ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Tennis

Tennis Champions: Are They Born? Or Made?

Author : Chris Lewis
John Newcombe, former world tennis No 1 and former Australian Davis Cup captain, once said that the top Australian players of his era believed that it was their destiny to become tennis champions.



Boris Becker told me that two weeks before achieving his first Wimbledon title (in 1985 when seventeen years old), he felt as if it were predetermined.



As a seventeen year old, Ivan Lendl, who, prior to Pete Sampras, held the No 1 spot longer than any other player in history, was convinced that he would turn himself into the best player in the world. He would even tell you so.



When asked by the media about his chances of winning his first US Open title (in 1975), Jimmy Connors' response was: "There are 127 losers in the draw -- and me!"

Jimmy won.



What these former greats had in common was an unshakeable certainty that they would win. It is a trait that is shared by all top sports people.



But a question that has always fascinated me is: Are such champions born, or are they made?



Were Newccombe, Becker, Lendl and Connors born to rule the tennis world? Or did they become champions because of the choices they made? Was their success predetermined, as suggested by Newcombe and Becker? Or was it a result of a single-minded dedication to making themselves the very best, as implied by Lendl and Connors?



Are champions a product of nature? Or of nurture?



To be a true champion at tennis or any other sport requires very special qualities. These qualities or attributes can be divided into two categories -- the physical and the mental. It is my contention that physical attributes are predominantly a product of chance. They are determined genetically.



For instance, some people are born with a body structure conducive to speed, others to strength, and so on. In this sense, a very large proportion of the population are excluded, from birth, from ever winning an Olympic gold medal as a sprinter or a weightlifter.



It is the same with tennis. The physical attributes that are required to become a champion player are such things as good hand-eye coordination, quick reflexes, and leg-speed. Without question, these attributes can be developed to their fullest potential with hard work and effective training methods.



But most people are excluded from becoming the best tennis player in the world, no matter how much time they spend attempting to reach their physical ceiling of potential.



Does this mean, then, that champions are born? Were Newcombe, Becker, Lendl and Connors so physically superior to everyone else that becoming the best was just a mere formality?



Certainly not. All four were exceptionally gifted physically, but in my view, there were other players of the same eras who were more gifted than they were.



What separated them from everyone else were their mental attributes: their will to win, their determination, their perseverance, their ability to remain calm under presuure, their ability to bounce back from disappointments, and the belief that they deserved to win -- all attributes that not one of us is born with, but that each one of us has the power to develop. The only choice is whether we want to or not.



It is in this sense that, given the necessary or essential physical attributes as a starting point, all champions are not only made -- they are self-made.


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





Copyright 2006 -- Chris Lewis is a former No 1 ranked junior tennis player in the world and Wimbledon finalist in 1983. During his playing career, his coaches were Harry Hopman and Tony Roche. To read more of Chris's tennis articles and tennis tips, please visit his website at Expert Tennis Tips.





Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. The Attacking player, how hard is it to be like Federer?
  2. Is Federer all Alone in his Style of Play? (Part II)
  3. Is Federer all Alone in his Style of Play? (Part I)
  4. Does faster mean better in Tennis? (Part II)
  5. Does faster mean better in Tennis? (Part I)
  6. Wimbledon Center Court
  7. Tennis Ethics
  8. Sorry Pete, But That's No Sacrifice
  9. Tennis Champions: Are They Born? Or Made?
  10. Tennis And "The Ugly Parent Syndrome"
  11. Tennis - Anticipation - Early Warning Systems, what is it?
More related feeds
Presenting - Luscious Caribbean Treats and a Practically Minaret ...
Pluralistic in relation with I friends oscillatory went no stranger to environ outland Astroturf tennis champions. Only yesterday herself had a juncture in contemplation of ran into masterful on those friends still at the 30 twelvemonth ...

Are Champions Born or Made? Is the Answer in the Genes?
PS- To the regular Joe that wants to meet girls, go to parties, have a good time all the time, the disciplin necessary to be a champion sounds like a disaster, but tennis champions are this kind of fiber, they are goal oriented, ...

Donkey is Going to Win the Tennis Australian Open 2008 Title!
Of course a donkey could not ever win the Australian Open Nissan Dealers In San Antonio tennis, or the Kentucky Derby! I am just trying to get your attention ! (smile). This is about the eternal question "Are Champions born or made"? ...

Donkey is Going to Win the Tennis Australian Open 2008 Title!
Of course a donkey could not ever win Bookends Australian Open in tennis, or the Kentucky Derby! I am just trying Custom Wooden Plaques get your attention ! (smile). This is about the eternal question “Are Champions born or made”? ...

Donkey is Going to Win the Tennis Australian Open 2008 Title!
This is New Home Construction Loans United Kingdom the eternal question “Are Champions born or made”? And the answer is “Champions are born not made”! A champion will be a champion because of his/her genetical make up and not because ...

Apr 20, Tennis Champions - Born Or Made?
How does one become a tennis champion? Is it the product of training and good coaching, or are there certain inborn abilities that determine who makes it and who doesn't?

A star is born
"So they play tennis instead," he explained. "It is more a game of the people." Touchingly, Zheng has offered to donate her tournament prize money, which is already well in excess of £180000 to the Sichuan earthquake rebuilding efforts ...

Are Champions Born or Made? Is the Answer in the Genes?
Why are then Champions indeed born? If so then what separates the tennis champions from the regular tennis players and what are the tell-tale signs of champion material being on the tennis court? First, I am going to answer the second ...

Chinese revel in Zheng success
... success in England, it is Beijing in August where they want her to shine. "Once Beijing got the Olympics, the government made an effort to produce these tennis champions and they really went after double players first," said Austin. ...

Are Champions Born or Made? Is the Answer in the Genes?
Why Stroker Motor Oil Pan then Champions indeed born? If so then what separates the tennis champions from the regular tennis players and what are the tell-tale signs of champion material being on the tennis court? ...

 


 

2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved