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Great question, John. When I ordered the DVDs way back when, I was surprised Oscar answered the 800 #. I only thought his stuff applied to beginners also before I saw the DVDs. His core tenet is simplicity, which must mean for beginners. I told him I had often played practiced and played college doubles with tennis with Flach and Seguso, with my old college friend Jerry Clark as my doubles partner. Oscar mentioned he showed Robbie Seguso how to develop a world class kick serve in one lesson. This intrigued me as I did not know that Oscar's tenets applied at the higher levels. I would discover that they applied to all levels. For advanced players, feel is everything. Playing by instinct is everything. I can tell you that every great player today, when they play their best, is playing by Oscar's core tenets of "waiting" and hitting "across the ball" not through it. I have coached many high performance players including given lessons to three satellite tour players who came to me for a tune up because I taught Oscar's MTM. I even got invited on court at 7am with Tommy Haas at Cincinnati one year to warm up his backhand before Monfils arrived and he was showing me how he hit his BH and I noted to him he hit it exactly like Oscar Wegner teaches and he thanked me for the compliment and told me Oscar was a very well respected coach. I couldn't ask any more questions because Monfils finished his laps and was ready to hit. I will tell you that the better you get in tennis, the faster the game, and the more efficient you better be, and Oscar's Modern Tennis Methodology (MTM) is the foundation of you playing your best tennis, especially at the higher levels. At the higher levels, you need to create more time and space due to the speeds of the shots, and MTM is the only real method that emphasizes and then shows you how to do that effectively.
If you are content playing a certain way, even conventional, more power to you. It might not be worth changing. Me, I want to play my best, and I want to emulate the pros. I'm 50, and I can hit any shot like the pros, in form and style if not at Gonzalez' 124 MPH forehand. I will tell you this, I've been at the US Open Tennis Teacher's Conference and many great and well known coaches acknowledge Oscar's MTM as the best, even if they don't say so publicly. It creates great tennis players like no other methodology. Is it the only way to play? NO! Is the the only way to get to a great level? NO! But if the PTR and USPTA really knew how to teach tennis well, then why has USA tennis declined to the point at amateur level and pro level where we are on verge of being a third world tennis power except for Venus and Serena who learned MTM through their father. The mark of a great tennis methodology is it's repeatable by others. Oscar's MTM gets results like no other teaching method, which is why his converts are so loyal. I've tried all the teaching methods published and I know of nothing that gets such results. But once you really understand what playing natural and efficiently really means per MTM, you realize that the pros play very naturally and efficiently, each with their own preferences and idiosynchrocies, each according to their own physical builds and boundaries, and each according to theire own personalities. But they all play according to the tenets laid out in Oscar's revolutionary 1989 book.
Even Nick Bollittieri recently wrote publicly for the very first time that you can't hit a "killer forehand" from a closed stance successfully in pro tennis today. Oscar has been claiming that for nearly forty years. Glad Nicky B finally got it right.
If you have any doubt, write me and I'll send you some old articles Oscar wrote that will help you see how Oscar's stuff applies to all levels. Learning is on a gradient, and the more you advance, the more refinements you add to your game but you stick with the three real fundamentals of tennis which I believe are "find it, feel it, and finish it." Last note, I once met Master Pro Ajay Pant, who helped coach Amanda Coetzer (former #10) and worked with Agassi on his serve, just to name a few. Ajay noted how I was teaching as opposed to the other coaches on the court and said "you must be an Oscar guy." I smiled and in test to see if he was friend or foe, I asked him, what do you think is the number one fundamental of tennis? He smiled back and said "find the ball, of course." Then we talked about how Venus has lost her serve at the time because she could not "find the ball." He really knew modern tennis. See www.tennisteacher.com if you have any doubt and browse it carefully. Look at the coaches section, which contains a former top 100 female player and some other pretty accomplished players. I have coached very high level players using MTM every time for the last five years. I don't follow Oscar, I follow results, and Oscar's MTM gets the best results. Show me something that gets better results and I'll follow it to the moon.
Thanks so much, John and Lucile (thx Lucile also for directing me to this site from tennisw where I used my wife's userid rchen). I guess I understand all of what you are saying but without the benefit of "feeling" them. I am trying to become well versed in MTM so that I can be the voice of reason in my son's tennis development. For now, I'll just accept the fact that it'll be a long time. A quick question: does hitting "across the ball" apply to flat shots as well?
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