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Learn How To Play Tennis With 49 Step-By-Step Instructional Videos For Tennis Beginners






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"Always Wanted To Learn How To Play Tennis But Don't Know Where To
Start?"


Dear Tennis Beginner,

Would you like to...

Click on the video to seesample clips...
learn how to play tennis quickly and without the frustration that beginners often experience with tennis?
save hundreds of dollars on tennis lessons by getting all the same information here for less than the price of one lesson?
learn technique that lays the foundation for advanced strokes when you're ready for them?
learn tennis with the modern "game-based" approach that lets you develop your own fluid strokes instead of robotic copy of your coach's?


Learning how to play tennis can be an enjoyable journey, especially when your game improves to the level at which you move effortlessly around the court hitting accurate and powerful strokes.

However, as with every journey, you can head off in the wrong direction. The direction you take at the outset makes the biggest difference in where you end up.

Unfortunately, tennis teaching has long been too intellectual, with too many verbal instructions. The result is over-thinking beginners who move like tennis robots.

I've seen tennis players spend hundreds of dollars on lessons, only to be left more confused than ever... and unable to keep the ball in play for more than a few shots!

Have you been taking lessons and hitting hundreds of balls with no noticeable improvement?

Do you feel that you are stuck or maybe even going the wrong direction?

The biggest danger for a beginning tennis player is learning a stroke the wrong way. Once the body learns a movement pattern, it's hard to unlearn it. Erasing muscle memory, by replacing it with a new correct movement, is a frustrating and painstaking process.

And the hardest things to unlearn are those we learn as a raw beginner. Flaws you acquire at this stage are deeply ingrained. They can dog you forever, making you miss shots you shouldn't miss.

Don't let this happen to you...

Get on the right track now, as a beginner, and you'll soon enjoy your tennis game with great looking strokes and the ability to hit them consistently, time after time, with accuracy and power.










Scott Ford

Tomaz has put together a wonderful series of video clips that give the beginning player the exact information needed to start playing tennis immediately.

What I like about these videos is that Tomaz gets right to the point without bogging the viewer down with too much information.

All too often beginners are confused by an overabundance of unnecessary technical information. Tomaz avoids that trap nicely, and gives you just what you need to get started in this game we love so much.

Congratulations, Tomaz.

Scott A. Ford, USPTA, RPT
sford@arete-sports.com
www.arete-sports.com
303.229.5217









What If You Learn My Step-By-Step Modern Method Of Teaching Tennis Beginners?


My name is Tomaz Mencinger, and in the last 12 years as a tennis pro, I have taught hundreds of beginners from 4 to 74 years old how to play tennis with this modern and proven way of teaching tennis.

The way tennis is taught has changed in the last 10 years, and I have been in touch with all the latest research and methods, being a level 3 coach in European standards and a USPTR Professional tennis coach.

I even presented some of my teaching methods at the ITF Coaching Seminar in Bangkok in 2006... (picture)

Although learning how to play tennis takes time, the process can be greatly accelerated by learning tennis technique and footwork in a proper progression.




Boost Your Tennis Game In 5 Easy Steps

Sign up for the TennisMindGame.com Newsletter and you'll receive 5 free video tips:
How to improve balance (practice this for two minutes and in one week you'll feel why balance helps you play better)
How to find optimal contact point (a simple drill to "wake up" your feet)
Learn to control your shots on the run (4 steps progression method)
How to prevent opening of the racquet face when serving (the key difference between "club" serves and advanced serves)
A simple tip for more relaxed play (and you'll also last longer in rallies)


There are 3 additional special reports and slow motion videos as a bonus for subscribing to the TennisMindGame.com newsletter.









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P.S. There are two reasons why you should sign up for this course:
1. To get 5 free tips and other goodies of course ;)
2. To test if your computer plays the downloaded videos correctly. Of course you can always watch them online (from your internet browser) too. Check the sample videos below...







Here's A Secret That's Probably Going to Shock You...

Tennis technique is only a small part of the abilities and skills needed to play tennis. Most instruction online and on court fails to recognize this.

They teach you the technique but not HOW TO PLAY. Moving your arms in a "correct" way has very little to do with being able to play tennis.

For example, they keep telling you how to follow-through, not seeing that your biggest problem is judging the ball flight and getting to the right place in the 1.5 seconds you have available.

Having many instructions in your mind makes your brain very busy, so that it cannot calculate the ball's flight and your timing correctly.

The result is that the more you think about correct technique, the worse your timing and ball tracking get.

Consequently, you'll probably miss the shot, and the coach will probably tell you what to think next so that this mistake won't happen again. Unfortunately, thinking more instructions about technique won't fix the problem of thinking too many instructions about technique.

So, the problem deepens, and you are in a magic never ending circle of mistakes and over-thinking how to correct them.

But Not Anymore...

This beginner's package fills the gap by teaching you how to play tennis as well as how to swing. It shows you exactly how to speed the motor learning process, so that you improve much faster than beginners normally do.

It provides drills to improve your ball judgment skills. It shows you how to get rid of the tension that slows your improvement. And much more...

Since the best way to learn tennis technique is visually (Research shows that 75% of people are visual learners, especially of motor learning skills), this "How To Play Tennis" instruction for beginners is presented in video clips.

They guide you with a step-by-step, proven, modern, game-based approach that has you playing mini tennis in the first MINUTE of the first instruction video!

That's why I'm confident that you'll learn how to play tennis quickly, correctly and with a natural game-based approach that lets you develop your own style within the basic technique.

Introducing:

How To Play Tennis: A Complete Video Instruction Guide For Tennis Beginners



The Instruction Videos For Tennis Beginners package is your step-by-step guide to playing tennis. You'll gain immediate access to watching videos online and / or download them in MP4 format (viewable on a PC, MAC or Ipod).

The videos cover all the strokes and offer playing tips to jump-start your tennis game.

You'll learn how to play tennis with easy-to-follow instruction videos guiding you step-by-step for every stroke:

forehand groundstroke
backhand groundstroke
serve
return
forehand and backhand volley
and overhead


The Complete Guide to How to Play Tennis consists of 3 packages. Each covers one major playing situation in tennis.

Here's what's included...

How To Play Tennis On The Baseline

7 videos guide you through the forehand groundstroke progression:


How to find a forehand grip and how to start playing mini tennis in the first minute.
Why mini tennis helps and is a great training aid to speed your learning.
How to follow-through, so that your follow-through, over time, draws from within you a fluid and coordinated stroke.
The secret of the split step. (If you do it incorrectly, you will be slower instead of faster.)
Basic footwork patterns for better balance.
How to prepare for a more powerful forehand. For decades this has been taught the wrong way and is still a main cause of problems for tennis beginners. Get this right.
How to practice so you develop a stroke that is natural to you (i.e., so you don't move like a robot).


The backhand groundstroke videos teach you with a similar progression, but there are additional things to learn:


Whether you should choose a one-handed backhand or a two-handed backhand and why.
The correct grip for the one-handed and two-handed backhand.
An effective tip that keeps you sideways for a one-handed backhand follow-through.
Another way to feel the secret of a split step, with which you can explode in any direction.
Basic footwork patterns and why you can play more open-stance backhands if you are a two-hander.
How to prepare for both types of backhands in a natural way.
And how to practice so you develop accuracy and empty the mind while playing.



Click on the video to see a sample clip...(If your computer displays this video fine, then it will also play all the online videos in the "How to play tennis" full package.)


Let's move on now to strokes that start the point...

How To Serve And Return

I won't make any hyped promises - the serve is a complex stroke, and it will take a while to learn. Because it is complex, you can learn it in many wrong ways - wrong ways that will haunt you and be incredibly difficult to correct later, when you have developed muscle memory making these wrong motions habitual.

With the serve videos in this "How To Play Tennis" package, you start the right way and lay a foundation for more advanced serves - faster, more accurate topspin and slice serves.

Here's what you'll learn:

How to coordinate the tossing and hitting arm in a natural way. (Hint: you won't use a racquet.)
A simple drill that teaches you a soft and fluid serve motion. (Hint: you won't use any balls.)
The 3 key components that separate a serve looking like this (small picture below) from a serve looking like this ->
This a critical part of learning how to serve.

If you get this wrong at the beginning and choose the short-term approach, it is a nightmare to change that technique.

The number of repetitions it takes to erase the old incorrect stroke with a new movement is at least DOUBLE, if not TRIPLE, the number of repetitions needed to learn this stroke from scratch.

The 3 keys to a follow-through that will help you get a consistent and powerful serve.
A part (often overlooked by coaches) that develops a motion to accelerate the racquet so you hit with effortless power.
A simple way to split your serve into two parts, easing the progression to the baseline for actual serving.







Dear Tomaz,

Thank you for the video. I must say that after watching the video on the serve, my service have been corrected and I can now serve with greater confidence and more pace.

I have been playing tennis for 3 years and my serve had always been a great obstacle to me until I saw your video. I'm sure i will benefit from the rest of the "How To Play Tennis" videos too.

Julian Kan, Singapore




Click on the video to see a sample clip...(If your computer displays this video fine, then it will also play all the online videos in the "How to play tennis" full package.)


But remember; half of your first shots are service returns! The return of serve is an often neglected skill in teaching beginners how to play tennis. Consequently, they struggle with this stroke when they later face opponents with fast and accurate serves.



That's why it's crucial that at least the 3 basic components of a good return stroke are practiced even at this beginner stage.

Doing so makes them unconscious habit for later when the balls start whizzing around you.

You'll learn:
Where to position for receiving beginner serves and where to position for advanced serves.
How to split step so you keep forward momentum. (If you lean or move backward when returning, 90% of the time you'll lose control of the shot.)
Where to place the return for consistency. (By the way, even top pros return this way when they look to neutralize their opponent's first serve.)

And finally...

How to Play Tennis At The Net

Another often missed skill in learning how to play tennis is playing at the net. All too often a beginner is taught only how to play a forehand, a backhand and a serve. After they become a little more advanced and comfortable with those strokes, they decide to learn a volley and an overhead.

Since they have never played these strokes before, they are back at the beginner stage, and this can be very frustrating. They seem fine from the baseline, but when they have to play at the net, they look embarrassingly beginner-like.

Start learning how to play a tennis volley and an overhead now, so that in 3 months you'll be an advanced player in all strokes.


Here's what you'll learn in the tennis beginner volley videos:

A simple drill that reminds you how to move and react to the ball. (You already know how to do that, you just need a reminder.)
How to play your first volleys in a controlled manner, even though you don't have a lot of feel at this stage.
The key to quick and simple preparation for the volley. (Quick movements are crucial at the net.)
How to adapt/modify your split step for faster reactions at the net.
Why you shouldn't worry much about footwork when playing at the net.
A drill that develops an instinctive volley. (Often you have no time for conscious decision, so your volleying needs to be automatic.)

And the other often avoided stroke when learning how to play tennis is the overhead. Even many advanced players are uncomfortable when playing an overhead. If they told the truth, they would say that they are afraid of it.

Actually they are afraid of playing it because they are so insecure about it. And the most likely reason for that is that they didn't start practicing the overhead while they were beginners.


So don't make the same mistake. Learn how to play a tennis overhead with correct technique and consistency now.

The overhead videos will show you:
How to practice movement and judgment of the ball's flight in a natural way without the racquet. (You MUST get your feet moving first, before even thinking about hitting the ball with the racquet.)
How to prepare for an overhead. (Many players take the same backswing as when serving, so they lose balance and run short of time.)
What is the main reason for hitting the ball into the net and how to avoid doing that (both the mental and technical approach).



If you are a tennis beginner who wants to learn only a certain part of the game, or you are an advanced player looking for a way to correct just some of your strokes, you can now order Tennis Beginner Videos in 3 separate packages...


1. How To Play Tennis From The Baseline

This is best suited for tennis beginners who play maybe only once a week and are interested in learning only how to play from the baseline.

It might also be very useful for advanced players who are stuck on the same level for a long time, because it may help them discover some technical errors in the foundation of their strokes.

2. How To Serve And Return

This is a good choice for beginners who are somewhat successful from the baseline but want to learn the serve and return in a way that allows them to continuously improve.

Advanced players may benefit the most from the serve lesson, where they might identify some of technical mistakes that are slowing, or even stopping, the improvement of their serve.

3. How To Play Tennis At The Net

This is best suited for tennis beginners who can serve and play from the baseline with some consistency but feel really lacking in volley and overhead skills and want a complete game as soon as possible.

Advanced players might benefit most from (a) learning how to practice so they develop instinctive volleys and (b) from the movement and reaction drills included in this package.




Hi Tomaz,

A couple of months ago I purchased your "How to play tennis" videos and wanted to share my story as your system has changed my tennis life forever.

I have been taking lessons every week from my local club pro for over 1 year. I wasn't getting any better and about to give up the game as my groundstroke's and serve were poor.

I put a lot of time into practising but never seemed to get any better. Now I believe I was reinforcing my poor technique!

I purchased your system for the cost of 1 lesson !!!! and it was like a light was turned on. I finally understood what I should be trying to achieve when hitting the ball.

I went through all the drills you suggest and now I am hitting the ball with much more spin and penetration. My ball flight is more of an arc now and I am no longer hitting balls into the net or going long as frequently.

Your half court drills really helped me develop the correct feel and I slowly extended that to the full court. I still cannot believe that my new half swing produces as much power as my previous one with twice the accuracy!

My biggest area of improvement has to be my serve - I rarely landed my serve in and when I did it was weak, and hence I Lost the majority of my own service games.

I had never been shown the mechanics behind the serve before and your idea of practising the serve in parts and then putting it all together over many weeks really helped me.

My ball toss now is consistent and I have learnt to hit a spin serve which lands in 90% of the time! I am now pronating my wrist in the serve and cannot believe the power this one tip has given me.

Thank you so much for turning the light on with my tennis. I can now trust my swing and just focus on where to hit the ball, rather than how to hit it.

Brendan Murphy, Australia




With any order you will receive 5 additional bonus videos that cover information often left out when teaching people how to play tennis.

The Tennis Beginners Video Instruction Guide includes 5 bonus videos, that show you how we learn motor skills and much more.

Here's What You'll Learn in the "How We Learn Tennis" BONUS Videos:


The difference between intellectual and motor learning. - the intellectual approach when learning motor skills is catastrophic.
How our body learns new movements - since it doesn't understand English, you need to communicate in a different way.
How to practice to improve your feel in the fastest way without over-thinking
The trap of perfect technique and how to avoid it.
The right mental approach to learning tennis - 2 ways to have the right mindset, which removes disturbances from the conscious mind and accelerates your learning.


To speed your learning so you enjoy the game much sooner than beginners usually do, you will receive this bonus videos package with any order of tennis beginner videos.


And Now The Best Part Of "How To Play Tennis" Beginners Videos...

If you have ever taken a tennis lesson from a full-time tennis professional with all the credentials, it probably cost you from $40 to $60 per hour.

To go through all 6 "How To Play Tennis" video lessons + bonus material, it would probably take you 10-15 lessons, since you may not progress from one step to another in a matter of minutes. It might even take you weeks before you start working on the last step.


So, if you had a professional tennis coach work with you through these lessons, your whole investment would probably be around $500.

The best part of this "How To Play Tennis" Beginners Videos is the price!

With the power of Internet, where I have no inventory and no shipping costs, I can pass the savings on to you.

That's why I can offer you a single beginner video package for only $17. For the price of 1/3 of a tennis lesson, you are getting 15-20 step-by-step videos covering two full lessons and a bonus package that will speed up your learning process.

Choose between these 3 packages:

How To Play Tennis From The BaselineHow To Serve And ReturnHow To Play Tennis At The Net

Forehand Tennis Lesson
8 videos
Backhand Tennis Lesson8 videos

Serve Tennis Lesson6 videos
Return Tennis Lesson4 videos

Volley Tennis Lesson7 videos
Overhead Tennis Lesson4 videos

Bonus - How We Learn Tennis - 5 videosBonus - How We Learn Tennis - 5 videosBonus - How We Learn Tennis - 5 videos

Price: $17Price: $17Price: $17

Click here to orderClick here to orderClick here to order






Hi Tomaz,

After we watched the videos for couple of times we realized that your technique teaching method is very good and easy to pickup.

As a matter of fact my older daughter has a problem with her serve and after she watched the videos she was able to fix her problem and now her serve is almost perfect.

We bought many of tennis videos but none of them like yours.

Thank you for these tennis lessons.

Anthony Soewondo, USA




And If You Are Really Serious About Your Tennis Game...

I know that if you invest in the complete guide "How to Play Tennis For Beginners" - all 3 packages - you are serious about learning how to play tennis.

In that case, I'm going to offer you something special...

This is something that will set this "how to play tennis" video instruction guide far apart from all other instruction material you will find online or on a DVD.

Most other instruction videos (or pictures) just show all the elements of the stroke like grip, ready position, footwork, follow-through, preparation and so on.

They expect you to be able to memorize all that and execute all those movements while trying to judge the ball flight and move your legs correctly in the 1.5 seconds you have before the ball gets to you!

No wonder the 2006 USTA report says that 47% of adult beginners quit tennis after one year because it is too difficult!




Hi Tomaz,

I have been playing tennis for 48 yrs and attended college on a tennis scholarship. During this time I have been in and out of teaching and coaching. Of late I have been a follower of Brent Able and Oscar Wegner.

I think your video is outstanding, not just for beginners but experienced players as well. Each segment takes you back to sound fundementals, that are not being taught in the United States today.

If American junior tennis had the road map you are espousing we might be at parity with the rest of the tennis world.

Thank you for helping make me a better teacher and a better player.

Yours truly, Fred Simoneau, CA, USA




Yes, learning tennis in this way is incredibly difficult. It is a complex sport. To learn it with enjoyment and continuous improvement, you need a gradual progression.

Through my 12 years of working with tennis beginners, I have identified the 7 biggest challenges that beginners face, which have nothing to do with tennis technique.


Order Today All 3 Packages:
1. How To Play Tennis At The Baseline
2. How To Play Tennis At The Net
3. How To Start The Point

For the special price of 3 x $17 = $51 Only $37

And receive this ADDITIONAL BONUS VIDEOS package:

7 Biggest Beginner Challenges And How To Solve Them

Here's what these 7 videos will show you:
How To Judge The Ball - 2 drills that accelerate your ball judgement ability and help you overcome the biggest challenge for a tennis beginner
How To Not Hit Too Hard - 2 drills that show you the way to playing with touch and feel, enabling you to quickly play controlled tennis

How To Not Be So Tight - being too tight is another big challenge for a tennis beginner, and just saying "be more relaxed" doesn't work. You'll learn an interesting way to become less tight and a magic question that works wonders at getting you more relaxed.
How To Not Stop The Racquet At The Contact Point - Many beginners falsely feel that if they stop the racquet at the contact point, they won't hit so hard (since they already noticed that challenge). This in fact makes things worse. You'll learn how to swing through the ball and still be able to control it.
How To Play Tennis With An Arc - It looks really nice when the ball flies 1 inch over the net, but that's far from being an effective tennis shot. You'll learn two drills that make playing with an arc a subconscious habit in just a couple of practice sessions.
How To Reach The Ball In Time - The correct technique is of no use to you if you are rushed and not in balance when you hit the ball. Learn a simple drill that teaches you how to set up and balance before the shot.
How To Toss The Ball Consistently In The Same Place - The simplest looking thing, such as tossing the ball for the serve, often proves to be a challenging task. You'll learn two drills to overcome this challenge quickly.










Jeff Counts

Tomaz,

I think your video instruction on beginner tennis is outstanding.

Anyone wanting to learn the game (or wanting to teach the game to someone else) should start with your instruction as a core teaching model. It's that good.

What I found most compelling about your material is how you simplify tennis, yet still teach all the core components that lead to high level tennis later on.

By starting with your material, a student will quickly be hitting the ball well, and will be building a perfect foundation for big time tennis later on.

Most beginning instruction teaches an old style of hitting the ball, which makes it hard to progress later on. You start with the modern game, but present it in a way that is simple, easily copied, and natural.

I will be recommending your beginner tennis video series to others, and will be using many of your ideas in my own work with beginning students. Outstanding work.

Jeff Counts
http://www.hi-techtennis.com







So, let's take a brief recap of everything you'll receive in the COMPLETE "How To Play Tennis Beginners Video Instruction Guide":


8 forehand groundstroke videos
8 backhand groundstroke videos
6 serve videos
4 return videos
7 volley videos
4 overhead videos
---------------------------
37 videos

With two additional bonuses...



Bonus #1: 
How Do We Learn - 5 videos that will show you the difference between intellectual and motor learning, how our body learns new movements, how to practice to improve your feel in the fastest way without over-thinking and more...





Bonus #2: 
7 Biggest Challenges For Tennis Beginners And How to Solve Them - 7 videos that will show you how to judge the ball, how to not hit too hard, how to not be so tight and more....

That's 49 videos with a total playing time of more than 90 minutes (390 MB).

You'll be able to watch videos online (on a secure page) or download them which will take you just a couple of minutes on a fast DSL or cable connection.

Order now for only Only $37!





Special Bonus Ebook: You can receive a free ebook only if you send me your success story after you have applied the instructions in the "How To Play Tennis" video package.




You will be able to choose between the Mental Manual For Tennis Winners (50 pages, $19 value)andTennis Strategy Encyclopedia (108 pages, $27 value).You'll receive information about both ebooks in your confirmation email after the purchase.




(This offer is valid only until I receive 10 to 15 testimonials for the "How To Play Tennis" Video Instruction Guide. Order now to secure the chance of receiving an additional product to boost your game - either mental or the strategy part of tennis.)


Buy with confidence from Clickbank, the authorized retailer of How To Play Tennis Beginners Video Instruction Guide where your transaction will be handled by a secure server. Clickbank currently sells more than 10,000 digital products online, and the number is growing daily.

You also have a 100% risk-free, 8 weeks money-back guarantee on every purchase from TennisMindGame.com.

If you happen to ask for a refund, it is Clickbank's policy to send money back immediately.

Give this "How To Play Tennis" Beginners Video Instruction Guide a good try and APPLY the information to your game.

If after 8 weeks you feel that the video instruction and bonus materials did not help you play better tennis, then contact me and you will receive a full refund.



You'll complete your transaction with the trusted and secure Clickbank company and then receive immediate access to the page where you can watch and / or download the videos to your computer.

Here's how to order:

Click Here for an instant access to the entire "How To Play Tennis Video Instruction Guide For Tennis Beginners" package. Once your credit card is approved, you will be taken to a special secure page where you will watch the videos and be able download everything!

INSTANT ACCESS
Purchase Online with a Credit Card or Online Check from ClickBank's SSL Secure Server

It doesn't matter what time it is or where you are!

Tomaz Mencinger, professional tennis coach

P.S. If you are serious about learning how to play tennis, then don't miss this chance of having 49 instruction videos on your PC ready for you to study and analyze at any time and as many times as you want.

Remember, there is no risk with my 8 weeks money back guarantee.

You can be learning how to play tennis just minutes from now...




Hi Tomaz,

Although I am not a beginner, I recently ordered your complete video package for beginners. Why, someone might ask, would a non-beginner order tennis videos for beginners?

The answer is really quite simple. I am a baseliner who only comes to the net to either pick up the ball, or to shake hands.

Your opponent doesn't have to be a Rocket Scientist to figure out that if he brings you to the net, he's going to win not only the point, but also the match. In addition, you will have a difficult time wining a match if your opponent can attack your serve.

I have taken seven lessons over the past two years to help me improve my serve and also to learn how to volley. Instead of my serve and my volley improving they actually got worse.

I came to the conclusion that some tennis players are just born with the ability to serve and volley, but I was not one of those gifted individuals.

When I ordered your videos, I was only interested in your "How To Serve & Return Videos", and your "How To Play Tennis At The Net Videos".

I decided to order your complete package, because it was a better bang for my buck. I am happy to say that your instructional videos are great.

My first and second serve have more pace and depth, and they are now difficult to attack. Now when an opponent brings me to the net, I am not intimidated.

I now have the belief that I can volley, and it has become fun to now start attacking my opponent. What's really surprising, is that even though I felt like my forehand and backhand were fine, your "How To Play Tennis From The Baseline" have also helped me improve them.

This past Friday, I played a friend of mine who consistently beats me. He received the shock of his life when I beat him.

Thanks Tomaz.

John Adonis, USA







Hi Tomaz,

I'm very happy to have found your videos!

At the moment I'm starting to play tennis again after pausing for 5 years.

In the past I was a good player but I encountered great difficulties to start playing again.

In your How To Play Tennis videos, for each situation, I found the exactly information I need: few topics and tricks but essential and fundamental.

In only ten hours my tennis is growing better and better and I hope I'll improve even more to find my best tennis game again.

Thank you for your valuable advice.

Claudio Corbetta, Italy







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