Getting and Staying in Shape For Tennis


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Getting and Staying in Shape For Tennis

By mark norton

Author Bio
Mark Norton has been studying fitness for 17 years and helping people to live fit and healthy lifestyles for more than 14. In 1996, Mark graduated with a B.A. in Kinesiology from the University of Colorado and, since then, he has been certified as a strength and conditioning specialist by the NSCA (2006). He also has certifications through ISSA (1996), ACE (1997), NCEP (2001) and NCSF (2002).

But his passion for health and the biomechanics of the human body started long before then. As a child, he was active in tennis, football, wrestling, weight-lifting, soccer and gymnastics. And by age 15, he had designed his dream gym. While at college he competed in tennis, and, by 1993, he became a fitness and tennis instructor. Unlike most of us, what Mark wanted to do when he grew up was exactly what he was doing.

In 2005, he placed 3rd at the Arizona Natural Bodybuilding Competition. Today, as a strength and conditioning specialist, Mark’s training style is a combination of his extensive knowledge of the inter-workings of the human body and his love for a variety of physical activities.

As a result, his style blends Olympic lifting, functional training, core training, body-building, Yoga, Pilates, dynamic flexibility, Kettle bell, assisted stretching and corrective exercise. To Mark, fitness is a way of life, and variety is an essential spice to staying motivated.

But fitness as a way of life means different things to different people. For an 80-year-old woman, it may mean reducing dependency on prescription drugs and pain, for a high school hockey player, it might mean increasing muscle, flexibility and power.

There are many variables that play into the optimal fitness routine. Mark’s creativity in integrating a variety of techniques ensures each client gets the personalized results they seek.

Mark’s goal is to help everyone live a better life. But just because he cares, don’t expect a softie.

He knows your limits, and he’ll continually push you just past them until you start to see results. Because his technique is so customized to each person’s body, age and goals, he’ll build a program that succeeds for you. That’s why he has a 100% satisfaction guarantee. So your only risk is not getting started on a better you today.

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Tennis and physical fitness go hand-in-hand. It is a demanding sport exercising different parts of your body. Playing tennis requires joint flexibility, develops and tones your muscles and enhances your cardiovascular system. Your legs, arms, back, lungs and eyes get a work out. It is a marathon comprised of highly demanding skills including hand-eye coordination, balance and agility.

Not just a weekend sport

Tennis, to some, may be a weekend sport but it is a workout – a workout requiring some advance preparation. To excel, you have to combine tennis and physical fitness in your workout plan. Take heed. The workout should begin long before you are on the court. Perhaps, you could start with strength training.

Every time you lob the ball or run after it, your body is absorbing a major shock. In order to withstand the impact, you need to develop body strength. To maintain this as part of your tennis and physical fitness training, you can consider traditional weightlifting. You can turn to standard practices such as lifting dumbbells or barbells. There are also alternatives. Body weight exercises involving push-ups or squats or tossing around medicine balls can build up the necessary strength.

But wait, there’s more

Yet, strength is not enough. Tennis and physical fitness are only compatible if other elements are taken into consideration. An important requirement in this game is flexibility. Tennis features long stretches to reach those overhead shots and to lobby or serve the ball, lunges to nail those low shots and twists and bends as you bob all over the court. The only way to prepare for these and prevent possible injury is to incorporate stretching as a regular part of your exercise routine.

Tennis is a game of repetitive movement. As such, it requires you to build up strong endurance. A system acknowledging that tennis and physical fitness combined produces the best results, will consider this. Actions must require you to use certain muscles repeatedly performing a circuit of exercises, or doing multiple repetitions of the same exercise within a set time. Weight training, for both the upper and lower body, can be incorporated into this section of fitness training.

Another target area is the cardiovascular system. You have to reinforce or develop it so your body will be able to respond properly during matches that demand much from your heart and lungs. One suggestion is to alternate bouts of jogging with sprinting sessions. If you add weight lifting or any other form of resistance training to your cardiovascular exercise program, you will increase the amount of lean tissue. Thus, while working on your cardiovascular system, you can improve such elements as strength, power, and speed.

Do not forget that tennis and physical fitness are separate but symbiotic components. Each supports the other. In establishing a fitness schedule, make sure you adopt a comprehensive approach. Prepare all parts of your body in a tennis-specific fashion. Moreover, do so in the off -season as well as during the regular season. In addition, do not forget the warm up and cool down. Play gently before each game starts, lobbying the ball around. Stretch your major muscle groups e.g. calves, hamstrings, shoulders, quads, and lower back to promote flexibility and prevent injury. Jog to raise your heartbeat before the game and walk slowly around to cool down afterwards. Combine all the elements correctly and you will not only be prepared to play tennis but will be fit to enjoy whatever else comes your way.

Why use Mark Norton? His extensive knowledge of exercise science, nutrition, human physiology, program design, movement analysis.... Those are some great reasons and all accurate but the most important the dedication to our clients success.

Why use a personal trainer? A trainer will progress you through an exercise program with proper form, the proper intensity level, progress the difficulty of your exercises to match or improve fitness levels. A trainer can modify exercises to help with existing injuries and help reduce the chance of future injuries. Trainers most importantly provide motivation accountability and consistency.

We offer private sessions, as well as semi-private sessions, lunch hour groups, Internet coaching and on-site training for sports teams, as well as corporate speaking.

We are not a corporate gym where the membership is looked at like a dollar sign. We are just as invested in your success as you are. Our business succeeds when you succeed. In fact, we give our promise that you’ll be 100% satisfied or you’ll get your money back.

http://Scottsdale-Personal-Trainers.com

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