Description
Teaching the Mental Game
Give your athletes clearer instruction and your staff a stronger teaching resource with Teaching the Mental Game, featuring insights from Frank Giampaolo.
Coaches do not invest in instructional resources just to collect ideas. They invest in tools that help them teach faster, communicate more clearly, and get athletes to execute with more confidence. Teaching the Mental Game is built with that purpose in mind.
Drawing on Frank Giampaolo's perspective, this training resource gives coaches a more direct path to teaching the details that matter. Instead of piecing together scattered drills and clips, you get a more focused framework you can bring into practice, player development, and game preparation.
Use it to sharpen your teaching, reinforce your standards, and give athletes a clearer picture of what quality execution should look like. When coaches teach with more clarity, athletes play with more trust—and that is where real program growth begins.
Why Coaches Buy This Video
- Teach with more clarity and less wasted practice time
- Give athletes a more repeatable framework for execution
- Pick up coaching points you can apply immediately
- Use a focused resource instead of piecing ideas together from random clips
- Strengthen your program with more intentional instruction
What You'll Learn
- Comprehensive Understanding: Engage students in teaching to deepen their grasp of the mental game in tennis
- Emotional and Mental Skill Development: Facilitate the growth of critical emotional skills and mental/emotional awareness...
- Boosted Confidence: Elevate athlete confidence by empowering them to teach, enhancing their competitive self-efficacy
- Enhanced Group Communication Skills: Sharpen communication within groups, fostering a supportive learning environment
- Character Building: Cultivate essential character traits through the unique learning experience of teaching
Who It's For
Middle school and high school tennis coaches, club and travel tennis coaches, assistant coaches, trainers who want a clearer teaching resource, and parents who support player development.
Why It Helps Your Program
Strong programs do not rely on motivation alone. They rely on clearer teaching, better repetition, and shared standards across the staff. Teaching the Mental Game helps coaches create that kind of environment by giving them a practical resource they can use to teach with more precision and confidence.