Brain Game Tennis Blog
Learn tennis strategy, read analysis of pro matches, and more from the Brain Game Tennis blog. All posts are written by ATP tennis strategy coach & analyst, Craig O'Shannessy.
Brand New Analysis: Losing Set 1
Monday, 08 June 2020
G’day, The match begins, and you go down an early break. Your opponent has hit the ground running, and you have yet to find your game. This scenario happens all too often for players who have not created a strategic mission for how to start matches. Starting slow really puts us in a hole. In
- Published in ATP Tour
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1980-2020: Roland Garros Posters
Friday, 29 May 2020
2021 Roland Garros Poster Added At The Bottom G’day, Roland Garros posters are a work of art. ???????????????????? Some of them look magnificent and really capture the essence and flavor of the tournament, while others – to me at least – leave me somewhat confused! ???? I like them so much I have three framed
- Published in Roland Garros
Roland Garros: Rafael Nadal’s Formidable Forehand
Tuesday, 26 May 2020
G’day, Is there anything more fearsome in the sport of tennis than Rafael Nadal’s forehand on Court Philippe Chatrier in Paris? Rafa has won a head-turning 12 Roland Garros titles, with this singular shot carrying him to victory more than any other. Enjoy the forehand breakdown below – in 12 frames. 11:24 am, Tuesday, June
- Published in Forehands, Rafael Nadal, Roland Garros
Getting Tight Sneak Peek: We Are All In The Same Boat
Tuesday, 26 May 2020
G’day, You look to the other side of the court in the warm-up and assess your opponent. Forehand looks fine. Backhand seems solid. They don’t seem to be moving too fast so maybe you can form a strategy around running them side-to-side. Here are some questions for you… Do they have a better read on
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Sneak Peak: Don’t Play The Resume
Monday, 18 May 2020
G’day, Sometimes matches are over before they even start. You look at the draw and you see that you have to play the No.5 seed or the No. 10 seed, or the defending champion, or the No. 1 seed this year. Match over right there. You convince yourself that the opponent must be really, really
- Published in Strategy Courses
Volleys Are Worse In 2020 Than 2000. Here’s Your Free Lesson.
Thursday, 14 May 2020
G’day, Everything to do with volleys – from technique to tactics – has deteriorated over the past 20 years. Everything. We like to think improvement is linear. We should be getting better over time. Nice theory. Not always on the mark in tennis. Take volleys, for example. Doesn’t it feel like a greater percentage
- Published in Wimbledon Channel
“Getting Tight” Fixes Getting Angry
Thursday, 07 May 2020
G’day, Tennis is a sport of errors. Professional matches average around 70% errors and that number increases at the recreational level for both adults and juniors. Those errors are not well received by players. Not well received at all… The negativity first gains a foothold as frustration, and straight-up anger quickly hijacks players who had
- Published in Getting Tight, Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Review: Coaching Mental + Tactical Together
Wednesday, 29 April 2020
G’day, Three bedrooms vs. one living room. In one room of the house lives all the emotions that you feel in a tennis match. There are good feelings, but there are also nerves, frustration, anger, and disappointment. Putting all of these elements in isolation – alone in one room – is not a good
- Published in Getting Tight, Strategy Courses
Bigger 2nd Serve: Coco Gauff or Novak Djokovic?
Monday, 27 April 2020
2019 Wimbledon Rewind: Coco Gauff Coco Gauff defeated Venus Williams 6-4, 6-4 in the first round of Wimbledon last year. Talk about causing a buzz on Centre Court! I reviewed the match on the Wimbledon Channel, including Coco’s serve and forehand technique, and a little background on the first time I saw Coco play at
- Published in Wimbledon
Getting Tight: Brookes Gives It Two Thumbs Up
Friday, 24 April 2020
Getting Tight has been out now for about a week and a half and the early adopters are consuming the course. Brookes Byrd, from Sacramento, sent me this review yesterday and was nice enough to agree to share it with everyone. So let’s go through Brookes’ review and see what she thinks about Getting Tight.
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight: Leora’s Course Review
Friday, 17 April 2020
Improve your perspective. Getting Tight has had a very successful launch week, so a big “thank you” to all the early adopters! Around 60% of sales have been in the U.S, with the other 40% from 14 countries around the globe. Leora, from San Francisco, purchased the course on Monday and sent Jeff and I
- Published in Getting Tight, Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Sneak Peek: Are You At 75% Of Your Potential?
Sunday, 12 April 2020
G’day, Do you really know who you are as a tennis player? In other words, do you have a crystal clear mission of your ideal game style, and do you stick to it in the heat of competition? Most players have a general idea of what they want to do, but the blueprint
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Sneak Peek: Can’t Close Out A Lead
Saturday, 11 April 2020
G’day, Very excited about the launch of Getting Tight in just two days! You will be able to purchase it Monday morning at 8:00 am US Central time. This video is focused on players that start well, get ahead, and then for whatever reason can’t close out a lead. It’s almost like they start playing
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Sneak Peek: The Spaniard Factor
Friday, 10 April 2020
G’day, Very excited about the launch of Getting Tight in just three days! You will be able to purchase it Monday morning at 8:00 am US Central time. A key theme that runs right through the 27 video chapters and 325 “Mini-Lessons” is a real-life case study of Jeff’s semi-final match of the US National
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Preview: Opponent Awareness
Thursday, 09 April 2020
G’day, Today’s two-minute sneak peek under the hood of Getting Tight, which launches in four days, is all about joining the dots between the mental, emotional and strategic aspects of competition. Jeff Greenwald, a former No. 1 player in the world in men’s 35’s, had just taken the first set against Francisco Clavet, who is
- Published in Strategy Courses
Getting Tight Preview: Anger & Frustration
Wednesday, 08 April 2020
G’day, Hands up if you find yourself getting too emotional in matches? In particular, hands up if the emotions that you feel are frustration and anger? All over the world, at all levels of our sport, this is a universal predicament. It is quite possibly the most common way we express our emotions negatively on
- Published in Strategy Courses
GamePlan: Sneak Peek At Double Faults
Tuesday, 07 April 2020
G’day, On Wednesday, September 6, 2017, I performed a feat I will unlikely repeat in my lifetime… I sat at my New York Times media desk under Arthur Ashe Stadium at the US Open and watched 730 women’s double faults on the match replay feed. Seven. Hundred. And. Thirty. ???? I had more coffee
- Published in Strategy Courses
The Right Time To Play Behind Your Opponent
Thursday, 02 April 2020
G’day, The open court is an illusion… ???? The ball is going to take approximately 1.5 seconds to arrive at the baseline in the big, vacant “open court” on the other side of the net. Your opponent has already turned their hips and is moving in that direction, and in 1.5 seconds will be making
- Published in Wimbledon
Where To Hit Your 1st Volley.
Wednesday, 01 April 2020
G’day, The 25 Golden Rules of Singles Strategy is the ideal “entry-level ” strategy course to improve the patterns of play in your game. Rule #24 is called First Volley Behind, and it’s all about having the right strategy for your first volley when you come to the net. First volleys are going to be
- Published in Strategy Courses
YOU miss too many returns.
Monday, 30 March 2020
G’day, Think of the irony of this situation… The shot you miss the most is the shot you practice the least. Yes, it’s the return of serve. Look at these numbers from The Championships last year. 2019 Wimbledon: Unreturned Serves MEN Unreturned 1st Serves = 39% (6983/18020) Unreturned 2nd Serves = 20% (1897/9502) Combined = 32%
- Published in Strategy Courses, Wimbledon, Wimbledon Channel





























