Artwork for podcast Atlanta Tennis Podcast
A 360* View of College Recruiting and What Parents and Players Need to Know with David Stolle and Stewart Russell of Universal Tennis Academy (UTA)
Episode 47 β€’ 16th November 2023 β€’ Atlanta Tennis Podcast β€’ Shaun Boyce and Bobby Schindler
00:00:00 01:08:02

Share Episode

Shownotes

Episode:#47 Shaun Boyce and Bobby Schindler

In this episode we talk to David Stolle and Stewart Russell of UTA who has been a staple of metro Atlanta tennis for over 25 years. UTA manages multiple locations throughout metro Atlanta, has a history of helping the city of Atlanta with the city facilities as well as helping private clubs grow and improve. David and Stewart walk us through a bit out the college recruiting process but more importantly we learn more about what is necessary to prepare your young player for the recruiting process.

Watch the LIVE replay: https://www.youtube.com/live/rhvXzZeis-A?si=bX5NXsw3yhcQerWU

https://www.facebook.com/events/685618639900174/

https://utatennis.com/

Shaun Boyce USPTA: shaun@tennisforchildren.com

https://tennisforchildren.com/ 🎾

Bobby Schindler USPTA: schindlerb@comcast.net

https://windermerecommunity.net/ 🎾

Geovanna Boyce: geovy@regeovinate.com

https://regeovinate.com/ πŸ’ͺπŸΌπŸ‹οΈ

This podcast is powered by GoTennis! Atlanta: Membership has its privileges πŸ€œπŸΌπŸŽΎπŸ€›πŸΌ

🏠 https://letsgotennis.com/

🫢 https://letsgotennis.com/join/

https://shop.letsgotennis.com/ πŸ‘ŸπŸ‘œ

πŸ’° https://letsgotennis.com/deals/

https://letsgotennis.com/podcast/ πŸŽ™οΈπŸŽ§

https://www.facebook.com/gotennisatlanta

https://www.instagram.com/gotennisatlanta/

https://www.youtube.com/@atlantatennispodcast

Do you want to read about some good things going on in the world of tennis?

https://letsgotennis.com/stories/ πŸ”₯πŸͺ‘

Check out our GoTennis! Atlanta Facebook page for deals, updates, events, podcasts, news, stories, coach profiles, club information, and more https://bit.ly/gt_facebook_page

Also, you can support this show (and save some $) by shopping at πŸ€‘https://letsgotennis.com/deals/πŸ€‘

Or, donate directly HERE

Want to get into crypto? This is easy: https://www.coinbase.com/join/boyce_3s?src=ios-link

Want donate with Bitcoin? Here's the address: 3EqTU1gQBLoieMeFLC1BQgCUajPpPMCgwB

Considering your own podcast? We (obviously) recommend Captivate: This podcast is hosted by Captivate, try it yourself for free.

Transcripts

Speaker:

(upbeat music)

Speaker:

Welcome to the Atlanta Tennis Podcast.

Speaker:

Every episode is titled, "It Starts With Tennis"

Speaker:

and goes from there.

Speaker:

We talk with coaches, club managers,

Speaker:

industry business professionals,

Speaker:

technology experts, and anyone else we find interesting.

Speaker:

We wanna have a conversation as long as it starts with tennis.

Speaker:

(soft music)

Speaker:

- Hey, hey, this is Sehaun with the Atlanta Tennis Podcast,

Speaker:

powered by GoTennis!

Speaker:

Check out our calendar of Metro Atlanta tennis events

Speaker:

at LetsGoTennis.com,

Speaker:

where you can also find deals on equipment, apparel,

Speaker:

and members get 10% off our shop.

Speaker:

So get yourself an Atlanta tennis monster shirt,

Speaker:

or even the Daniil Medvedev LaCoste shoes

Speaker:

at 25% off for paid members.

Speaker:

In this episode, we talk to David Stolle

Speaker:

and Stewart Russell of UTA, Universal Tennis Academy,

Speaker:

who has been a staple of Metro Atlanta tennis

Speaker:

for over 25 years.

Speaker:

UTA manages multiple locations throughout Metro Atlanta,

Speaker:

has a history of helping the city of Atlanta

Speaker:

with city facilities,

Speaker:

as well as helping private clubs grow and improve.

Speaker:

David and Stewart walk us through a bit

Speaker:

of the college recruiting process,

Speaker:

but more importantly, we learn more about

Speaker:

what is necessary to prepare your young player

Speaker:

for the recruiting process.

Speaker:

Have a listen and let us know what you think.

Speaker:

(soft music)

Speaker:

- Good morning, this is Shaun Boyce

Speaker:

with the Atlanta tennis podcast.

Speaker:

We have an exciting morning,

Speaker:

we're a few minutes late getting going,

Speaker:

'cause that is the nature of what happens with live things.

Speaker:

And we don't mind, but I appreciate anybody

Speaker:

who's actually paying attention.

Speaker:

In this case, today, we bring in Bobby Schindler as usual,

Speaker:

but we're in the same room at the same time,

Speaker:

which doesn't happen all that often,

Speaker:

and we are honored to have David Stolle

Speaker:

and Stewart Russell with us today,

Speaker:

from Universal tennis academy,

Speaker:

and they are gonna talk about all the cool stuff they do,

Speaker:

as well as catching us up on some college recruiting information,

Speaker:

which is kind of a year-round process

Speaker:

from what I can tell.

Speaker:

It's not just, not even that,

Speaker:

I just say the kind of thing, my child,

Speaker:

just turned one year old yesterday,

Speaker:

so we're already starting him on the career path,

Speaker:

so we're gonna get him going,

Speaker:

but I think that's a longer term plan,

Speaker:

and we're gonna find out from David and Stuart some ways

Speaker:

to get him started,

Speaker:

but if you're interested in your kids' plan,

Speaker:

you think they're good, checking out their UTR,

Speaker:

you start having those questions,

Speaker:

and say, "Hey, can we play some college tennis?"

Speaker:

We've talked to Billy Pate previously,

Speaker:

we've talked to Luke Jensen,

Speaker:

we've talked to some others about the college recruiting process

Speaker:

about how UTR is used,

Speaker:

as well as how our local coaches are integrally,

Speaker:

is that integrally?

Speaker:

They're integral to the process of getting those kids

Speaker:

to be able to play college tennis,

Speaker:

and we brought in two of the most competent

Speaker:

that we know to have this conversation,

Speaker:

so Bobby, good morning,

Speaker:

I appreciate you actually being in the same room at the same time.

Speaker:

- Good to see everyone,

Speaker:

thanks guys for coming out, we appreciate it.

Speaker:

- I appreciate it, yeah.

Speaker:

- Yeah, thanks, David and Stuart,

Speaker:

so we will start, if you don't know David and Stuart,

Speaker:

they are UTA, which is Universal Tennis Academy,

Speaker:

but they work for Universal Tennis Management,

Speaker:

is the management company that handles that.

Speaker:

The academy is the on-court presence,

Speaker:

correct me if I'm missing anything,

Speaker:

I think it's fairly straightforward that way.

Speaker:

You guys manage nine facilities currently, is that right?

Speaker:

You've had as many as a couple hundred in the area,

Speaker:

so you've been around,

Speaker:

and since the mid 90s catch me up,

Speaker:

David, catch me up on where you started,

Speaker:

you bought a property and ran a club,

Speaker:

and then took over the world,

Speaker:

well took over the Atlanta world from there, right?

Speaker:

- We were just trying to make tennis better, so,

Speaker:

yeah, so we started back in 1996,

Speaker:

we worked at a couple of clubs,

Speaker:

and then we bought our first facility,

Speaker:

Chad Huchplantation, Marietta in 1997,

Speaker:

and then in 2009,

Speaker:

was when the city of Atlanta was needing some help

Speaker:

managing their tennis centers.

Speaker:

They were estimated to be losing over half a million dollars a year,

Speaker:

and when the recession came,

Speaker:

they were either gonna have to start shutting down

Speaker:

some of those facilities,

Speaker:

or they needed somebody to come in and help them with it.

Speaker:

So we looked at as an opportunity to one,

Speaker:

help the city to grow the sport,

Speaker:

three create jobs at a time when people were losing jobs,

Speaker:

and then from there, we kind of turned it into

Speaker:

a management company,

Speaker:

where, as you mentioned,

Speaker:

we have many locations around the city,

Speaker:

and we all enjoy teaching.

Speaker:

I mean, that's a part of our lives,

Speaker:

and so, yes, there's a management component,

Speaker:

but the biggest part of what we do is the teaching

Speaker:

from complete beginners, five-year-olds to kids

Speaker:

that wanna play in college, to adults, to senior citizens,

Speaker:

we kind of run the gamut as far as who we teach,

Speaker:

and where we teach.

Speaker:

But as far as where I got into the college recruiting side of things,

Speaker:

I grew up in Boston, I went to school at University of Virginia,

Speaker:

didn't really have somebody help me that much with the process,

Speaker:

and when we started our academy down here,

Speaker:

several of our original kids had interest in playing in college,

Speaker:

and our overall goal is to try to create things

Speaker:

that we didn't have kind of as a junior,

Speaker:

so college recruiting process was one of those things,

Speaker:

and we've learned that if you spend two years,

Speaker:

four years, six years, eight years with a family,

Speaker:

it's always nice to be able to help them with the process,

Speaker:

and then hand them over to a program

Speaker:

where you feel like they're gonna continue to grow,

Speaker:

as tennis players, but also as people.

Speaker:

- And I like that a lot, that's the concept

Speaker:

of what's the phrase we use, Bobby, is making tennis,

Speaker:

making Atlanta tennis even better than it already is.

Speaker:

- Be better.

Speaker:

- Be better.

Speaker:

That's gonna be our new tagline.

Speaker:

- Be better.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- And it's the kind of thing where the podcast is trying to do that,

Speaker:

we try to do that with GoTennis,

Speaker:

are we actually doing something good for Metro Atlanta tennis?

Speaker:

Are we helping somebody rather than just going out

Speaker:

teaching, making money?

Speaker:

And I feel like, I don't typically work on field,

Speaker:

I typically work on numbers, but I feel like UTA

Speaker:

is the type of organization that is doing its best

Speaker:

to help Atlanta tennis.

Speaker:

Is that an easy thing for me to say, Stuart?

Speaker:

Is that--

Speaker:

We let the customer base at all of our different sites

Speaker:

kind of dictate each one's gonna have some different demands

Speaker:

or different specialties.

Speaker:

So when David spoke about whether it's an adult population,

Speaker:

that's looking for more, whether it's the juniors

Speaker:

that are looking to play college tennis.

Speaker:

Came from a background where, when I grew up in,

Speaker:

as far as tennis, way back in the day, one of the aspirations

Speaker:

that I constantly heard whenever I was in the teaching profession

Speaker:

and I'm in play for professional tennis,

Speaker:

I wanna play for professional tennis.

Speaker:

And the reality is, and I haven't done the numbers,

Speaker:

but how many kids that are getting involved in tennis

Speaker:

are actually gonna play at that elite level.

Speaker:

And finding the pathway is a tricky, tricky

Speaker:

because every different customer base,

Speaker:

whether it's by where they are demographically or whatnot,

Speaker:

is gonna be different needs.

Speaker:

So, UTA providing this as a service,

Speaker:

some of our facilities, it's not necessarily needed

Speaker:

because the focus and there's nothing wrong with it

Speaker:

could be more on the recreational players

Speaker:

who just, their aspiration would be to play high school tennis.

Speaker:

There's absolutely nothing wrong with that.

Speaker:

But what I find intriguing in the entire thing

Speaker:

with UTA, especially, is same thing with David,

Speaker:

I grew up, actually, I was actually a men's tennis coach

Speaker:

at Ronald Collab where I graduated from.

Speaker:

I actually had anointed my senior year.

Speaker:

And the same kind of an idea, I didn't know what I was doing.

Speaker:

I was getting thrown out of the tennis court,

Speaker:

but I found the passion for that team activity

Speaker:

in this individual sport.

Speaker:

And I'm finding that more, whether it's kids

Speaker:

who wanna play high school tennis, whatever,

Speaker:

I've not seen a junior tennis player

Speaker:

that hasn't relished in an opportunity to play.

Speaker:

They love doubles and they love team events.

Speaker:

And we're talking about an individual sport in tennis.

Speaker:

So the idea of blending it has been a passion of mine.

Speaker:

And I know it is of David's, whether it's

Speaker:

on the college side of it, or just in general,

Speaker:

the team concept.

Speaker:

And having it, whether it's with UTA,

Speaker:

I mean, we're a team.

Speaker:

We're not just on an island by ourselves as individual pro

Speaker:

who's trying to figure out what's the best bang for our buck.

Speaker:

It's what does our market or our customer base dictate

Speaker:

and therefore can we provide this service to them.

Speaker:

And I wanna stick with that team idea

Speaker:

and David at some point will get back,

Speaker:

I say at some point, the next thing I wanna do

Speaker:

is talk about the actual recruiting process

Speaker:

because that really didn't exist

Speaker:

when I was in high school thinking about going to college.

Speaker:

But sticking with Stuart on the idea of the team atmosphere,

Speaker:

Bobby and I have worked hard with Joel at T2

Speaker:

and we've created a new league focused on that team atmosphere.

Speaker:

It's a flex league for the high school kids.

Speaker:

And it's not college recruiting.

Speaker:

It's, these are kids that don't have a UTR.

Speaker:

They don't have a U.S. TA rating.

Speaker:

They may just learn how to play tennis

Speaker:

and they wanna make the high school team.

Speaker:

But I think what they wanna do is they wanna be part

Speaker:

of something bigger than themselves.

Speaker:

And tennis doesn't always offer that.

Speaker:

Tennis offers, I love my favorite story,

Speaker:

is the 10 year old with the bag as big as him in the tournament

Speaker:

and he walks, excuse me, excuse me, excuse me.

Speaker:

Hi, I'm Sean and he's checking for, I love that.

Speaker:

I love that about the individual sport

Speaker:

and how that creates that bad ass kid.

Speaker:

And that's, the team atmosphere is different.

Speaker:

It brings that kid into playin' with his friends

Speaker:

and having a great time.

Speaker:

It's, dude, you're big on promoting the team atmosphere,

Speaker:

whether it's high school or college

Speaker:

and what that means to tennis.

Speaker:

My background's been specifically with team.

Speaker:

I have two kids, fairly accomplished.

Speaker:

Daughter who played Division II soccer, again, team sport.

Speaker:

And I have a son who has never picked up a tennis racket

Speaker:

and was a very accomplished,

Speaker:

Kenosostate baseball player came through the Juco ranks

Speaker:

and then was able to be very accomplished

Speaker:

at Division I school in baseball.

Speaker:

Again, another team sport.

Speaker:

So I basically took that mindset

Speaker:

and then me coaching in college.

Speaker:

Tennis was more of a team atmosphere.

Speaker:

I started years ago, I participated in all the UST

Speaker:

functions, his own old competitions that they did.

Speaker:

And then one of the ones that stands out to me

Speaker:

that I did was the inaugural season

Speaker:

of the National Spring Team Championship,

Speaker:

which was in Mobile, Alabama, Scott and Lorraine Novak

Speaker:

put on a phenomenal event and started,

Speaker:

I wanna say, 2015.

Speaker:

I could be off a little bit the first year in his existence

Speaker:

and I started that inaugural season.

Speaker:

And that was an opportunity for me to get a feel

Speaker:

for the kids coming from the highest level kids,

Speaker:

level one tournament.

Speaker:

So the highest level kids coming all over the country

Speaker:

but was very intriguing about it was the idea of how much

Speaker:

those individuals that had inspired to be the top in their,

Speaker:

whatever region they participated in,

Speaker:

how much they enjoyed the team aspect of an event

Speaker:

rather than just going out there

Speaker:

and either winning or losing on their own.

Speaker:

And it was an event that was near and dear to my heart.

Speaker:

I started as my inaugural season

Speaker:

and I did it all the way up until the last season,

Speaker:

which I participated in just prior to COVID.

Speaker:

One goal ball as a coach,

Speaker:

which was kind of went out on top, which was great.

Speaker:

But I keep in touch with what was great about it is,

Speaker:

it's amazing how I kept in touch with so many of the kids

Speaker:

that whether it was zoneals or whatnot through the years

Speaker:

and it was simply because of the team environment.

Speaker:

They had nothing to do with their individual.

Speaker:

I wasn't that lightning rod coach.

Speaker:

I do have a lot of energy on the court

Speaker:

but when these kids come, they all know how to play tennis

Speaker:

when you're playing at that level.

Speaker:

But it was amazing to actually decompress for a minute

Speaker:

and watch them actually lose a tennis match

Speaker:

but stay and cheer on their teammates.

Speaker:

Just like in any other sport, my son

Speaker:

who is a very accomplished baseball player

Speaker:

had to sit his first couple of weeks playing

Speaker:

at his division one school.

Speaker:

What are you gonna do?

Speaker:

You can cheer on your teammates or you're gonna sit there and suck.

Speaker:

And I found, you know, with tennis on the individual aspect

Speaker:

and then you know, he gets his opportunity.

Speaker:

If you get your opportunity,

Speaker:

you're hoping that you put on a good show in front of the coach

Speaker:

that when they do give you an opportunity,

Speaker:

not only you but the rest of your teammates

Speaker:

who are gonna recognize that you had their back

Speaker:

whenever they were doing it.

Speaker:

And I think something that's lost in junior tennis circle a lot

Speaker:

and I just have a passion for the team aspect of it

Speaker:

and blending this idea of this individual sport

Speaker:

and make it more of whether it's high school tennis or whatnot,

Speaker:

you know, the team aspect of it is just something

Speaker:

that's near and dear to my heart.

Speaker:

- And Bobby, you see that a lot

Speaker:

because you've got a local high school that plays at your facility.

Speaker:

It's just an amazing atmosphere even at the high school level

Speaker:

that kids yell and then scream and...

Speaker:

- It is great in it and it, I think we're in a really transitional time

Speaker:

with tennis from the perspective of the old guard,

Speaker:

the old 50 year old white guy who grew up,

Speaker:

unfortunately, in a more individualistic sport,

Speaker:

I like to do it, I came out of baseball.

Speaker:

So everything I did was team that tennis was introduced later

Speaker:

and I always felt like an outcast

Speaker:

because I didn't have come from that mentality.

Speaker:

I came from a group of guys and we cheered for each other

Speaker:

and I think it's great and I love what you guys are doing

Speaker:

and I think we're seeing it a change into the conversations

Speaker:

we had with Luke, Jensen, Billy, Pate and I know Austin Smith.

Speaker:

Austin Smith, one of the things he talks about

Speaker:

not liking the pro-tour was not having teammates.

Speaker:

You know, and the frightening numbers

Speaker:

of how many of those kids who trained their whole lives

Speaker:

to play college tennis then squit altogether.

Speaker:

That's 70 to 75% of D1 tennis players never pick up a racket again.

Speaker:

And you know, that's not healthy.

Speaker:

And I think that the more we can incorporate

Speaker:

what you're talking about, this idea that we're going to root for each other.

Speaker:

I think we're seeing it on the professional level,

Speaker:

the success of the labor cup.

Speaker:

I'd like the changes they made to the Davis Cup,

Speaker:

making it more of a weak internment, I think.

Speaker:

I think those are all things that are going to benefit

Speaker:

and it's going to grow the game and we're trying to do

Speaker:

with not ignore, just focus on the highest level players.

Speaker:

There's a lot of recreational players

Speaker:

that are going to help grow this game

Speaker:

that are going to play high school tennis

Speaker:

and probably not play it collegially again, but that's okay.

Speaker:

If they go to college, there's now club teams.

Speaker:

It's better than doing what we were doing

Speaker:

which was hanging out in bars.

Speaker:

So, you know, I think all this stuff that is going on

Speaker:

is only going to be a positive,

Speaker:

not only for the kids growing up,

Speaker:

but for the growing of the game.

Speaker:

So, I think that's one of our biggest challenges, though,

Speaker:

is it is an individual sport.

Speaker:

And we lose a lot of people to basketball, baseball,

Speaker:

to all these because they want to be with their friends.

Speaker:

I mean, kids want to be social.

Speaker:

So, one of our challenges is, you know, how do we make it?

Speaker:

You feel like you're part of a team.

Speaker:

So, like when we travel to tournaments,

Speaker:

you feel like you can warm up with people

Speaker:

and you can get to root for people,

Speaker:

even though it is an individual tournament.

Speaker:

I do think one of the things tennis offers

Speaker:

that maybe some of the other sports may not

Speaker:

is you get to go to drills and practice

Speaker:

with different age groups, different genders.

Speaker:

And so, one of the things that we try to focus on,

Speaker:

you know, in an academy setting is, you know,

Speaker:

the old kids used to be the young kids.

Speaker:

And when they were the young kids,

Speaker:

you know, the old kids hopefully looked out for them,

Speaker:

knew their name, you know, spent some time with them.

Speaker:

And you remind those kids, hey, one day,

Speaker:

you're gonna be, you know, one of the older leaders here.

Speaker:

And this is what's gonna be, you know, expected of you.

Speaker:

And, you know, it's funny,

Speaker:

'cause when everybody always wants to be playing

Speaker:

with somebody better or somebody older.

Speaker:

- We have that conversation all the time.

Speaker:

- And then we have to remind people, well,

Speaker:

there's somebody on the other end of the net

Speaker:

that is obviously not thinking the same way you are

Speaker:

because they're hitting with your child, you know?

Speaker:

So, it's one of those, you know, building the team unity

Speaker:

in an academy or drill setting is something

Speaker:

that's important, you know, to us.

Speaker:

- There are questions, we're talking about

Speaker:

the cultural aspects of it as far as,

Speaker:

we're seeing it, we're up in Forsyth County

Speaker:

where there's gonna be 70 to 80 kids trying out

Speaker:

for these high school, it's no longer,

Speaker:

we have three tennis players and we're looking for eight warm bodies

Speaker:

to have a tennis team.

Speaker:

So, there's competition now.

Speaker:

And it's gonna be interesting to see how the coach is adapt

Speaker:

to it to make and start, because, you know,

Speaker:

I hate to say it, it's not,

Speaker:

tennis players get away with a lot more than

Speaker:

what you'd get away with on a football team

Speaker:

or a baseball team.

Speaker:

Well, I can't come to practice today, I have this.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Well, then you're not playing, you know, you're coming.

Speaker:

Because it's bigger than you, it's a commitment to a team.

Speaker:

And your, I understand you have other things going on

Speaker:

in your life, but if you've decided this is something

Speaker:

that is important, you can't judge it how it affects you,

Speaker:

there's, 'cause there's 12 other people on the,

Speaker:

so it'll be interesting to see how tennis transitions,

Speaker:

especially in our area as the popularity has gone up

Speaker:

so much where it's no longer, hey, I'm gonna make the tennis team.

Speaker:

I'm not gonna make the tennis team in South Forsyth

Speaker:

at Lambert just by walking out.

Speaker:

There's gonna be 40, 50 kids going home,

Speaker:

disappointed each year.

Speaker:

So it's gonna be on the coach to create that atmosphere

Speaker:

and to go to, like you said, when you're the young kid

Speaker:

or you're the borderline kid, you better be trying the hardest.

Speaker:

You better be picking up the most balls.

Speaker:

You better do something that the coach sits there and says,

Speaker:

the Rudy for lack of a better word.

Speaker:

He might not have the size, he might not have the ability,

Speaker:

but if the guy who does have the size

Speaker:

and the ability worked as hard as that child,

Speaker:

that's how you make a star.

Speaker:

So, yeah.

Speaker:

And that was it, okay.

Speaker:

- That was one of the things that, you know,

Speaker:

I'm showing up at this National Springteam tournament,

Speaker:

tournament, and I consider myself

Speaker:

to be more of a tutor than I did a teacher.

Speaker:

Kids that were showing up there are the best of the best.

Speaker:

Or, already no.

Speaker:

I'm not gonna be able to, obviously,

Speaker:

have hula hoops out there and make them a better tennis player

Speaker:

for that week during set event.

Speaker:

But what I am gonna do is gonna create a culture.

Speaker:

And what I've just found fascinating is

Speaker:

the first year I did it, which was the initial phase,

Speaker:

and I learned it was like,

Speaker:

how much involvement can I actually have as a coach?

Speaker:

And it was a typical kids at that level,

Speaker:

what I found where they lost their match

Speaker:

and the first thing they did was they left

Speaker:

to either have a discussion with their parents or whatnot.

Speaker:

And I was like, "Hey, there's one, gonna be one rule

Speaker:

"without I'm gonna have you are staying there

Speaker:

"until this match is completed,

Speaker:

"you are cheering on the rest of your team

Speaker:

"because your point counts just as much as Johnny's or whatnot."

Speaker:

And me being judged as a coach this week is

Speaker:

how our team does, not how you do.

Speaker:

And I was fascinated, okay,

Speaker:

how many kids still would wanna walk off and be that individual?

Speaker:

Like I lost, almost, I'm not gonna say they,

Speaker:

the feeling that the professional was,

Speaker:

I don't care how my team does,

Speaker:

I just care about how I did today,

Speaker:

you know, whether it's win or lose.

Speaker:

And that was the culture I created.

Speaker:

So I wasn't teaching them anything,

Speaker:

I was just teaching them,

Speaker:

hey, if you were, 'cause all these kids are gonna be

Speaker:

a spy in the majority of them, do play college now,

Speaker:

at that level at some point,

Speaker:

I was like, this is gonna be mandatory for you to do.

Speaker:

Your college coach shouldn't be having to tell you this

Speaker:

by the time you show up there.

Speaker:

It's just the facts.

Speaker:

And it was just the same idea is,

Speaker:

you have a job to do, regardless of the result

Speaker:

that you put on there because David said it earlier,

Speaker:

your coach's job is on the line with how the team does,

Speaker:

not how you do as an individual.

Speaker:

And that's a tough sell for a lot of kids

Speaker:

that have grew up in an environment was,

Speaker:

I don't care about how anybody else does,

Speaker:

I just care about how I do.

Speaker:

And so that team, once you create the culture,

Speaker:

I had a couple of good friends that actually lived out

Speaker:

close, and a mere delet played on the Illinois team,

Speaker:

which was probably one of the best college teams

Speaker:

I think ever assembled, came out just as,

Speaker:

just in passing, he lives out close to, in Windermere,

Speaker:

his wife does, or his family does, where without,

Speaker:

and he came out and he just hit with our kids one day.

Speaker:

And I, near and dear to my heart when he said this to me,

Speaker:

he said he goes, the atmosphere out here with your kids

Speaker:

is just like what I felt like at Illinois.

Speaker:

It was just the culture of the atmosphere.

Speaker:

It was like, they're all really genuinely interested

Speaker:

in how everyone else in the environment here

Speaker:

and I was like, wow, that's the best compliment I can get

Speaker:

'cause I'm a team guy, rather than them just worrying about,

Speaker:

there's a couple of kids that are kind of falling off

Speaker:

that day in practice or whatnot,

Speaker:

but the rallying by the other kids to get them

Speaker:

and say, hey, we got this, come on, we create,

Speaker:

that shouldn't be a coach's job.

Speaker:

And that's what I'm talking about in regards to that event.

Speaker:

When I did that event, I was like, I'm two to ring kids.

Speaker:

I'm not teaching kids anything that they're not gonna need

Speaker:

to know at the next level.

Speaker:

And I think that's the part of the team concept

Speaker:

that I would love more people to embrace,

Speaker:

whether it's on high school team or not.

Speaker:

- I hit them, sorry.

Speaker:

In real me, and if I go too far,

Speaker:

but you brought up something,

Speaker:

and I think this speaks to your guys' success,

Speaker:

is that you as an organization or a team,

Speaker:

you are a bigger entity as we spoke of previously

Speaker:

that you all wear your hats and are comfortable

Speaker:

with the hats that you wear.

Speaker:

Even though there's big time coaches,

Speaker:

with big time success, everybody does their role

Speaker:

and does it well and historically is done so.

Speaker:

And I think that starts and it makes it easier

Speaker:

to permeate into your academies when the kids see

Speaker:

what the example that you guys have set,

Speaker:

and the way the success that it is brought to you guys.

Speaker:

And I think from, again, the tennis perspective of,

Speaker:

you got the pro who's got a hopper in the back of his car,

Speaker:

who's going in one facility the next,

Speaker:

he's just teaching tennis.

Speaker:

He's not teaching the nuances of what is going,

Speaker:

you're going to need if you're going to continue to play.

Speaker:

- Finding your niche, finding your niche

Speaker:

and using the rest of the group, the team,

Speaker:

as a resource, and don't be afraid to ask for help.

Speaker:

If somebody finds their niche,

Speaker:

we started out at the facility,

Speaker:

and I'm actually kind of overseeing or was up,

Speaker:

and continuing to oversee at James Creek,

Speaker:

and we found our niche, it was on the female population

Speaker:

of high level players that wanted to aspire

Speaker:

to play college tennis.

Speaker:

And so that was our niche.

Speaker:

Use people's resources, talk to David

Speaker:

and then start to develop some relationships with coaches.

Speaker:

- And switching gears back, I want to talk about,

Speaker:

you say you've got a lot of those kids

Speaker:

look into play college tennis.

Speaker:

I want to switch back to kind of where we started, David,

Speaker:

and say, okay, tell us about the actual recruiting

Speaker:

process, because a lot of people have this picture

Speaker:

of this cloud of who knows who you call and where does it work.

Speaker:

Is there a structure that can be walked through

Speaker:

that just says, you do these things and it will work?

Speaker:

How does that work?

Speaker:

- Yeah, well, first of all, I think everybody's different.

Speaker:

Everybody has different goals.

Speaker:

So, you know, over the last 25 plus years,

Speaker:

we probably sent over 300 kids to play somewhere in college.

Speaker:

My job is to kind of help tell their story.

Speaker:

So usually working individually with families,

Speaker:

it works a lot better because I've got to listen

Speaker:

and some kids are really good when they're 10, 12, 13,

Speaker:

some don't start till they're 14,

Speaker:

some walk in with US News and World Report.

Speaker:

That lists the top 100 schools and they're like, David,

Speaker:

I don't care how much I have to write a check for.

Speaker:

I want my kid to go to the highest rated school on this list

Speaker:

and the very next person comes in and goes,

Speaker:

"Hey, David, I don't care where my kid goes to school,

Speaker:

I just don't want to write a check."

Speaker:

And there's no right or wrong.

Speaker:

My job is to kind of listen.

Speaker:

You know, it's kind of been a blessing over the last 25 years

Speaker:

to obviously we've worked with hundreds of schools.

Speaker:

My job is to not only tell the kid's story,

Speaker:

but also to work from the coach's side as well

Speaker:

because it's not trying to get one over on somebody

Speaker:

and squeeze somebody in somewhere

Speaker:

because if you try that, it might work for a year,

Speaker:

but then the kids are not gonna be happy

Speaker:

or the school is not gonna be happy.

Speaker:

Then they're gonna call me, want to transfer.

Speaker:

And then three years later, when you have a kid

Speaker:

that might actually be a great fit at a school,

Speaker:

the coach is gonna say, is this one for real

Speaker:

or are you trying to get this one past me type of thing?

Speaker:

So I always tell people that because I want it to be a good fit

Speaker:

and sometimes I work just like a guidance counselor.

Speaker:

You've got to set up reach schools,

Speaker:

realistic schools and safety schools

Speaker:

and people typically spend 95% of their time

Speaker:

stressing about the reach schools.

Speaker:

And oftentimes there's no real reason behind that

Speaker:

other than they've seen that team on TV playing football

Speaker:

or they see that they're a top 10 school

Speaker:

and they just think that's where they need to go.

Speaker:

I always say, have you ever been on campus?

Speaker:

No, do you know the name of the coach?

Speaker:

No, do you know anybody on the team?

Speaker:

No, then how do you know you wanna go there?

Speaker:

And so part of my job is to help them start the process,

Speaker:

try to get them to be open-minded

Speaker:

to a lot of different things.

Speaker:

I typically like to start with a bigger list of schools

Speaker:

so kids might have 25 or 30s schools on their list

Speaker:

and then we try to work our way down

Speaker:

'cause really you're just trying to marry one.

Speaker:

It's not like you're trying to pick five,

Speaker:

you're just trying to pick one.

Speaker:

So the goal is, you know, you start,

Speaker:

I start with a list of questionnaires

Speaker:

which just gets families kind of talking

Speaker:

because it's not just a kid decision,

Speaker:

it's obviously it's a family,

Speaker:

it impacts the entire family

Speaker:

so you wanna get everybody involved.

Speaker:

And questions are, you know,

Speaker:

starting to get them think about size of school location,

Speaker:

where do they wanna fit in the lineup?

Speaker:

Do they wanna go somewhere

Speaker:

where they don't have to stress about being in the top six?

Speaker:

Do they wanna go somewhere

Speaker:

where they just can say they're on the team?

Speaker:

That's part of it and then another question is,

Speaker:

some people they need athletic money,

Speaker:

some people might be able to qualify for academic money,

Speaker:

some people might be need-based

Speaker:

and then understanding how that works.

Speaker:

A coach can help tag an application

Speaker:

to help you get through admission,

Speaker:

whether you're getting money or you're not

Speaker:

'cause there are a lot of schools,

Speaker:

you know, your Ivy leagues for example,

Speaker:

they don't have athletic scholarship money

Speaker:

but coaches do have the ability to, you know,

Speaker:

tag your application and, you know, help the requirements,

Speaker:

you know, help you to be able to get into the school.

Speaker:

So my job, we typically start in their junior year.

Speaker:

Sometimes we have people that are a little bit anxious

Speaker:

and I always say, listen, if you're losing sleep

Speaker:

and you're a freshman or a sophomore,

Speaker:

I'm happy to talk to you,

Speaker:

but you gotta remember we're talking about college coaches,

Speaker:

I'm a coach so I can say this,

Speaker:

like some of them don't know where they're gonna be in two years,

Speaker:

you know, and a lot of them are working on,

Speaker:

you know, next year's class.

Speaker:

So even though they got their own list of schools.

Speaker:

Exactly, yes they do.

Speaker:

Yeah, so even though this is the most important thing to you,

Speaker:

it may not necessarily be the most important thing to them

Speaker:

and you get one chance to make a first impression.

Speaker:

So that's why I tell people,

Speaker:

when do you wanna make that first impression?

Speaker:

Are you better when you're a first semester sophomore

Speaker:

or are you gonna be better when you're a first semester junior?

Speaker:

You know, and hopefully they're gonna say first semester junior

Speaker:

if not, they should probably take some time off, I guess.

Speaker:

So, and I also explain to people,

Speaker:

I think there's four parts to be in a good college coach.

Speaker:

One, can you teach tennis?

Speaker:

Two, can you communicate and can you manage a group of people?

Speaker:

Three, can you fundraise for your program?

Speaker:

And four, can you recruit?

Speaker:

And rarely do you find somebody that excels

Speaker:

in all four of those areas.

Speaker:

And there are a lot of great places out there

Speaker:

where some of the coaches, they may not feel like,

Speaker:

their job is on the hot seat.

Speaker:

So they may not spend as much time on recruiting.

Speaker:

We've had kids that have tried to reach out to certain schools

Speaker:

and got no responses after five emails.

Speaker:

And I'm, that's right, I'm like, okay,

Speaker:

well here's where I step in and I can reach out to the coach

Speaker:

and say, listen, you want this person on your team?

Speaker:

I'm not sure what you're doing.

Speaker:

And, you know, and they'll come back and they'll say,

Speaker:

you know, thanks for reaching out, I will follow up.

Speaker:

And then, you know, so that's my job is to kind of help

Speaker:

create the pathway to make the process easier.

Speaker:

- So it is very subjective.

Speaker:

So we're not just looking at, okay, here's,

Speaker:

fill out this form and it's obvious

Speaker:

as to what the next step is.

Speaker:

There's a lot of different variables in that

Speaker:

within each family.

Speaker:

- Yes, for sure.

Speaker:

And that's, to me that's the fun part

Speaker:

'cause, you know, you talk about teaching tennis.

Speaker:

If we were just teaching forehands and backhands,

Speaker:

that gets old really fast.

Speaker:

So, you know, you're working on trying to figure out

Speaker:

how each kid thinks, how they learn, how they process things.

Speaker:

And, you know, I might say one thing to you

Speaker:

and then I've got to say the same thing to Bobby,

Speaker:

but I might have to change the approach.

Speaker:

So I think college recruiting is the same way.

Speaker:

- Gotcha.

Speaker:

And that would morph into, yeah, I know we discussed it,

Speaker:

you know, a lot of kids went through this recruiting process.

Speaker:

UTR and, you know, UTR, they're just numbering.

Speaker:

There's a lot of coaches that do gauge what their interest

Speaker:

or their initial interest in a perspective,

Speaker:

student athlete, and they might look at their UTR

Speaker:

to say, but that doesn't tell the whole story.

Speaker:

I mean, what David does, and it has a little bit to do with it.

Speaker:

And I'm not, it's not that I'm downplaying

Speaker:

the importance of some recruiting services or whatnot,

Speaker:

but we're, you know, David and us at UTR,

Speaker:

we're around these kids on a regular basis.

Speaker:

And we know a lot more of the subjectivity of the things

Speaker:

that we have to consider when recommending someone

Speaker:

to a college coach.

Speaker:

Right, we're seeing these kids on a regular basis,

Speaker:

whether it's a financial, whether it's,

Speaker:

how is this coach going to deal with the parents

Speaker:

of this child?

Speaker:

Because there's a lot of different nuances associated with it,

Speaker:

but UTR, in some cases, I totally understand the idea,

Speaker:

but I like to tell the story about UTR being

Speaker:

more than just a number.

Speaker:

And there's still, this fascination is it's going up,

Speaker:

it's going down on a 13 on a 12 on a 11,

Speaker:

I'm not going to qualify for this school.

Speaker:

Let David or I or a couple of us maybe have a discussion

Speaker:

with a coach that might not downplay the importance

Speaker:

of a UTR from competitive, but understand

Speaker:

the other variables associated with you possibly

Speaker:

becoming part of their program.

Speaker:

And that makes me think of our conversation with Billy

Speaker:

Pate and Chase Hodges.

Speaker:

And a bunch of conversations, but Billy Pate, specifically,

Speaker:

who says, if you're not a, whatever, UTR number,

Speaker:

is like, you just not playing for me.

Speaker:

And it may not be that--

Speaker:

Not objective of a decision.

Speaker:

If I've got somebody like UTA in my corner that can say,

Speaker:

hey, Billy, I know.

Speaker:

He's a 12.5, whatever that is.

Speaker:

Is it good to have you on my side to be able to call Billy?

Speaker:

I will use him as just the example,

Speaker:

but be able to call that college coach and say,

Speaker:

you need to check this kid out.

Speaker:

He's good for the team here, all the X factors.

Speaker:

And David's going to downplay this,

Speaker:

but he doesn't need to be downplaying this.

Speaker:

When David's getting phone calls from college coaches,

Speaker:

OK, there's a reason they're calling him,

Speaker:

and it's more associated with what do you think?

Speaker:

Then it is the number idea.

Speaker:

And there are coaches that you're absolutely right,

Speaker:

that are going to basically say, they're not playing for me.

Speaker:

But if David or somebody helped them navigate this kid,

Speaker:

he's come to work all day.

Speaker:

He's going to be the best team player you've ever seen.

Speaker:

And he's very careful in how he does it,

Speaker:

because he's not going to recommend somebody

Speaker:

that he knows is going to come back to bite him,

Speaker:

and he said this earlier.

Speaker:

He's not going to recommend somebody that in a couple of years

Speaker:

is going to be like, what were you thinking

Speaker:

by recommending this kid?

Speaker:

But there are times where there's going to be some tough fits.

Speaker:

I mean, one that came to mind was probably 15 years ago.

Speaker:

I told the coach, he said, this girl is going to come in

Speaker:

and play number one for you.

Speaker:

I said, she's going to be a pain year rear.

Speaker:

She might not get along with the other girls,

Speaker:

but she's going to win you a lot of matches.

Speaker:

And she stayed there for two years and did exactly that.

Speaker:

She called.

Speaker:

She said, I'm ready to transfer.

Speaker:

Coach called me after that and said, I just want you to know.

Speaker:

You told me exactly what I was going to get.

Speaker:

And I got it.

Speaker:

And I was willing to take the chance.

Speaker:

So that was good.

Speaker:

But getting back to your Billy Pate story, you know,

Speaker:

certain schools, they might have a baseline

Speaker:

as far as what they're looking for.

Speaker:

It worked.

Speaker:

UTR is a starting point.

Speaker:

Get me close.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But I would turn around and I would go to Billy.

Speaker:

And I'd say, all right, those kids are 12, 5,

Speaker:

and you're looking for a 13.

Speaker:

I'd go, how good a coach are you?

Speaker:

He's going to be even better, so.

Speaker:

Or if you could--

Speaker:

Because I'm going to be able to say,

Speaker:

I've watched this kid for the last eight years.

Speaker:

I know what this kid has in the tank.

Speaker:

I know where he's heading.

Speaker:

And that goes back to the telling of the story of the kid.

Speaker:

And you know, UTR is just a--

Speaker:

it's a number, like we said.

Speaker:

But I always tell families.

Speaker:

I said, you know, think of it this way.

Speaker:

A coach has got eight to 14 spots of picking people.

Speaker:

They get to hang out with for 20 hours plus a week,

Speaker:

plus weekend trips for four to five years.

Speaker:

I go, do you think they're going to go based on a number?

Speaker:

I go, is that how you do it at work?

Speaker:

I go, you know, there's also a personality.

Speaker:

Better be like them with it.

Speaker:

You need to be-- yeah.

Speaker:

Likeable to their program, right?

Speaker:

Likeable to their culture.

Speaker:

And I think that that's a part of it.

Speaker:

One of the things that comes up to families will be like,

Speaker:

oh, this school wouldn't be interested because they just

Speaker:

take foreigners.

Speaker:

And I'm like, well, wait, first of all, I go,

Speaker:

that school may be a great fit.

Speaker:

I said, most college coaches would tell you.

Speaker:

Our job is to get the best team that we can get.

Speaker:

I'd love to get Americans.

Speaker:

But they may not be at the level that we need to be at.

Speaker:

And I had two teammates at Virginia.

Speaker:

One guy was from Haiti.

Speaker:

One guy was from Mexico.

Speaker:

They were two of my favorite guys on the team.

Speaker:

Two guys that I could not stand was a guy from Georgia,

Speaker:

and a guy from Tennessee.

Speaker:

So I would not be discouraged by that at all.

Speaker:

I think I've never had a coach say, I'm not interested

Speaker:

in Americans.

Speaker:

But what they will say is, hey, my job is based on how we do.

Speaker:

So I think that being open to learning

Speaker:

about different coaches and their philosophies,

Speaker:

and really, I can't emphasize enough,

Speaker:

and you can start this at any age, just getting on campuses,

Speaker:

watching practices, going to see matches.

Speaker:

Because stuff you see on the internet,

Speaker:

you don't get to see in person.

Speaker:

Being able to watch how a coach and a team

Speaker:

interact with each other, being able to watch how teammates

Speaker:

interact with each other.

Speaker:

Yes, it's great to win, but how do they handle themselves

Speaker:

when they lose?

Speaker:

I was fortunate.

Speaker:

I played for a coach who watched me lose a match

Speaker:

at Kalamazoo one and one, and he still wanted me on the team.

Speaker:

And I said, well, I do want that.

Speaker:

He said, well, I saw you were fighting at 5-1 in the second set.

Speaker:

You came off the court and could have a conversation with me.

Speaker:

I'm not expecting people to win all the time,

Speaker:

but I'm expecting people to compete.

Speaker:

And maybe that's a bit of it as well, is that work ethic.

Speaker:

And I think that's why you've got a lot of non-Americans

Speaker:

on the team.

Speaker:

And maybe this is a question to ask,

Speaker:

and say, OK, I played NAIA.

Speaker:

And it was a lot of guys from outside the country,

Speaker:

and they worked so hard.

Speaker:

And it might have just been because that's what it took.

Speaker:

It was that much more important to them

Speaker:

to be there at the school playing college tennis

Speaker:

than it was for me, because I was just there for my father

Speaker:

to pay the bills for four years so I could put a band together.

Speaker:

Playing tennis was fun.

Speaker:

I enjoyed it, but it wasn't a life-changing concept

Speaker:

where some of these kids, maybe in the Atlanta area,

Speaker:

they're a little spoiled, Bobby.

Speaker:

I think you've made a comment of that to say,

Speaker:

they don't really need it.

Speaker:

There's that work ethic, isn't there?

Speaker:

I think it's cultural.

Speaker:

And I don't say that for-- I said the sport itself, first of all,

Speaker:

because it's not a team sport, because,

Speaker:

better or worse, your parent is playing a very big role

Speaker:

in the situation and the indoctrination

Speaker:

from where your parent comes from.

Speaker:

There's so many things that we can't control.

Speaker:

Again, what I hear and what I love and what they do

Speaker:

is what we're trying to do is try to break down the walls

Speaker:

and some of the things that get in the way of tennis is success.

Speaker:

And part of what they do, because they're so good

Speaker:

about being a team within their organization,

Speaker:

where in their own hats, they have the ability

Speaker:

to offer things that most coaches don't feel

Speaker:

they have the expertise, time, whatever reason,

Speaker:

because they have other things that they have to do.

Speaker:

I get it.

Speaker:

The problem with tennis historically is the coach,

Speaker:

if I don't know what I'm doing,

Speaker:

I'm too stuck up or too, just called David Stalin,

Speaker:

and say, David, help me.

Speaker:

I have a great kid.

Speaker:

Could you help the family with the process?

Speaker:

Now, he can't give the personal endorsement,

Speaker:

because he might not know the kid as well,

Speaker:

but at least he can be a gateway and start

Speaker:

the child in the right process.

Speaker:

And I think that, of course, the board of problem with tennis

Speaker:

is that we don't communicate enough as coaches to say,

Speaker:

hey, this is just because this is not a poor reflection.

Speaker:

I don't have the time.

Speaker:

How can I find the kid?

Speaker:

When I was at Whitecombs, I had a couple good kids.

Speaker:

I was like, listen, I can't coach you in here.

Speaker:

That doesn't mean I wouldn't love to.

Speaker:

Of course, I'd love to coach a kid

Speaker:

who's actually a good tennis player.

Speaker:

I'm going to send you to winward.

Speaker:

Go see the guys at winward.

Speaker:

They're close by.

Speaker:

They can provide for you what I can't provide.

Speaker:

I think that's the responsibility of a quote unquote coach.

Speaker:

- Yeah, but take me to probably go on

Speaker:

where you're thinking Stuart,

Speaker:

which is those recruiting services,

Speaker:

which is the system that helps the coach,

Speaker:

maybe my coach in high school,

Speaker:

doesn't have the time or the energy,

Speaker:

or even just the expertise.

Speaker:

I mean, so many tennis coaches are convinced these days,

Speaker:

they have to wear all the hats.

Speaker:

If I'm just working for myself,

Speaker:

we've got a lot of those guys here.

Speaker:

Really just working for myself.

Speaker:

I gotta wear all that.

Speaker:

I gotta do everything, or I'm gonna lose this kid,

Speaker:

or there's no longer gonna be my client.

Speaker:

But I think the families are gonna appreciate

Speaker:

going to someone who is an expert in that.

Speaker:

And you guys know a lot about those.

Speaker:

They're plenty of recruiting services.

Speaker:

I can go to the dot-nets out there

Speaker:

that kind of help me through that system.

Speaker:

I think UTR has all their new magic systems

Speaker:

that are supposed to help,

Speaker:

and I haven't researched any of that.

Speaker:

So I gotta lean on you guys to help me understand

Speaker:

those services.

Speaker:

- We meet with Chase, a good friend of mine.

Speaker:

Chase actually, Ron Oak,

Speaker:

Ron Oak Virginia, where I was actually a coach.

Speaker:

He was actually, there are two rival country clubs

Speaker:

that came in the area,

Speaker:

and Chase was actually one of the directors there,

Speaker:

Chase Hodges, which is one story short.

Speaker:

(laughs)

Speaker:

Tennis is a small circle of people,

Speaker:

but we had this discussion with them.

Speaker:

And it was like, yes, the recruiting service is gonna,

Speaker:

getting back to Bobby's point

Speaker:

about the recruiting services versus the personal touch

Speaker:

and or whether it's UTR.

Speaker:

Telling people the story is the end.

Speaker:

We talked to Chase about this.

Speaker:

Getting back to having somebody as a number,

Speaker:

and that being an important idea,

Speaker:

not to tell you a whole story,

Speaker:

and it doesn't tell the recruiting stories of,

Speaker:

what if I told you that the majority of the backdrop matches,

Speaker:

this person pulls out.

Speaker:

Just don't play,

Speaker:

because they don't want it to impact their UTR.

Speaker:

And I know Chase eluded to this in the podcast

Speaker:

when he did it,

Speaker:

it all impacts your UTR.

Speaker:

So let's get rid of that.

Speaker:

- Let me have some misunderstanding, yeah.

Speaker:

- But it's a misunderstanding,

Speaker:

but the bottom line is we still have kids and parents

Speaker:

allowing that to happen.

Speaker:

Even in the USDA circle,

Speaker:

you can look back at USC tournaments across the board

Speaker:

and look at the backdrop and the consolation matches

Speaker:

and how many kids are pulling out.

Speaker:

Right, if you're a college coach,

Speaker:

then we're able to tell you the story,

Speaker:

and but you're able to look and see withdraw, withdraw, withdraw.

Speaker:

And unless the kid doesn't injury and that tells me a lot

Speaker:

about what I don't want on my team.

Speaker:

The kid is not ready to be out there

Speaker:

and go back to your point about the foreigners

Speaker:

versus Americans, they don't want to play.

Speaker:

They want to play matches.

Speaker:

And if it's important to a coach

Speaker:

that this person just plays matches,

Speaker:

regardless of a winner or loss,

Speaker:

or how it's going to impact their UTR,

Speaker:

that's a character flaw that somebody needs to tell

Speaker:

the story to before it bites you in the butt.

Speaker:

And that-- - Is that a character flaw

Speaker:

or is that a coaching mistake, a parenting mistake?

Speaker:

Because it's not the kid usually making that decision, right?

Speaker:

- Could be, could be, because we hear the kids,

Speaker:

this UTR, they're studying on a daily basis,

Speaker:

their UTR number, and it's like,

Speaker:

if I play this kid, it's going to go up or down.

Speaker:

I don't know if it's the parent,

Speaker:

but I tell you right now,

Speaker:

it is coach's responsibility.

Speaker:

Either to intervene one way or the other,

Speaker:

and basically say, okay, we don't do that.

Speaker:

We play, okay, unless there's an injury

Speaker:

when I just a fine line, we play matches.

Speaker:

We don't let, you know what I'm saying?

Speaker:

That's something that I think we need to tell the story

Speaker:

and do a lot better job of is,

Speaker:

when I look at back draw matches,

Speaker:

and I say, I'm not playing,

Speaker:

but I actually have heard kids say,

Speaker:

that's not gonna help my UTR,

Speaker:

so therefore I'm playing out.

Speaker:

- That's a problem.

Speaker:

- I think though the issue is a technology problem.

Speaker:

When everybody here was growing up,

Speaker:

I learned how good I was, February of the next year

Speaker:

when a little book showed up in my house,

Speaker:

it told me what I was ranked.

Speaker:

- Yeah, that point, I thought about it for about a day,

Speaker:

and I was like, oh, it's okay.

Speaker:

Oh, it's better than I thought, right?

Speaker:

And the next day I went back out to playing, right?

Speaker:

So we spent all of our time focusing on getting better,

Speaker:

where now with technology,

Speaker:

we're human beings, we like control,

Speaker:

we like to be able to manipulate things, right?

Speaker:

And so we're always trying to figure out the system,

Speaker:

right?

Speaker:

And so we've gotten away from doing the things

Speaker:

that we need to do to get better.

Speaker:

So what are you doing to your game to improve?

Speaker:

Not what tournament am I not playing?

Speaker:

So I can't hurt my rating.

Speaker:

You know, I had a girl,

Speaker:

she wanted to be top, this was probably 10 years ago,

Speaker:

she wanted to be top 15 in the South,

Speaker:

and I said, "Grey, I said, how are you gonna do it?"

Speaker:

She goes, "I got it all worked out."

Speaker:

She's like, "I'm gonna go to Little Rockark

Speaker:

and saw Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Speaker:

I'm gonna go to Jackson, Mississippi.

Speaker:

I'm gonna play these events.

Speaker:

The draws will be weaker,

Speaker:

I'll pick up more points, and I'll be top 15 in the South."

Speaker:

And I looked at her and I said, "Well, that's one way to do it."

Speaker:

And I said, "Here's another way."

Speaker:

And she looked at me and she'd write something down.

Speaker:

I said, "Why don't you start beating people

Speaker:

that are top 15 in the South?"

Speaker:

And she looked at me like I had three heads,

Speaker:

and I walked away and I was like,

Speaker:

"That's where I feel like we have a problem,

Speaker:

a perception problem."

Speaker:

UTR came around a few years later,

Speaker:

and from a recruiting side of things,

Speaker:

because you notice we haven't talked really anything

Speaker:

about USDA rankings.

Speaker:

We've been talking about UTR.

Speaker:

- Still got to get into Kalamazoo right now.

Speaker:

- Right. - Right.

Speaker:

- Play the Orange Bowl,

Speaker:

and you got to figure out how to do that.

Speaker:

You got to manage both, right?

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

- But 10 years ago, and I'm talking to a coach in Michigan,

Speaker:

I'm saying, "Hey, this kid is eight in Georgia."

Speaker:

Well, that translates to 12 in the Midwest,

Speaker:

and that translates in the top 30 in Peru,

Speaker:

and so you're trying to translate.

Speaker:

So the one nice thing about UTR,

Speaker:

at least it makes us closer to be able to compare apples to apples,

Speaker:

and it's taken the international part of the sport,

Speaker:

and it's kind of unified it.

Speaker:

So, and even Chase said,

Speaker:

it helps me from making a mistake.

Speaker:

It doesn't help him make the decision.

Speaker:

- Correct.

Speaker:

- The number, like Stuart, you said,

Speaker:

it's more than just a number,

Speaker:

but it doesn't tell the whole story.

Speaker:

- Absolutely. - Maybe we just taglined UTR.

Speaker:

(laughing)

Speaker:

But it was saying,

Speaker:

it helped me from making a mistake.

Speaker:

It gets me in a better apples to apples,

Speaker:

as you said, point of view.

Speaker:

- Yes, so from recruiting side of things,

Speaker:

it has made it easier,

Speaker:

but to my other point, the technology side of things,

Speaker:

I've never had anybody say,

Speaker:

"Hey, I think my UTR is too high."

Speaker:

You know, it's typically--

Speaker:

- Mine probably is.

Speaker:

- Okay.

Speaker:

(laughing)

Speaker:

But it's one of those things where,

Speaker:

you know, I think kids and parents,

Speaker:

you know, I think they're,

Speaker:

we're way too into technology,

Speaker:

like, and we're getting away from

Speaker:

what parts of my game I'm trying to work on.

Speaker:

And if I'm working on something,

Speaker:

guess what, I might take one or two steps back,

Speaker:

but if I'm playing a tournament that weekend,

Speaker:

I'm gonna try those things that I'm working on,

Speaker:

probably not.

Speaker:

I'm gonna go back to what I'm comfortable with

Speaker:

'cause I'm worried about the technology

Speaker:

that's gonna happen Monday morning, you know?

Speaker:

So I feel like that hurts us.

Speaker:

- It's one of the reasons we brought up this T2 League,

Speaker:

is if I'm not worried about my UTR for a match,

Speaker:

what would I do?

Speaker:

If I'm not worried about college recruiting for a match,

Speaker:

hey, what happened over here?

Speaker:

Oh, I certainly worried the whole match

Speaker:

'cause I got a, the doubles thing coming up

Speaker:

and I stayed at the baseline, I just hit only drop shots.

Speaker:

Whatever it is that I get to work on,

Speaker:

that we did back, that's what we all say back in the day,

Speaker:

right, that we did saying,

Speaker:

hey, you know what, I went to work on something.

Speaker:

I needed to work on something.

Speaker:

We look up and we watch the professionals

Speaker:

every once in a while,

Speaker:

and what did Alkaraz lose to that guy?

Speaker:

And you go, okay, maybe he was working,

Speaker:

that's my first thought is maybe he was working on something.

Speaker:

Maybe even those guys do a little bit of that,

Speaker:

but also managing schedules, is that part of it?

Speaker:

Yeah, that's gotta be part of it, right?

Speaker:

Adaptability, adaptability on a match by a match basis

Speaker:

at the next level.

Speaker:

But look at the success, go back to our point earlier

Speaker:

about team atmosphere, the success of someone like,

Speaker:

whether it's a John Isner or whether it's a Benchelle now,

Speaker:

they were all talking about their college experience.

Speaker:

They don't just talk about,

Speaker:

and it's so well-rounded in when they speak about it,

Speaker:

it almost sounds like that's the highlight of their life.

Speaker:

I mean, those people are gonna relish in these team events.

Speaker:

I mean, John Isner always talks about his time

Speaker:

at University of Georgia, Benchelle is on a regular basis,

Speaker:

Brian Shelton, who actually was coached, you know,

Speaker:

George Deck, you know, did a fabulous job, I think.

Speaker:

Amanda McDowell, who was NCAA single champion,

Speaker:

that worked with, went to George Deck,

Speaker:

came through our program, whatever.

Speaker:

But these people, the well-rounded aspect

Speaker:

of those people and their adaptability,

Speaker:

I look back and I say, that kid genuinely loved college, right?

Speaker:

And not just a success on the pro tour,

Speaker:

when I watch Benchelle, that's what, I say a college player.

Speaker:

I don't see a professional tennis player right now.

Speaker:

I say a college player that's, that worked in,

Speaker:

wasn't distraught of a losing in individual match.

Speaker:

Might have been working on things, I'm sure,

Speaker:

I think he played at one point, it started there at six singles.

Speaker:

You know, it worked his way up, high in the lineup.

Speaker:

I'm sure we didn't lose the match.

Speaker:

Because he was a football player, originally.

Speaker:

Yeah, that's why the reason is why he's probably not burned out,

Speaker:

but exactly.

Speaker:

Right, exactly.

Speaker:

Just that atmosphere of him losing a match,

Speaker:

but feeling like his team was still successful,

Speaker:

I think it's just huge for kids.

Speaker:

So whether it's playing high school tennis,

Speaker:

I have never once had a kid,

Speaker:

and I know there were coaches out there

Speaker:

who say, don't play high school tennis.

Speaker:

Coach has no one to talk about.

Speaker:

I've never once done it, because I understand the atmosphere

Speaker:

that's it, right?

Speaker:

So more important than worrying about the math teacher

Speaker:

giving your player bad advice.

Speaker:

Nobody's screwing up their forehand.

Speaker:

Majority of the high level players

Speaker:

are going to be the best player on the high school team.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Well, you got a job to do, bring up the rest of the group.

Speaker:

Right, right?

Speaker:

That's your job.

Speaker:

And that was a tough thing we had growing up.

Speaker:

And I pointed you, David, just because you talked about the back in the day

Speaker:

and how we used to find out what our ranking was,

Speaker:

that we physically wrote down our scores, trying to remember them, right?

Speaker:

But then when you look at the high school time frame,

Speaker:

I played high school tennis with Jason Steele,

Speaker:

who's one of the coaches in the four-cyth area that's helping us.

Speaker:

Yeah, that's helping us.

Speaker:

We played a high school on the same team at the same time,

Speaker:

but we didn't practice with the team.

Speaker:

Because the rest of the team, I was recruiting off the chess team.

Speaker:

It was like, guys, all right, you're tall here.

Speaker:

Stand here and whack the ball when it comes to you.

Speaker:

But we don't have that problem anymore

Speaker:

with the numbers in certain counties,

Speaker:

where I'm picturing this, though, is the better players.

Speaker:

It comes back to that, my kid.

Speaker:

I always wanted to play with a better player.

Speaker:

We all have a good answer for that.

Speaker:

I'm surprised it's still a thing,

Speaker:

because all the coaches we talk to have a good answer for that.

Speaker:

But the better players, being part of a team,

Speaker:

and being able to bring in more than themselves

Speaker:

and see that larger picture for themselves,

Speaker:

is more than just the UTR.

Speaker:

It's more than just even what my coach says, yeah, yeah, he's a good kid.

Speaker:

But is he a good teammate?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Is he somebody that can handle adversity?

Speaker:

Is he somebody that can help somebody else handle adversity?

Speaker:

Because what's tennis?

Speaker:

It's a microcosm of life.

Speaker:

And typically, how you handle yourself on tennis court

Speaker:

is going to be how you're going to handle situations in life.

Speaker:

So we use it as a way of getting to connect with people

Speaker:

in the next generation and hopefully be impactful

Speaker:

so that the way they handle and learn how to handle adversity

Speaker:

will take that with them for the rest of their life.

Speaker:

Making better people, right?

Speaker:

A small sample size of that, we call a story that happened

Speaker:

in the second year that was a national spring team championship.

Speaker:

They awarded gold medals to each participant on the team.

Speaker:

There was a year that there was a second year I was there.

Speaker:

There was a team at one.

Speaker:

I did not coach this team.

Speaker:

There was a team that won and one of the individuals

Speaker:

that played in the younger age division did not win one single match.

Speaker:

And he still won a gold ball or gold medal.

Speaker:

Because he was part of the winning team.

Speaker:

He lost every single match doubles and singles.

Speaker:

And he still won and there was an uproar from not all.

Speaker:

So I cannot believe this individual won a gold medal

Speaker:

and didn't win a match.

Speaker:

Didn't tell the whole story.

Speaker:

The kid was there like he was participating

Speaker:

in something bigger than me.

Speaker:

It's not like he lost every match and he was wearing it on his chest.

Speaker:

He was cheering on the rest of his teammate for the rest of the week.

Speaker:

So I was like, and there were actually parents.

Speaker:

I believe who were writing in on this story

Speaker:

saying that the kid didn't deserve a gold medal.

Speaker:

How many out of teams?

Speaker:

My point was I almost would refuse to coach if this kid didn't win a gold medal.

Speaker:

I would never coach there again because this kid was part of that.

Speaker:

And my point is I could not believe there was an uproar

Speaker:

that this kid didn't lose much because they don't know what this kid was doing.

Speaker:

Now if this kid was running off and sulking and crying

Speaker:

because he lost every single match, OK?

Speaker:

I mean one thing different probably didn't deserve it.

Speaker:

But they let the coach make that decision for that.

Speaker:

This kid lost a match and was still cheering on the rest of his team the entire rest of the day.

Speaker:

They're not winning a match.

Speaker:

I guess what ceremony?

Speaker:

He got a gold medal just like everyone else on that team.

Speaker:

I go to a base ball reference.

Speaker:

I go to a baseball reference.

Speaker:

Of course, Bobby, I strike out every time in the world series.

Speaker:

My team still wins.

Speaker:

Do I not get my right to get your ring?

Speaker:

You get a ring.

Speaker:

And that's where the team aspect just makes a huge, you know, makes a huge difference.

Speaker:

As we always talk about we get these round tables

Speaker:

and four more shows.

Speaker:

I've already popped up in my mind being by far the oldest at the table.

Speaker:

Though I have to do it, I think, by three weeks.

Speaker:

I laugh at you guys talking about technology.

Speaker:

My idea of technology was, well, I'm so old.

Speaker:

We didn't even play tournaments.

Speaker:

That, you know, people asked me, what was your ranking?

Speaker:

I was like, ranking.

Speaker:

I was 20th at my club.

Speaker:

I didn't need to go play someplace to lose.

Speaker:

I could lose any day of the week.

Speaker:

Now, I didn't know that we had great cash, Chris Garner, Randy Vignan,

Speaker:

Sven Saluma.

Speaker:

I mean, there were some serious players playing the, obviously, were coached by King Van

Speaker:

Austria and John Van Astrand, Molly, Molly played a wimble, so, you know, a whole different story.

Speaker:

But I didn't need to go anywhere to be humble.

Speaker:

I could go out any day of the week and get my butt handed to me.

Speaker:

So that's number one.

Speaker:

The other thing that I hear and I scream and I always laugh about, obviously, the culture

Speaker:

of the sport.

Speaker:

And how much responsibility does that come from a higher being?

Speaker:

We talk about it.

Speaker:

The idea of tennis etiquette.

Speaker:

How, that is, the importance of it, his died.

Speaker:

And, you know, I get things evolve and it might be old fashioned, but I think there's always

Speaker:

something that you should take out of that.

Speaker:

And it's just the idea of the respect for the game.

Speaker:

I think we, we, we, we laugh it a little bit about what we are on in Atlanta with the idea

Speaker:

of the out-of-player.

Speaker:

This is a mommy-driven sport.

Speaker:

In my opinion, in Atlanta, tennis is mommy-driven.

Speaker:

And mommy's played out there, which is great.

Speaker:

We have a bunch, you know, unbelievably successful, but how many of them judge their value as a tennis

Speaker:

player?

Speaker:

You'll ask him, "How'd you do today?"

Speaker:

And immediately they give you a one or loss.

Speaker:

I didn't ask you whether you want a loss.

Speaker:

I asked you, "How'd you do today?"

Speaker:

Did this stuff that we're working on in practice come into being, "Well, you know, and knowing,"

Speaker:

as David said, "Well, you know they're not going to work on their second top spin serve,

Speaker:

because they got to get it in.

Speaker:

So they're going to tap it and they're going to wonder why the second return was nailed

Speaker:

at them.

Speaker:

Like, guys, really, if you want to win, you need two strokes in Atlanta."

Speaker:

Don't you want to be a tennis player?

Speaker:

That's a whole different discussion we can have.

Speaker:

So I think the culture, be it the sport, or being where we are at because of how tennis

Speaker:

is evolved here is makes it very challenging.

Speaker:

And then the interesting one, as we just talked about, too, as we're seeing more professionals

Speaker:

coming out of the college ranks, do you see that changing the dynamic as well?

Speaker:

And what, you know, the future holds for tennis because with COVID, there was a fear that

Speaker:

men's tennis might go away entirely.

Speaker:

But now, all of a sudden, you're seeing more and more kids who have gone to college coming

Speaker:

out on the tour and having success.

Speaker:

And this is a little bit different.

Speaker:

And, you know, is that going to change the way we look at college and the way maybe in

Speaker:

this country will make people wake up to the fact that it's not about?

Speaker:

I think it bridges, I think it helps bridge the old philosophy, which was the young kid who

Speaker:

was becoming an elite tennis player.

Speaker:

The first thing on their mind was I want to play professional tennis.

Speaker:

I think by seeing this evident with, I don't know the whole story, but I do know what I see

Speaker:

doing with my eyes.

Speaker:

I think seeing the success of some of these college players to do it, I think there's another,

Speaker:

it helps bridge.

Speaker:

It's a very viable option.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

And I'm not just talking about the division one athlete.

Speaker:

I'm talking about whether it's division two, whether it's juke-o, for the right reasons,

Speaker:

to be able to, the first thing on a kid's mind, which, near and dear to my heart is to

Speaker:

be saying, I aspire to play at the next level.

Speaker:

And the next level is not professional tennis.

Speaker:

The next level is entertaining, if I can check a box and play collegially.

Speaker:

And they're seeing it, and I'm sitting in front of them.

Speaker:

And I think that's where it really helpful.

Speaker:

And don't you think that's going to help the idea of cultivating the team more?

Speaker:

Because now, like you said, when I was growing up with, and I was going to play professional

Speaker:

tennis, my coach looked at me and said, look, you're 120 pounds, you're graduating high school,

Speaker:

you could probably, with your ability, your effort, we could play D1.

Speaker:

You're going to sit out a year.

Speaker:

We got to put about 40 pounds on you.

Speaker:

I didn't want to sit out a year.

Speaker:

I knew I was still going to be five-nine at the end of the day, and I wasn't going to play

Speaker:

professional.

Speaker:

So growing up in New York, we didn't have the collegiate sport powerhouses that it is down

Speaker:

here.

Speaker:

So it just wasn't part of my thinking.

Speaker:

It wasn't, so I think that's great the way it's going now, that it's becoming, so that should

Speaker:

lend itself more to these kids getting exposed to a team environment, hopefully earlier,

Speaker:

and maybe getting rid of some of that mommy and daddy influence.

Speaker:

I mean, I've never passed judgment, but you look at people who made a foregone, the college

Speaker:

route to play professionally, the Corrigal Office of the Koch Office of whatnot.

Speaker:

I've never downplayed this, it's very successful in what she's doing.

Speaker:

Well, you don't know if she was to go in college, how that might have impacted her professional

Speaker:

career.

Speaker:

I don't know if it's a financial decision for a lot of people.

Speaker:

I don't know if it's more the fact that they just want to be, they want to forego college

Speaker:

for whatever the reason.

Speaker:

But I think it teaches just so much more that you'll be equipped to deal with the adversity

Speaker:

when you're playing professionally.

Speaker:

I look at people like when I watch, and I say this to my students all the time, I look

Speaker:

at people that are constantly out there and don't look happy.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

And it's a couple of professional tennis players who stand out when I watch them play.

Speaker:

They're constantly looking at their coach's box for assistance, hands on the head and whatnot.

Speaker:

Versus kids, the kids, people that have gone through the college, I've been here before.

Speaker:

I've done this rather than looking at mom, dad, or so forth on a regular basis for guidance

Speaker:

on why are they failing today?

Speaker:

You don't see it as much in the college ranks.

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

I think college is a great bridge, right out of the program.

Speaker:

There's a bigger jump from high school tennis to college tennis, and there is from college

Speaker:

tennis to pros.

Speaker:

Sure.

Speaker:

Sure.

Speaker:

And I think that college tennis won to your point earlier.

Speaker:

It gets people out on their own.

Speaker:

They're making decisions.

Speaker:

They're turning into adults.

Speaker:

They're living and getting acclimated by themselves.

Speaker:

And that's what they need to do when they're on the tour.

Speaker:

So why not be at a place where somebody in many cases are paying you a lot of money to

Speaker:

chase a yellow ball, get an education?

Speaker:

You're not pushing all your chips into the table, like you would be if you just go straight

Speaker:

from juniors to pros.

Speaker:

And you're making lifelong friends and you're going to be in an environment that you wouldn't

Speaker:

get on the pro tour.

Speaker:

So I think you're finding more of those players are enjoying it and they're seeing they're

Speaker:

getting a complete experience in a team sport, which is going to help them later.

Speaker:

And to our point, we did something with Tim Siegel, former coach of his son, if you're familiar

Speaker:

with the story.

Speaker:

And to do the event, the amazing part to me was his teammates from Arkansas 40 years ago

Speaker:

still come.

Speaker:

What do you need us to him?

Speaker:

And they all show up and they still are that bond is still there.

Speaker:

And you talk, you know, there's no atheists in Foxhole type mentality.

Speaker:

All the great parts about the team environment you make friends with a commonality that you've

Speaker:

been never met before.

Speaker:

And not to laugh about it because it wasn't well-department.

Speaker:

You know, thought about, you know, you hear all these kids now with the mental health issues.

Speaker:

Couldn't getting growing up, putting it back a little while, getting in that environment

Speaker:

where you feel like you have a support system because let's face it, what is Novak have,

Speaker:

even though Novak came out, he's got a team.

Speaker:

He's got eight guys that travel with him.

Speaker:

Number 200 in the world does not have eight people traveling with them, right?

Speaker:

They don't have that luxury of having a team.

Speaker:

There's very few people at the, even at the elite level that have that team in their box

Speaker:

with them, you know, most of them.

Speaker:

If you look at who, you know, and how few people make money in tennis, it's a different thing.

Speaker:

So how can we do expose this more and make this more of the route that should be taken or

Speaker:

looked at seriously because it's going to have my friend and we probably on Andre Janisak,

Speaker:

you know, Andre played top level North Carolina.

Speaker:

He said, Bobby, tennis, as you said, tennis prepared me for life.

Speaker:

I got to hear no a lot.

Speaker:

It prepared me for sales.

Speaker:

I lost a lot of matches.

Speaker:

I lost a lot of points.

Speaker:

Well, a lot of people tell me no in the business world too.

Speaker:

It comes full circle.

Speaker:

I like that.

Speaker:

Back to tennis is a microcosm of life, right?

Speaker:

Yes it is.

Speaker:

I've got one more thing I want to ask before I ask you guys a king of tennis question.

Speaker:

I'll give you each of that because we're running down here.

Speaker:

UTA 360.

Speaker:

Who wants to give me, you got a short version?

Speaker:

You got a 30 second version or a three minute version.

Speaker:

You guys got a cool thing that you're helping kids get, it's part of the helping kids get into

Speaker:

college thing, right?

Speaker:

For kids in our program, basically, we're just, we're looking at tennis and it's now become

Speaker:

more than just hitting balls, right?

Speaker:

So what we try to do is partner with a various, whether it's an orthopedic sports psychologist,

Speaker:

nutritionist, workout person, stretching person.

Speaker:

So we just try to connect with experts in the field in the Atlanta area that are able

Speaker:

to spend some time doing seminars with our kids and really helping them become fully equipped

Speaker:

to be the best player.

Speaker:

And as we talked about, it's physical, mental, psychological, how do you handle injuries

Speaker:

and things like that.

Speaker:

So it's just one way that we just try to do something to be as we first started with.

Speaker:

We're trying to create things that we wish we had when we were growing up and if we can

Speaker:

make the tennis world better than when we started, then we're doing something right.

Speaker:

Not trying to tackle it right, not trying to tackle it all by ourselves.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But go ahead and use in other people's resources, experts in the field to try and create what

Speaker:

would be a comprehensive athlete, comprehensive means it's more than just, like what David said,

Speaker:

more than hitting forehands back into the big serves.

Speaker:

There's nutrition, there's other aspects of it.

Speaker:

So not being afraid to say we need help, like Bobby mentioned earlier, and going out and

Speaker:

finding some experts in the Atlanta area because they're here, the people that near and

Speaker:

dear to their heart, this is their specialty.

Speaker:

And not being afraid to say, hey, can you assist us with this because this is not our specialty.

Speaker:

And that's the team aspect.

Speaker:

Not trying to tackle the law by ourselves, but go ahead and reach out to other people that

Speaker:

might be able to help or group, get better and become more comprehensive.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

That's fantastic.

Speaker:

So to finish up, I've got a King of Tennis question.

Speaker:

It's one of my favorite things is I'll let you guys decide.

Speaker:

It doesn't have to be college recruiting specifically, but sometimes in this case, I would say, all right,

Speaker:

college recruiting, is there anything if you were King of tennis, is there anything you

Speaker:

would change?

Speaker:

But I'll allow you to zoom out if you want to about anything in tennis.

Speaker:

But if you do want to stick with college recruiting specifically, I'm good with that as

Speaker:

well.

Speaker:

But I'll ask you each individually, I'll start with you Stuart.

Speaker:

And I'll say if you were King of tennis, whether it's college recruiting specifically or that

Speaker:

pathway or anything in the tennis world, whether it's Atlanta related, is if you were King

Speaker:

of tennis, you could just make a decision, snap your fingers, whatever it is.

Speaker:

Is there anything you would do or change?

Speaker:

I would love to be in whether it's USDA or UTR offices one day with the higher ups,

Speaker:

and basically figure out a way to make team, whether it's doubles or whether team events become

Speaker:

extremely prevalent for the health and sanity of those that are only playing individual

Speaker:

tournaments, singles only, and highlight it.

Speaker:

The only way to do it is possibly to get more points for team events, higher level or

Speaker:

even doubles events, which I know is a tough sell in an individual sport, but to actually

Speaker:

glorify and bring it back the importance of doubles.

Speaker:

Doubles and were team events rather than just every weekend, multiple tournaments that

Speaker:

are basically singles driven.

Speaker:

For a while, I have not found one kid that is used to playing individual singles event

Speaker:

ever said to me, I prefer or really like doubles and I love team events.

Speaker:

And it's I think it's because of the breath of fresh air.

Speaker:

So it came for tennis, I would highlight or glorify more of those events, even if it was

Speaker:

on the professional tour, which I know it's not going to sell, whether it's US Open or

Speaker:

whatever, find it amazing that they only show the finals of doubles, right?

Speaker:

But or whatever it is, whether it's mixed doubles or just that whole concept of bringing

Speaker:

that back, bringing that whole concept of glorifying it, whether it's the Davis Cup, whether

Speaker:

it's the labor cup, get more involved in those type of team events because I think you'll

Speaker:

find that the individuals that are participating find them very relieving as opposed to the

Speaker:

constantly battling it each week on having to judge their own results rather than their

Speaker:

team results.

Speaker:

Good for mental health.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Good for the future of tennis getting into league tennis, talking Atlanta specifically so

Speaker:

we need a format and we need an incentivization system.

Speaker:

All right, call me next week.

Speaker:

I need an answer format incentivization.

Speaker:

My King of tennis response is going to be a little bit more geared towards tournaments.

Speaker:

I think we should have some tournaments during the course of the year where when the kids

Speaker:

sign in, the parents also get to randomly select another player in the draw and they have

Speaker:

to go watch that player play as opposed they're watching their own child play.

Speaker:

And I think by the end of it, then parents are going to be less stressed because they're

Speaker:

going to get to watch somebody else play and hopefully enjoy this board of tennis.

Speaker:

Their child is going to be able to tell the parent at the end of the day how their match

Speaker:

went and then they can be happy for the rest of the day.

Speaker:

So how are you going to incentivize me as the parent to not watch my own child rather

Speaker:

than just drawing a rule?

Speaker:

Well, I think there's a lot of parents out there that would like to have less stress in

Speaker:

their life.

Speaker:

So hopefully you'd want to do it.

Speaker:

Stress free, tennis free tennis.

Speaker:

Stress free tennis.

Speaker:

That's exactly right.

Speaker:

I'll think of it in other direction which I think this is a great idea.

Speaker:

It also allows the parents to have more interaction.

Speaker:

I mean, I was telling stories.

Speaker:

I played tennis from the time I was 13 and this is what I do for a living.

Speaker:

I'm 58.

Speaker:

My mother has seen me play tennis one time in my life.

Speaker:

She never missed a baseball game.

Speaker:

In a baseball game, there was a crowd in a tennis match you're isolated.

Speaker:

In New York, you were behind glass.

Speaker:

So you were looking down.

Speaker:

So the ability to feel like there's a purpose for you to go there and then oh, by the way,

Speaker:

look at another child's demeanor and sit there and say, I don't want my child back like

Speaker:

that.

Speaker:

Or I do want my child to look like that.

Speaker:

I think that's one of the best things I've ever heard.

Speaker:

I love the absolute.

Speaker:

And it goes back to what Stuart was saying and I think it compasses everything, the ability

Speaker:

for people to step out of their comfort zone.

Speaker:

So important as we talked about.

Speaker:

Listen, you're not going to be better until you're comfortable stepping out of your comfort

Speaker:

zone.

Speaker:

So love it.

Speaker:

Very interesting.

Speaker:

Same thing with my mother.

Speaker:

Her.

Speaker:

I'm a mother actually knew everyone on my son's baseball team stats.

Speaker:

She knew him by name.

Speaker:

She knew how to cheer for him.

Speaker:

She knew what their stats were.

Speaker:

And not just her grandchild.

Speaker:

So that idea is more of that, but again, that's the team aspect.

Speaker:

She wasn't better than what I was going to come up with, which is more of that searching

Speaker:

for Bobby Fisher thing.

Speaker:

We got to stick all the parents in the basement because they're not allowed to be in the room

Speaker:

because the parents are awful.

Speaker:

And we don't want you around.

Speaker:

We'll just have you watch on the screen.

Speaker:

Maybe we need more of where the Atlanta tennis open has their air condition sweet and all

Speaker:

the parents have to go up there and you have to sit next to the parent that your kid is

Speaker:

playing against and you guys have to cheer and figure that out.

Speaker:

Well, it would teach the parents to make the whole environment.

Speaker:

I mean, I literally heard a story about it.

Speaker:

I think we were talking about yesterday where the child wouldn't play another turn because

Speaker:

the opponents' parents were yelling at them and the kid walked off the court crying.

Speaker:

No, this is that would never happen any place else.

Speaker:

You'd get tossed.

Speaker:

Why does it happen here?

Speaker:

That's a cultural thing that, like you said, I think that's a great way to teach another

Speaker:

segment.

Speaker:

We just have to jump into the next one.

Speaker:

Exactly.

Speaker:

David Stoley.

Speaker:

Stuart Russell.

Speaker:

Bobby Schindler's always.

Speaker:

Thank you so much.

Speaker:

I really appreciate your time.

Speaker:

Yeah, thanks.

Speaker:

Thanks for having us.

Speaker:

We'll do it again.

Speaker:

Thanks, guys.

Speaker:

Well, there you have it.

Speaker:

We want to thank Rejovenate.com for use of the studio and be sure to hit that follow button.

Speaker:

For more tennis-related content, you can go to AtlantaTennisPodcast.com.

Speaker:

And while you're there, check out our calendar of tennis events, the best deals on TechnoFiber

Speaker:

products, tennis apparel, and more.

Speaker:

If you're a coach, director of any racket sports, or just someone who wants to utilize

Speaker:

our online shop, contact us about setting up your own shop collection to offer your branded

Speaker:

merchandise to the Atlanta Tennis World.

Speaker:

And with that, we're out.

Speaker:

See you next time.

Speaker:

[MUSIC]

Speaker:

[music fades out]

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube