
Clay court tennis is often described as slower, but that simplification misses the deeper reality: the surface fundamentally reshapes how players manage space, construct points, and move through contact. In this episode, we break down the technical and tactical adjustments required to transition effectively from hard courts to clay. A central focus is movement—specifically the difference between sliding into the ball versus sliding after contact—and how this distinction impacts balance, recovery, and court positioning. Using Charleston as a reference point, we analyze players like Jessica Pegula and Madison Keys, whose games highlight the challenges of adapting to clay’s spatial demands. The episode also features a detailed examination of Belinda Bencic’s backhand. While biomechanically unconventional, her open-stance execution demonstrates how timing, efficiency, and discipline can outweigh traditional technique. We close by discussing Iga Świątek’s coaching change and what it could signal for the evolution of her already dominant clay-court identity. Send us Fan Mail
AI Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Rafael Jódar and the ATP’s Next Tactical Separator

Chris Eubanks Explains What Tennis Fans Get Wrong About the Pro Level

Ben Shelton’s Clay Evolution and Arthur Fils’ Pattern Identity

Jannik Sinner vs Carlos Alcaraz: Execution, Margin, and the Next Phase of a Rivalry
Free AI-powered recaps of Best Of Three and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.