Nice content dude! you've improved a lot quickly. Come next to Mallorca and hit me up for a match! And it's great to be able to "attend" a lesson with the pro coaches, at least in youtub
Your content is incredible and of high quality, I congratulate you for it, if you allow me I am going to give you a advice that is little talked about but for me it is important if you really want to become a professional or semi-professional player and that is worked off the court. I'm pretty sure that you have an outstanding aerobic capacity to play padel because tennis is much more demanding so the trend in padel in recent years is to gain a little more muscle mass to get more strength and explosiveness, it will help you a lot in the smash, as in the heavy balls, short sprints .... I see that you put a lot of effort to improve and it is wonderful to see people committed to what they do, my advice is to work in the gym and try to gain 5/10kg of muscle mass in the next 2/3 years, I really think it would be very useful. Greetings from Madrid!
Hey bud congrats on the progress. Is the goal to turn pro? As in - play on tour? Or to become a coach in the UK? Or neither? Curious to know what your end goal is. Cheers! Andy
Great video, thank you for the quality of the content. Please let's time to the training with the coaches - and congrats on your impressive improvement in Padel. Greetings from France.
@@Padelactico if you do come go to any club and ask for luke mousley tho no jokes theres some good level in the canary islands. Players like sager diego gil and jofre at the moment
In my training I heard that standing actively on your toes is essential to react fast in padel but I made those little jumps too much what causes me to become tired very fast in a rally. I also see you being very energetic with those "little jumps" instead of being more relaxed in a match. It that a bad thing or not? Im just wondering
So I think a ‘split step’ as your opponent hits the ball is important to help react/change direction. But I think its also important to be quite relaxed on the court, especially when reacting off the walls