Tennis Podcast: Do You Play Better in Practice than Matches?

Taking Practice Skills to Matches

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Welcome to session number forty three of The Tennis Psychology Podcast.

Dr. Patrick Cohn at Sports Psychology for Tennis, is a mental game of tennis expert and helps tournament players, tennis coaches and parents improve confidence, focus, and composure using sports psychology strategies.

In this week’s tennis psychology session, Dr. Cohn teaches you:

How to play as well in matches as you do in practice.

Many tennis players play well in practice, but have a hard time transferring their skills to matches.

Listen to the podcast to learn how to trust in your practice and perform well in matches.

*Download a free tennis psychology report to improve your tennis mindset between points.

Improve Your Mental Toughness for Tennis Quickly with Dr. Cohn’s new Tennis Confidence Audio Program

*Subscribe to The Tennis Psychology Podcast at iTunes!


*Subscribe to The Tennis Psychology Podcast on iTunes
*Subscribe to The Tennis Psychology Podcast on Spotify


Improve Your Mental Game for Tennis

Tennis Confidence 2.0

Tennis Confidence CD

Tennis Confidence: Mental Game Strategies for Tournament Players” is an audio and workbook program to help tennis players, coaches, and instructors improve the mental game of tennis is just 10 easy to learn sessions. Tennis Confidence: Mental Game Strategies for Tournament Players Audio and Workbook program is ideal for any junior, collegiate, and tour professional player. Tennis coaches and instructors would also be wise to teach the strategies “Tennis Confidence.”

Tennis Confidence is a complete mental training program developed Peak Performance Sports. You learn the same strategies Dr. Cohn teaches his tennis players to help them improve mental toughness and consistency – from managing unrealistic expectations to coping with perfectionism.

Read more about Tennis Confidence Program>>

2 thoughts on “Tennis Podcast: Do You Play Better in Practice than Matches?”

  1. It’s actually the other way around for me… I suppose the pressure of winning drives me to work hard. I am crap during practice but during a match I’m very impressive. I suppose the pressure can shut some people down and make them nervous but it pumps me up, I love it :D.

  2. You are one of the lucky few that can raise their game in matches. Your challenge is getting focused enough in practice to improve and grow as fast as your skills and motivation will allow.

    Patrick Cohn
    http://www.peaksports.com

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