My Top 10 Tips for Tennis Parents

I look at this next young generation of upcoming tennis players with mixed emotions… the excitement of knowing what they will experience and the heartache of knowing what they will experience.  Some of my very best memories of life are from junior tennis… traveling the world, amazing friends, tough competition and yes, most of all, the high of winning. Junior tennis was also one of the toughest times for my parents, my family and myself.

We all know as parents, parenting isn’t easy, isn’t always fun and rarely goes according to plan. Count on that in spades if you are parenting an elite athlete, especially one in an individual sport like tennis.  It is safe to say that the children who are able to walk on a tennis court by themselves, with no teammates and no coaches, perform in front of family, peers, strangers, agents and recruiters (in tiny skirts and tops no less), make all the strategic decisions by instinct, deal with the integrity of calling their own lines under pressure, deal with the lack of integrity of an opponent calling their own lines, the emotional drama (or trauma for some) of playing a friend, attempting to keep their emotions in check when things go poorly (which they will) and then the kicker… to deal with you, the parent when they come off the court (Yeah, you didn’t tell them all of that when you talked them into their first lesson did you?) … this takes a unique child. I can honestly say… there is nothing normal about us and get ready for a bumpy ride, because we can be hell on wheels to raise!

So here are my TOP TEN TIPS FOR TENNIS PARENTS… from Marianne Werdel, the 14-year-old girl, ranked # 1 in the country, fiercely independent, intensely competitive, cunningly smart, somewhat (or very) precocious, driven and determined to be the best…

 

1.  I AM A TEENAGER.   Marianne Werdel and Debbie Spence

Please remember I am a teenager. I have a teenage brain. I will make teenage mistakes. I have teenage wants and needs. I want to go to the beach, the movies, the mall and to just hang out with friends.  I see everything and everyone on the sidelines (especially the cute boys) and I can do this all the while I am playing a match.  It is called multi-tasking and I hear it is a much-needed skill later in life. When I get into high school, I want to go to the football games and dances and yes, I want to stay to the end, even if I have an 8 am practice. And by the way, does it have to be 8 am every Saturday morning?  Oh, and when you are thinking about letting me travel in a group to co-ed tournaments… please don’t think back to what you wanted to do as a teenager because as athletes, we would never ever do any of that… no, never.

2. PLEASE DON’T MICROMANAGE ME.

I want to organize my own practices, sign up for my own tournaments, manage my own homework, write my own essays, etc. Managing all these things will help me with all the moving pieces I juggle on the tennis court. Believe it or not, I am capable to set my own alarm, pack my own suitcase and respond verbally to adults. Now, that doesn’t mean that I will always get up on time, pack all the right stuff and not embarrass you with what comes out of my mouth. But hey, I am a teenager and we can only learn from our mistakes. Right?

Marianne Werdel's coach, Woody Blocher

3. HIRE GOOD COACHES AND LET THEM COACH.

Help me find good coaches (yes, it will be plural) that work well with ME. It is I on the court with them after all.  And then, (imagine this) let them coach.  Let them do their job so you don’t have to do it.  And by the way… I need a tough coach, not the nice sweet polite one. I am a tough personality and need an equally strong person to be in charge. I need someone to teach me, push me to my limits, enforce the boundaries (can’t believe I am asking for this), hold me accountable to my goals, teach me discipline with my shot selection (good luck with that one), correct my mistakes, and to be there for me when things aren’t going well (believe me, things will get ugly now and then). But one of the main jobs my coach will do…. is to deal with you (dear sweet parent) when we are in battle. And yes, there will be plenty of battles. Did I not warn you of this? Oops, consider it payback for not giving me full disclosure on this adventure when I got hooked after winning my first tournament.

4. I WILL NEED A BREAK FROM TENNIS.

Please don’t talk about tennis all the time. The same way you don’t want me checking Instagram at the dinner table, I don’t want to hear a play by play from my match or practice at the dinner table. Also, please let me take one day off a week…. not just on a rare Southern California rain day. My body and my brain need a break. I actually play better after a day off and chances are I will have fewer injuries. Oh, and a day off, means “a day OFF”…. not a bucket (or 5) of serves, or a workout, or a run, or reading a tennis book, or watching tennis on TV, etc. You get the picture.

5. I AM THE ONLY ONE ON THE COURT.   

Nothing is more annoying than hearing you say, “WE did this and WE did that”.  Last I saw it was “me, myself and I” out on that court.  Funny that when I don’t do well it is always, “you didn’t do this, you didn’t do that”.  And the way you talk to people about “our” match as if “we” played and “I” am not standing right next to you.

Marianne Werdel 1984 Jal Cup

6. DON’T INTERFERE WHEN I AM ON THE COURT.   

It is my job to handle things on the tennis court. This is my playground, my sanctuary, and my place with my peeps.  I don’t need you to correct the score or correct my opponent’s line call, or my line call, or try and tell me what to do from the bleachers. Let me handle it, I GOT THIS! (with an exaggerated eye roll) and even if I don’t always get it right… I need to learn how to do it myself. Call me crazy but chances are I may even have more experience at this than you do.

7.  MY TENNIS IS NOT THE MOST IMPORTANT THING IN LIFE.

I know my tennis can be all consuming but remember that our family is most important.  Trouble starts when my tennis takes over. You see, I know this (I am smart) and I will manipulate you all day long with it. Yes, I know when I can get away with everything because I won my last tournament and an even bigger one is around the corner.  Have you heard the old saying “inmates running the asylum”? By the way, rumor has it that I will also need a good education, some social skills along with other interests to make it through life… just so ya know!

 8. I KNOW IT CAN BE HARD TO WATCH ME OUT THERE…

Well, not really.  I am a teenager and my world is rather myopic. It is all about me, myself and I. You have to wait until I am a parent myself for me to truly appreciate the hell you go through driving all over the place, waiting endlessly at tournaments… just to watch me compete, choke matches, get crushed and behave like an imbecile all the while my tennis expenses syphon your bank accounts dry. Having fun yet?

9. SOMETIMES TO LOVE ME, YOU MUST LET ME LOSE.

I need to play all the tough tournaments, all the tough opponents and in the tough conditions. Manipulating my schedule, avoiding competition and playing the system won’t help me in the long run. I know you want to fix everything in life that goes wrong for me to make things easier. You don’t want to see me suffer any more than I have to, but please make me earn my way, I will be stronger in the end.  I’m sure that when I lose or behave badly on the court, it’s embarrassing to you.  Please tell me “no” and teach me what is acceptable and unacceptable behavior as a competitor, child, friend, and citizen.  I might say hurtful things to you but trust me when I say; I am immature and trying to avoid the tough life lessons that competitive tennis teaches me.

10. BE A PARENT FIRST.

Please don’t bombard me with all the things I did wrong as I come off the court from a match. I was the one out there after all and I put all the blood, sweat and tears into the preparation… no one knows better than I do how badly I messed up and chances are no one wants to win more than I do. Remember that I am a teenager, who needs a parent.  You can always hire coaches but I only have one mom and dad. When I come off the court after a tough match, I don’t always need a coach, or nutritionist, or trainer, or sports psychologist…. I just need a mom and a dad to give me a hug and let me know that losing isn’t the end of the world.

Marianne Werdel and Debbie Spence with mothers

Be the parent we run toward for support after a tough match, not the parent we run away from in tears.  We won’t promise you it will be easy, but hopefully, it will be worth it!