. My one comment…Running isn’t heavily focused on agility and footwork while soccer places a premium on it so there is plenty of value for a kid who runs to play soccer as well. The two sports develop different things.

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I understand the difference in skills with two sports. Are you saying that soccer will help someone who does athletics or you wanted to just clarify the difference? Sorry just trying to understand :)

  • @fmtien

    @fmtien

    4 ай бұрын

    @@BogdanGrygorenko at 5:50 in the video, you say if the child is a runner, you don't see the benefit for the child to then play soccer. My point is that there is ABSOLUTELY a benefit for the child to play soccer because running (sprinting or long distance), doesn't require the extreme levels of footwork, agility, and change of direction like soccer does. The footwork, agility, and change of direction are things that are applicable to tennis while running forward in a straight line isn't that applicable because tennis movement is mostly diagonal and lateral with fewer instances of forward straight line movement. Perhaps I misinterpreted the point you were trying to convey.

  • @systemx4
    @systemx43 жыл бұрын

    Good info. My son started playing u11 tournaments and our goal is just to win a first round match first. If you want more subs I suggest doing a tennis technique video

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. I will at some point this summer.

  • @ineszouabi201
    @ineszouabi201 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much. I found tour video very useful and helpful. I used to be a competitve tennis player..i have two kids: my girl is 4 and my son is 6. They have both taken tennis lessons. At some point, they were both in the same group ( i think this was the first mistake). The coach was impressed with our daughter and was more positive towards her than to our son. One day she told my son that pretty soon our daughter will be better than him. ( I guess she wanted him to behave and listen to her on the court) . That day, he came home amd said that he want to sign out from temnis :( i've been battling this and i took things in my own hands. I still feel the impact on him was big and he always needs confirmation that he is good. He plays soccer as well amd he loves it. I would rather have him play tennis but of course wouldnt force him if his interest is elsewhere. But i'm still upset with what happened with thé coach

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Жыл бұрын

    Ines thank you so much for kind words but more importantly for sharing your story. This is incredibly valuable to hear and I am sure other parents will find it useful. Unfortunately it’s happening more often than it should. I think also what is happening that your son wants to find his own niche because tennis is sort of occupied by your daughter. He wants his sport. I’ve encouraged this many times. Sometimes parents as well say this without actually saying it. By giving more private lessons to one kid, driving that child to their sport, talking about it a lot at home etc. It’s impossible to prevent though so no worries. Everyone will find their thing they’re passionate about. Thank you Ines.

  • @ineszouabi201

    @ineszouabi201

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BogdanGrygorenko Thank you for taking the time read my comment and reply to it. You absolutely nailed it when you said that my son is trying to find his own niche. That's absolutely what is happening . And he does feel that tennis is somehow occupied by our daughter. We are trying to change that and whenever I have the opportunity to show him otherwise that's what I do. It's not easy to be a parent :) :) thank you so much again

  • @mauriciocarvalhodegodoy9709
    @mauriciocarvalhodegodoy9709Ай бұрын

    Speak brother, ok? Dude, how do I get information about this coaching course? I'm a tennis coach here in Brazil, but I would like to take a course

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Ай бұрын

    Hey man I will be releasing it this summer. I’ll update on the channel 🙌🙏

  • @boarhog1979
    @boarhog1979 Жыл бұрын

    My kid plays hockey and is right into it and I see a few kids are absolutely not interested and don't take them to practice and become a hindrance to the rest of the team. No going to practice to me means don't bother to go to games. Not much different then doing homework.

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Жыл бұрын

    Totally agree with you!

  • @_singingtime_4041
    @_singingtime_40412 жыл бұрын

    for other sports to play, what do you recommend? running or like soccer cause it helps with stamina im a newly 12 year old.

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    2 жыл бұрын

    My top picks would be: Soccer Basketball Track and field But if you really like something else go for that as well.

  • @ineszouabi201
    @ineszouabi201 Жыл бұрын

    One more question coach! Do you think a parent can be the coach of his kids ( at least at the very beginning of their learning?). I have mixed feelings about it!

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Жыл бұрын

    I think I’ll be very vague and say it’s possible of course as we’ve seen so many successes (a lot more unsuccessful stories however). It’s very tough to separate the role of a parent and a coach. The reason kids don’t like to be coached by parents because parent continues to coach in the car, during dinner etc. plus kids love their free time away from parents and doing their own thing.

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    Жыл бұрын

    If you have the opportunity definitely have a different coach. However, I should’ve said this in the beginning. It’s practically impossible to achieve success without extra time on court. Most of the time it’s the parent who helps.

  • @ineszouabi201

    @ineszouabi201

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BogdanGrygorenko it makes sense..very valuable info for us parents

  • @ineszouabi201

    @ineszouabi201

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BogdanGrygorenko got it! Been looking 😁 but I'll definitely do the extra hours :)

  • @cruelsun9243
    @cruelsun92434 ай бұрын

    My 13 year old is a 6'1" bball player. He does not practice on his own. Would rather draw or be oh his phone, or watch YT funny videos. If I take him to practice, he will give me 100%. If he goes to team practice or personal trainer, 100%. His issues are dribbling and other simple fundamentals, and his coaches know it, and i have told him. He truly thinks he is really a good player, but he is inconsistent. I'm just keeping it real. Competitive is NOT Rec, and if you're child sausage they have these lofty goals, you want to help them reach those goals. My issue is he simply won't do the extra stuff in his own to build his IQ, dribbling conditioning etc. If I make him do it he will not have the WILL....to do it on his own, and completely. Daughter is 11 y/o and 5'8". Always the tallest girl on the pitch. Read the above. She plays soccer, as an attacker but those fundamental and IQ things are lacking and getting her to do extra stuff is like pulling teeth. She plays Club soccer and was moved up for the first tournament, and reality set in. I'm just about done with wasting thousands of dollars and my time. Your advice will be greatly appreciated. ✌️

  • @BogdanGrygorenko

    @BogdanGrygorenko

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this. It’s hard to give any advice without asking you few more additional questions. At this age it can be still maturity to take ownership of his basketball. And also simply going through puberty which will have the mood swings and lower energy level. Hard to say. I will be happy to go more in detail over a consultation of this interests you.

  • @cruelsun9243

    @cruelsun9243

    4 ай бұрын

    @BogdanGrygorenko well, it's simply laziness, and his friends are more important than his goals. He knows it, he just won't admit it. The daughter admits she'd rather do something other than training away from the club. This will more rhan likely be her last year playing club ball. She can play REC. Thank you.

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