When it comes to a perfect tennis serve something that's going to make it worse is being afraid of double faulting. This puts unreal pressure on your first serve and so much more on your second which leads to a less than perfect tennis serve. So what you need to do is keep the following in mind so that you don't end up double faulting when it comes down to it.
1. Be ConfidentIn 1995, Boris Becker
promised me a big bonus if he won a top-level clay title. In the Monte
Carlo final, he had match point against Thomas Muster in the fourth-set
tiebreaker. Becker went for a 122-m.p.h. second serve and missed by two
inches. He lost the fifth set at love, and there went my bonus. But
Becker did the right thing: His serve was his biggest weapon, and he
didn’t hold back. The second serve is a confidence shot, and no one hit it more confidently than Becker. That’s the attitude you need to strive for; you can only get there by learning to accept double faults.
2. Play On Your TermsYou
can’t afford to be on the defensive when you serve. If you hit one
dinky second serve after another, you’re not going to control too many
points. Look at the double fault this way: If you hit one, at least
you’re losing the point on your terms, not your opponent’s. You want to call the shots when you serve.
3. Go After It In MatchesYou
can hit thousands of second serves in practice, but once the match
starts, it will feel different. There’s more pressure in competition.
It’s important to go after your second serves in a match because that’s
where you need this weapon most. You may lose a few matches on double faults and feel like pulling your hair out, but that's O.K. It's for your own good.
4. Take It To Tough Returners
The return game has improved immensely both on the pro tour and at the club level. It used to be that only Andre Agassi was a dangerous returner from both wings. Now almost every top pro can crush a weak second serve, no matter where it’s placed.
At the club level, modern racquets and strings give the returner more
stability, which in turn results in more power and fewer mishits. So if
you hit a terrible second serve, it’s almost as bad as a double fault.
You need to make your second serve as solid as possible. If that means a
few double faults along the way, so be it.
5. Look AheadLosing
because of double faults will make you miserable. But cheer up, you’re
preparing for the future, not worrying about the present, and that’s the
best way to improve. Some people call the serve the easiest shot in
tennis, because you have complete control over it. But it’s the toughest
shot, too, since all the pressure is on you. If you double fault,
there’s no one to blame but yourself. It takes time and lots of setbacks
to learn to believe in yourself. The sooner you get started, the
better.
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