Monday, January 23, 2012

How To Play Tennis?

Tennis is a game step by step video tutorial for beginners is Tomaz Mencinger, the coach at 3 in the European standards and professional tennis coach USPTR developed. Tomaz is a modern approach and tried to teach tennis, and many people of different ages have to determine their useful advice. With easy to follow instructions in the video that will teach you how to play the forehand and backhand the ball from the baseline, forehand and backhand volley, and serve, and performance overhead. There are three packages to choose from. 1) to play tennis for two basic. Serve) as well as back 3) Tennis on the Net.

How to play tennis from the baseline
Such as tennis at the start of the game with the help of seven video, learn how you can find a forehand grip and how to start playing mini-tennis in the first minute. Tomaz mini tennis, why Bang-up way to accelerate the learning process. This will show you how to move properly.
Video will direct the process of developing a stroke that comes naturally to you, so you can move your mechanical guide. Video setbacks, you can find out what type of heads (one hand or both hands), which should play right and handles both.
The program also focuses on the apparent motion and position players, including forms and tips to keep your feet on the site, then one-handed backhand and can quickly move in any direction.
How To Serve and Return
Tomaz The program explains to viewers that the server is a building complex movement, and it is to learn to take some time. It is also noted that there is due to the complexity of the race there are many bad techniques could be developed may be a habit.
With How to Play Tennis videos, you learn the appropriate way to serve and lay the foundation and serves more topspin serves and faster cutting. The videos show you how to coordinate both arms in a natural way to beat the ball.
Also learn three essential components of good service. Learn the proper way is very important if you want to play good tennis.
How To Play Tennis At The Net
It may contain valuable information for beginners is to play tennis from the baseline with some body, but the feeling that their participation in the network needs much better.
In this book you can learn how to for the release of a quick and easy, how to react quickly to network and play your first command downloads prepared, despite the fact that it brands little sense at this time.
Top players can from the traffic and response exercises and benefit from learning to develop the practice of the so instinctively downloads.
How at the baseline, play tennis, includes eight videos for teaching tennis forehand shot and backhand 8 videos. Serve and Return Package includes six videos to six hours of lessons and in turn to serve. How to play tennis on the network admits seven videos for classes and 4 volley tennis courts above.
Package price of $ 17 is the same each and every package with five bonus videos and a guarantee of money to eight weeks.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Caroline Wozniacki,Dominika Cibulkova Into Sydney Quarters

Top-ranked Caroline Wozniacki came back from 4-0 down in the final set to beat Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia 7-5, 2-6, 6-4 Tuesday and advance to the quarterfinals at the Sydney International.
The match ended on a line call that was ruled in and later, on video review, shown to be out by a few millimeters, giving Wozniacki victory on her second match point.
Wozniacki, who was No. 1 for all but one week of last year, has achieved the top ranking without having won a Grand Slam. The Danish player’s best finish in four appearances at the Australian Open, which begins next Monday, was the semifinals last year.
“I thought I had lost the match,” Wozniacki said of her big third-set deficit Tuesday. “I decided to play free, not care about the score anymore, and it worked out.”
Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, ranked No. 2 and in position to overtake Wozniacki for the top spot with a win at Sydney, also struggled against an unseeded opponent before advancing to the quarterfinals with a 7-5, 3-6, 6-4 win over Alexandre Dulgheru of Romania.
Kvitova used a strong serve to set up an easy crosscourt forehand at the net to the open corner for the win on her first match point.
In other second-round matches, French Open champion Li Na beat Channelle Scheepers of South Africa 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 and seventh-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland defeated Andrea Petkovic of Germany 7-5, 6-4.
Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia, beaten by Kaia Kanepi of Estonia in the Brisbane International final last Saturday, defeated 2010 French Open champion Francesca Schiavone of Italy 7-5, 6-1. On Monday, Schiavone beat U.S. Open winner Samantha Stosur of Australia in the first round.
Former U.S. Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova withdrew from her match against Lucie Safarova while down 6-1, 2-0, citing heat illness.
In men’s matches, eighth-seeded Radek Stepanek of the Czech Republic defeated Xavier Malisse of Belgium 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-4 and Julien Benneteau of France beat Italian Andreas Seppi 6-3, 6-4.
Fifth-seeded Viktor Troicki of Serbia played former No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt later Tuesday.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Sabine Lisicki Bows Out In Auckland With Back Injury

A back injury forced top-seeded Sabine Lisicki to retire from her quarterfinal match at the ASB Bank Classic, compromising her preparation for the Australian Open.
The 15th-ranked Lisicki was trailing unseeded German compatriot Angelique Kerber 6-4, 4-3 in a quarterfinal on Thursday when she made the decision to withdraw. The 22-year-old had looked in discomfort throughout the match and left the court after the first set to receive treatment.
Kerber, who upset fifth-seeded German Julia Goerges in the second round— when Goerges was affected by an illness—will face fourth-seeded Flavia Pennetta in Friday’s semifinals. Pennetta beat Elena Vesnina 6-2, 6-1 in her quarterfinal.
The other semifinal will be between third-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova and China’s Zheng Jie.
Former U.S. Open champion Kuznetsova beat Italy’s Sara Errani 6-4, 6-3, and the Russian has not dropped a set in the tournament.
Zheng was equally impressive, taking only 59 minutes to beat Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Republic 6-2, 6-3. Hradecka had ousted second-seeded Peng Shuai of China in the second round, but was unable to match Zheng’s faultless performance.
“I’ve played against Lucie a few times and I knew she liked to play aggressive so I wanted to move her around and it worked very well,” Zheng said.
Lisicki looked well below her best from the start of her match Thursday. While she hit the ball strongly, she moved gingerly and lacked confidence in her serve.
She fell behind 3-0 at the start of the first set, won back the break then lost serve again to trail 5-3 and to give Kerber the chance to serve for the set.
Lisicki broke for 5-4 but immediately dropped serve for a third time to lose the set in just over 40 minutes. She left the court for a lengthy injury break and returned still looking uncomfortable and impeded in her movement.
Lisicki was still able to gain an early service break to lead 3-2 in the second set, but after losing the next two games she signaled to Kerber and the umpire than she couldn’t continue.
“Sure, a win is a win,” Kerber said. “I don’t know what happened to Sabine. I hope she will be ready for Melbourne.
“I feel very good at the moment and I’m just trying to play my best tennis.”
The Australian Open begins on Jan. 16 and Lisicki is likely to head directly to Melbourne to continue her preparation for the year’s first Grand Slam tournament.
Pennetta, who has yet to drop a set at the Auckland tournament, brushed aside Vesnina in only 68 minutes, converting six of 13 break points. The Italian was a finalist in Auckland in 2010 and was too strong for Vesnina, who was the runner-up in 2009.
After giving up an early break for 2-2 in the first set, world No. 20 Pennetta reeled off six straight games to take charge of the match.