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    Home ยป How to Get the Most Out of a Tennis Training Camp or Coaching Trip
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    How to Get the Most Out of a Tennis Training Camp or Coaching Trip

    John CoheeBy John CoheeJuly 10, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    A concentrated block of tennis training – a week at a camp, an intensive coaching trip, or a stretch of daily lessons – can do more for your game than months of casual weekend hitting. The immersion, the volume, and the focused feedback create the conditions for real, rapid improvement. But only if you approach it the right way. Show up unprepared and you’ll leave sore and no better; show up with a plan and you can genuinely transform your level.

    Here’s how to make an intensive training experience actually pay off.

    Prepare Your Body Before You Arrive

    The biggest mistake players make is arriving at an intensive block physically unprepared. Going from two hours a week to five hours a day is a massive jump in load, and if your body isn’t ready, you’ll spend the first half of the camp getting injured rather than improving.

    In the weeks before, gradually build your on-court volume and do some general conditioning – movement, mobility, and light strength work. Arriving with a base of fitness means you can absorb the training instead of breaking down under it, and you’ll get far more out of every session.

    Go In With Clear Goals

    Vague intentions produce vague results. Before you start, identify two or three specific things you want to work on – maybe a more reliable second serve, better court positioning, or a backhand that holds up under pressure. Share these with your coach on day one so the training can be targeted.

    A focused block that genuinely improves three things beats a scattered one that dabbles in ten. Depth over breadth is how lasting change happens in a short window.

    Embrace the Discomfort of Change

    Here’s something every player should understand: real technical change often makes you worse before it makes you better. When a good coach adjusts your grip, your swing path, or your footwork, it will feel awkward and your results may dip temporarily. This is normal and necessary – you’re overwriting an old motor pattern with a better one.

    Players who bail on a change the moment it feels strange never improve. Trust the process, tolerate the messy middle, and give the new pattern enough repetitions to start feeling natural. That’s where the breakthrough lives.

    Choosing the Right Environment

    Where you train matters enormously. A strong program combines quality coaching, appropriate hitting partners, good facilities, and a structure that balances technical work, match play, and recovery. Cities with established tennis cultures can be excellent bases for this kind of focused training.

    If you’re curious about what a well-organized training setup looks like in practice, this guide to

    tennis training in Berlin is a useful window into how a serious training environment is structured – the mix of coaching, courts, and community that makes a destination worth traveling to. Even if you train elsewhere, it’s a helpful template for the questions to ask and the standards to look for wherever you go.

    Balance Drilling With Match Play

    A common trap in intensive training is spending all day grooving strokes in cooperative drills and never testing them under pressure. Clean technique in a feeding drill is a start, but it means little if it collapses the moment a real point is on the line. The best training blocks deliberately bridge that gap.

    Make sure your camp or coaching block includes plenty of point play, practice sets, and pressure situations – not just repetitive drilling. The goal is to transfer what you build in isolation into the chaos of an actual match, where the ball isn’t fed to your strike zone and the score is real. If a program is all drills and no competition, push for match play, because that’s where technical gains either prove themselves or reveal what still needs work.

    Lock In the Gains Afterward

    The camp isn’t where improvement finishes – it’s where it starts. The new patterns you build in an intensive block are fragile at first, and if you return to your old habits immediately, they’ll fade. Keep notes on what you worked on and the cues that helped, and build a maintenance routine to reinforce the changes over the following weeks.

    The players who benefit most from intensive training are the ones who treat it as the launch of a project, not a one-off event. A week of focused work plus a month of deliberate follow-up will outperform the camp alone many times over.

    Train With Intention

    Whether you’re heading to a full camp or just committing to a focused block at home, the principles are the same: prepare your body, set clear goals, embrace the awkwardness of change, and reinforce the gains afterward. Do that, and a concentrated dose of training can push your game to a level that years of casual play never would.

    For more structured training advice, coaching insight, and practical guides to improving your game,

    Tennis Mindset is packed with resources for players who are serious about getting better. Train smart, and the results will follow.

    coaching skill development tennis camp tennis improvement tennis training
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    John Cohee
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