{"id":5613,"date":"2017-08-08T12:57:54","date_gmt":"2017-08-08T16:57:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/theyogasanctuary.biz\/staging\/?p=5613"},"modified":"2023-07-31T12:02:13","modified_gmt":"2023-07-31T16:02:13","slug":"why-bother-breathing-to-improve-your-game","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theyogasanctuary.biz\/why-bother-breathing-to-improve-your-game\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Bother Breathing to Improve Your Game"},"content":{"rendered":"

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The Yoga Sanctuary is excited to share this excellent essay by local Tennis Professional, Jak Beardsworth<\/a>. Jak writes about the importance of using the breath, particularly the exhale, to improve your game — something we yogis know very well! To learn more about Jak, his teaching, and his writing, click HERE<\/a>. Enjoy….<\/p>\n

\"Tennis;<\/a><\/h4>\n

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Why Bother Breathing to Improve Your Game<\/p>\n

You attend tour events in your area. You regularly tune into the Tennis Channel to watch your favorite players in tournaments far and wide. You aspire to fashion your game by mimicking the stroke mechanics, movement, strategy and tactics of the tour\u2019s big boys and girls to the best of your ability. Yet, strangely, clubbers mostly fail to model themselves after the breathing techniques of the best players on the planet.<\/p>\n

Unfortunately, the ubiquitous use of term \u201cgrunting\u201d has done a great disservice in discouraging breathing \u2013 a highly essential component of the game – among club mortals, both overtly and subliminally, by putting such a negative spin on it.<\/p>\n

A never ending curiosity to me, it\u2019s a lingering epidemic in club tennis that\u2019s, embarrassingly, left unaddressed by far too many teaching pros.<\/p>\n

I\u2019ve dutifully covered the subject in both my books \u2013 More Than Just the Strokes <\/em>and Tennis Game Theory \u2013 <\/em>apparently to little avail in my current part of the tennis world where the books have sold well.<\/p>\n

Players continue to misperceive the nothing but positive, multi-faceted manifestations that breathing out, exhaling, at the ball striking moment can provide your existing game almost immediately, yet commonly viewed as unimportant.<\/p>\n

Hers\u2019s a review of the 5 benefits that simultaneously occur if you\u2019re not <\/em>stressfully holding your breath for dear life at shot impact:<\/p>\n

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  1. It is essential, particularly in a hard fought rally, to prevent one from going into oxygen debt, which, once the red light goes on, will completely undermine your focus on the task at hand, sap your stamina, and not to mention, especially if you\u2019re older and in hot\/humid conditions, put your cardio-respiratory health at serious risk.<\/li>\n
  2. Breathing out through the moment of racket-on-ball contact also adds easy power to your shots by reducing muscle tension, promoting physical relaxation, and optimizing racket swing weight.<\/li>\n
  3. Additionally, it triggers an emotional calmness at that stressful shot making moment. Keep in mind that the issue may actually be more \u201cemotional toughness\u201d than \u201cmental toughness,\u201d as is typically noted.<\/li>\n
  4. Also, the physicality involved in breathing out will also do wonders in eliminating all too common left brain over-thinking, which will literally distract your eyes from the ball at the crucial moment, creating a glazed over non-focus. Think deer-in-the-headlights.<\/li>\n
  5. Finally, and overlooked by some of the very best club pros otherwise, and completely unrecognized by others, it enhances the mechanical synchronicity, and all its connected parts \u2013 kinetic chain – involved in timing the optimal ball striking moment. Right place, right time, right moment.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    My colleague, Margit Bannon, a USPTA tennis professional and<\/em> Yoga Professional, recently offered me her take on the breathing component: \u201cBreathing brings a certain fluidity to the tennis stroke in a way that nothing else can. Every other lesson I get asked by students for \u2018more power,\u2019 but what they fail to realize is that it is in the letting go<\/em> of the breath (the exhalation\/grunt if you will) that we experience that effortless expression of the stroke we are looking for. In other words, stop trying to muscle the ball (which would create more tension, etc), let go, breathe into the letting go of the stroke for that ultimate release to where it might actually feel good to hit the ball while adding more pace. Who doesn\u2019t want that?\u201d<\/p>\n

    I have come to believe that players are timid about breathing, creating a negative mind-set and foolish embarrassment over trying to be \u201clike the pros\u201d with regard to this one, and only one, technique. Huh? As previously noted, they are eager and motivated to model themselves in every other way. But not breathing. I estimate that 70% of club players, perhaps even more, fit this profile.<\/p>\n

    In a game where one has to recognize the speed, spin, and trajectory of an incoming shot, calculate an optimal where and when position to intercept it, and then decide what their shot response will be in mere milliseconds, you need all the help you can get at the ball striking moment of truth. Get over it!<\/p>\n

    I have found great success in getting otherwise perfectly good players, but nonetheless breath-holders, to find \u201ctheir noise,\u201d and improve their game right off. On tour, every player has a signature sound \u2013 some even utilize two syllables – that they make while exhaling. It does not have to be the blood curdling screams of the Sharapovas, Azarankas, Williams sisters, Nadals, and, regrettably, many more of the pro world. Ridiculous and bad for the game\u2026where\u2019s the decibel meter? Conversely, you have to turn the volume up on your television to hear the greatest male tennis player of all-time, Roger Federer, breathing. Enough said about volume, although I\u2019d love to know Rod Laver\u2019s take on the subject.<\/p>\n

    One of the techniques the Father and original proponent of the term \u201cmental toughness,\u201d renowned performance psychologist Dr. Jim Loehr, used in his early groundbreaking programs (early 80s) for those initially uncomfortable and self-conscious with the practice was to say the word \u201cyes\u201d while striking the ball, a very viable substitute for actually exhaling. With committed use over time that \u201cyes\u201d will morph into your<\/em> signature sound.<\/p>\n

    Next time out start either making a relatively quiet noise, or saying \u201cyes,\u201d through impact right from the first ball in the warm-up, and continue it throughout the entire match, or practice session without fail. Make it your #1 goal for that day. Trust me, once you become more comfortable with the task you\u2019ll see a marked improvement in your game. If not \u2013 give it an honest try – contact me via email if you reside in SW Florida and I\u2019ll offer you a free half-hour lesson to get you over the breathing hump.<\/p>\n

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    Some things to know about Jak….<\/p>\n