A volley good time
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Andrew Edwards
Kevin Fukuda’s legs were like springs as he bounced up and down in
preparation to fire a serve across the court. Once he was ready, the
9-year-old tossed his tennis ball above his head and with an overhand
swing of his racket, launched the fuzzy green projectile over the
net.
“You have to throw the ball high enough so you can pop the ball
with your racket,” Kevin said, describing his technique.
Kevin was practicing his serve along with the other children in
his group at Junior Tennis Camp. The campers were divided into three
groups, based on a combination of age and skill level. Kevin’s group
of intermediate players, were practicing serves under the guidance of
Ai Takamori.
The children, in the midst of learning tennis skills, don’t always
play like pros. For every serve they nailed, some shots didn’t clear
the net or went sailing far beyond the court boundaries. Though not
all the players in the group were completely new to the game, the
camp was a chance for the players to have fun and pick up basic
skills and work through their inexperience.
“You learn backhand, forehand, you get food, you get to hit the
cars and make the alarms go off if you hit it over the fence,”
8-year-old Jacob Parisi said.
The youngest children at the camp played simple drills in their
group. In a game they called “jail,” Minh Nguyen tossed tennis balls
to the players and challenged them to hit the ball over the net three
times. If they missed three times, they were sent to jail and had to
sit out the match until another player managed to break them out. The
only way to get out of jail was if a child successfully returned
three volleys and then sent an extra ball flying over the net to free
their companion.
Hannah Johnson, 6, won 7-year-old Jessica Laconde’s freedom when
her racket connected for four volleys. Hannah was all smiles after
her effort.
“It’s fun,” she said. “I like hitting the ball.”
The oldest campers practiced more advanced drills with Ian Rich,
who taught them how to use overhand strokes to connect with
high-flying balls and a technique that required the campers to hold
their racquets upright and step into incoming shots, returning the
ball to their opponent.
“You step on your left and just punch for a ball,” explained
9-year-old Drew Ross.
The advanced group finished their day with a round-robin doubles
tournament. The players would pair up and face off in single volleys.
The challenging team would serve the ball and their opponents would
play for points by trying to win the volley. Only the defending team
could score points, if the challengers won, they took the defenders’
places and tried to hold their own against the next pair.
Oz Gotsman, 11, and Nicole Colgrove, 14, claimed victory when they
were the first pair to win 15 points.
“I love being on the winning team,” Nicole said.
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