Thomas A Haugen, Caroline Ruud, Silvana Bucher Sandbakk, Øyvind Sandbakk, Espen Tønnessen
International journal of sports physiology and performance 2024 Aug 26To investigate the training and development process of a multiple-Grand-Slam finalist.A mixed-methods case-study design was used to capture the quantitative and qualitative aspects related to the training and successful development process. We used a 3-step data-collection process and pragmatic analyses of (1) training history based on logs, plans, and questionnaires; (2) in-depth semistructured interviews with the player's head coach/father, physical coach, and team administrator/mother; and (3) systematic quality assurance through negotiation among researchers and all key informants, including the player.The player's exceptional performance level was achieved by a progressive, nonlinear increase in annual training load during childhood and early youth, stabilizing at 800 sessions and 1250 to 1300 hours per year at the age of 19. The annual tennis-specific training plateaued at ∼750 hours from the age of 15, and 60 to 80 matches were played in most of the analyzed years. Point-play accounted for approximately 50% of the total amount of specific tennis training, clearly ahead of ground strokes (∼30%), serve/return (∼15%), and smash/volley (∼5%). Physical-conditioning hours increased 5-fold from 12 to 19 years, before stabilizing at ∼500 hours at senior age. Key success factors included the athlete's multidimensional sports talent, discipline, and inner drive; a highly dedicated father and tennis-enthusiastic family; and strong support from a complementary and interdisciplinary performance team.This study provides novel information regarding the training and development process for a world-leading tennis player, providing a point of departure for the development of future talents.
Thomas A Haugen, Caroline Ruud, Silvana Bucher Sandbakk, Øyvind Sandbakk, Espen Tønnessen. The Training and Development Process for a Multiple-Grand-Slam Finalist in Tennis. International journal of sports physiology and performance. 2024 Aug 26:191-9
PMID: 39187248
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