New York Tennis Magazine November / December 2021

Page 32

An Athlete Needs a Rival By Dr. Tom Ferraro

J

ust like a dancer needs music, or an actor needs an audience, an athlete needs a rival in order to grow and develop. There are many wellknown rivalries in sports. We have the Boston Red Sox versus the New York Yankees, which pitted Ted Williams against Joe DiMaggio and climaxed in the 2003 ALCS when Boston’s Pedro Martinez ran across the field during the brawl in Game 3 and tossed New York bench coach Don Zimmer so violently that good old Don Zimmer spun in the air and landed on his back. Golf has had many a mesmerizing rivalry including Sam Snead versus Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer versus Jack Nicklaus. In more recent times, and as Gary Smith of Sports Illustrated pointed out early on, Tiger Woods would ultimately have but one rival which was fame itself. And unfortunately for Woods, fame

proved to be a sinister foe indeed, resulting in all sorts of interesting addictions for Mr. Woods. Rivalries are very good for the sport since it brings out the best in both players, it guarantees close endings and exciting matches and it draws in screaming fans like bees to honey. When I was younger I remember being at the Belmont Stakes to witness the great rivalry between two of the greatest thoroughbreds in history, Affirmed

Indoor Winter Season November 2021-April 2022 at New York Tennis Club Full 38-week after-school program Groups, Private Lessons and Tournament Travel Come train with Gilad Bloom: 27 years of High Performance coaching 13-year career on Pro Tour, including Davis Cup and Olympics

Call 914-907-0041 or E-mail Bloom.Gilad@gmail.com www.GiladBloom.com 30

New York Tennis Magazine • November/December 2021 • NYTennisMag.com

and Alydar. The crowd was so large that I was unable to see a single step as Affirmed beat Alydar by a nose. Baseball, basketball, soccer and golf have had great rivalries but tennis, as it pits individual against individual, is made to foster great rivalries. This fact was not lost on Andy Roddick’s father who wisely located and imported the best young player in Florida to live with his young son Andy. Mardy Fish was the import and as Andy played against him, they both developed their talent. This strategy worked well for both with Roddick ascending to #1 in the world rankings and after he retired, Fish climbed to the top of the United States rankings. Richard Williams, father of Venus and Serena Williams, also knew a thing about rivalry. They lived on the tough streets of Compton, Calif. and he started them young, pushed them hard and encouraged their sibling rivalry, all of which served to catapult them to the top of tennis. As is often the case, the youngest of the the sibling pair developed greater drive and ambition. Thus, the world watched as Serena became the dominant player in the world for many years. The sibling rivalry has been around for as long as the Old Testament, starting with the infamous story of Cain killing Abel out of envy. Science began considering the importance of rivalry when the psychoanalyst Alfred Adler, a peer to Sigmund Freud, began writing about birth order and sibling rivalry at the beginning of the 20th century. His theories still hold true today, some 120 years later.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Leylah Fernandez: I Have a New Tennis Idol By Lonnie Mitchel

4min
pages 62-63

You Are Good Enough By Rob Polishook

4min
pages 64-65

Delivering the Message By Jeremy Schmitter

2min
pages 66-68

All it Takes is a Racquet and a Dream By Steve Kaplan

4min
pages 52-53

My Tennis Tribe, My Tennis People By Barbara Wyatt

2min
page 50

Importance of Coordination and Training Specificity in Young

3min
page 51

Tennis: There Is Always Something to Learn By Shenay Perry

2min
page 31

2021 New York Tennis Coaches Roundtable Discussion

28min
pages 34-41

The Connection Between Sports By Gilad Bloom

6min
pages 42-43

Burnout Variables and Monitoring Techniques By Farhad Roshanaie

3min
page 30

USTA Eastern Inducts 2021 Hall of Fame Class

3min
pages 48-49

An Athlete Needs a Rival By Dr. Tom Ferraro

4min
pages 32-33

USTA Eastern Metro Region Update

5min
pages 26-28

Across Metro New York…News and Notes From Across the New York Metro Tennis Community

3min
pages 6-7

Beyond the Baseline w/ Jenny Schnitzer, USTA Eastern By Brian

6min
pages 8-11

Moonballers! By Chris Lewit

8min
pages 20-22

Metro Corporate League Recap presented by Advantage Tennis Clubs

1min
page 29

Slinger Serves a Successful First Year

2min
page 23

Junior Player Spotlight: Centercourt Tennis Academy’s Big Three

5min
pages 24-25

Coaching Spotlight: Rohan Goetzke, CourtSense By Brian Coleman

6min
pages 12-14
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.