Saturday, May 30, 2009

What Does It Take To Become A Tennis Coach?

Being a tennis coach is a great life; you need to be sociable, able to interact with people but above all to be able to help others to learn basketball great game of tennis. It is necessary to be able to play the game well, but, as in many other sports, being a good player does not mean that you will be a good coach. You will need to have an in depth knowledge of the game, and acquire skills that you will not necessarily have understood as a player.

It is my contention that the coach who starts players off on the path of playing, particularly if teaching juniors, needs to be a coach who understands and can coach every aspect of the game. This includes technical and tactical skills, strategy, mental skills, fitness training, periodisation and nutrition.

A prospective coach will learn a number of these areas during the coach qualification period; however, it is again my own view that a newly qualified coach should work together with a pro. For at least 3 - 6 months after qualifying.

A coaching course can be taken with the LTA in the U.K. the USPTA in the States and the largest coaching organization worldwide the USPTR (known as PTRUK in
The UK). There are naturally national coaching organizations in each country.
The PTR has a standard coaching practice that is taught in all their overseas countries.

Once qualified, the coach will need to consider whether they have any preference as to who they want to work basketball whether this is Seniors or Juniors, individual or squads, men or women. Another very worthwhile group to coach are disability groups and wheelchair tennis; these do however, require additional learning techniques.

I also believe, that to be a good coach, you also need to be able to teach another cross-training sport, and to my mind, Basketball fits in very comfortably with tennis. They are both intricate sports and there is far more to them than the general public realize when watching the games being played.

The great satisfaction from teaching tennis is that a good coach can take almost anyone and give them this game for a lifetime, and the big payoff is seeing them succeed at whatever level.

To find out more about the great game of tennis and to subscribe to a monthly news letter, visit http://www.tennisatthenet.ws

John Hoskins is an L.T.A. and a PTRUK qualified licensed tennis coach working at a number of facilities as head coach in Kent, England.

Make A Living Or Second Income Betting On Sports

Yes, it is possible to make a living right out of your home betting on sports. Like any successful business, recipe, or other venture, you have to have key ingredients. One of the most important ingredients in sports wagering is PATIENCE. Without patience, you will fail. Lets say for example you win big on a particular Saturday in college football. You wake up early Sunday morning and your first instinct is that you feel that you are on a roll, unbeatable, and feeling lucky for the NFL. You bet all of your profits on the NFL and lose. Raise your hand if that has happened to you? basketball thought so. The lesson here is quantity is not quality. If you play more plays then the odds are against you. The Las Vegas and all of the sports books know this fact that the public does not.

I am sure you searched the internet for a reputable sports service (handicapper) that offers hundreds of picks. Most handicappers have no shot of winning basketball they play right into the sport books hands. The reason is that the 110 to 100 rule is made for suckers that bet the board. Again, QUALITY is not QUALITY.

Another key ingredient is MONEY MANAGEMENT. Without money management, you will fail. The reason is, you will have winning streaks but you will also have losing streaks. Before a season starts, I already have a set amount of what I am going to put on a game. This is called a budget and you have to stick with a budget. If you budget your money, you can wager on almost every sport all year long. This is one of the reasons I can make a living on sports wagering. I do it year round primarily on the NFL, MLB, NBA and college football and college basketball. One thing I can tell you is that time flies and the next thing you know it is football season, basketball season, etc.

This brings us to the third key ingredient DISCIPLINE. I make a living on sports wagering and I am a professional. You have to be disciplined enough to stay away from teasers, parlays and other sucker bets that the sports books want you to bet. It can be difficult to win one game let alone three to win a parlay.

PATIENCE, MONEY MANAGEMENT AND DISCIPLINE. If you combine these three key ingredients for sports betting, you will be a consistent winner.

About the Author: John E. Message is the Chief Handicapper at www.worldclasshandicapping.com. He makes a living on sports betting by being patient and waiting for odds makers mistakes. Feel free to e-mail him with any questions or visit his website.

About the Author: John E. Message is the Chief Handicapper at http://www.worldclasshandicapping.com. He makes a living on sports betting by being patient and waiting for odds makers mistakes. Feel free to e-mail him with any questions or visit his website.

College Basketball and Basketball TV - Beyond Live

In the United States, college basketball has gained quite a following. Now, with the immense popularity basketball the NBA and its superstars, many students are looking to get noticed in college basketball recruiting, to play in college teams and even perhaps in the NBA.

Such is the popularity of basketball that he NBA has its own channel, NBATV, a 24-hour television network, produced by its basketball production and programming division, NBA Entertainment. It also manages the content of each NBA's team's home page, and the league's official sites, NBA.com, WNBA.com and NBADLEAGUE.com. The NBA is also an established presence in sports marketing. It maintains fully integrated domestic and global marketing partnerships with some of the most recognizable global brands, including the leading Internet content and technology providers, in the hopes of bringing basketball to fans around the world.

During the 2005-06 championship season, the NBA had a planned 44,000 hours of programming to broadcast to 215 countries and territories in 43 languages. The league's worldwide extension is also demonstrated by 81 international athletes playing in various teams. In the United States, the NBA broadcasts around 142 games in on local networks, namely ABC, TNT, ESPN and ESPN2.

Kids aspiring to play in college sports sometimes don't realize that senior year is just too late in the game to check up on prospective schools with recruiting. Gathering information on colleges, their courses, their mission statements, history and other details is important. Setting aside a folder for each school that may come under consideration is a useful way of organizing necessary data. Deadlines for submitting requirements may and do differ from school to school, and parents need to keep track of them.

The Internet has proven to be a useful venue for both students in college basketball and coaches involved in the process of college basketball recruiting. There are many websites and online forums wherein students and scouts can come together and interact.

D1Athletes is an online community wherein high school athletes and coaches alike can share and exchange information they need during college basketball recruiting. D1Athletes offers them a place to build an online presence and gain important public exposure

To learn more, visit D1Athletes.com or just click college basketball recruiting