Error – This is a shot that did not manage to make it across the net, or that landed out of the court, and this will result in a loss of the point. Face – This is the racquet’s flat area, one that is formed by way of the strings and then bounded by the [...]
Online Stores- Body Washes & Shower Gels Bath & Body Store
- Mozart Player Piano Acoustic Musical Instruments
- Waste Ball Valves Watering Equipment Gardening & Plants Yard, Garden & Outdoor Living Nursery
- Titanium Racquets Tennis Discount Tennis Gear
- Red Balls Tennis Discount Tennis Gear
Related Posts -
Tips for Serving Here are some more useful tennis tips for improving your serving game. If you want to make improvements in your ability to serve, these tips will prove useful. Tip #1 - Vary your procedure when you are serving. You are going to want to vary your procedure as well...... -
Ground Strokes Guide pt 1 Unless you are playing well beyond the intermediate level, then more than 75 % of your shots made during play are going to be forehand ground strokes or backhand ground strokes. For this very reason, your ground strokes absolutely need to be your basic weapons and tools for winning on...... -
More Tennis Tips pt 2 ... Continued from More Tennis Tips pt 1. This is part two in our weekly tennis tips series. Here are some more invaluable tips that will help you improve all aspects of your tennis game. Now you should draw your racquet back and away from the net and make...... -
More Tennis Tips pt 3 ... Continued from More Tennis Tips pt 2. This is part three in our weekly tennis tips series. Here are some more invaluable tips that will help you improve all aspects of your tennis game. You should swing your racket back until the point where the tip is barely...... -
Tennis Glossary pt3 Ace - This is a serve that the opponent is incapable of returning, to serve an ace. Ad - This is a shortened version of Advantage. Advantage - The player that scores the very first point after deuce is said to have had the advantage, because winning the next point......

