Insider's Playbook: Smart Strategies for Competitive Senior Tennis Players Over 50

Why 'Watch the Ball' Is the Worst Advice in Senior Tennis I Richard Brice

June 16, 2026·24 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

7 Day Free Trail - https://www.skool.com/senior-tennis-unpacked-8081/aboutSenior Tennis Unpacked Community You've spent years fixing your forehand, tweaking your footwork, and drilling your backhand — and you're still making the same mistakes. Richard Brice, vision and brain-based training specialist, makes an uncomfortable case: the problem was never your strokes. The problem is your visual system is declining, you're "hit and admiring" instead of recovering, and you're wiring your brain to look at bright screens four to five hours a day — then wondering why you can't judge a 60-mph ball. We get into why watching the ball at contact is the last thing you should worry about, why your T-Rex forehand is a spacing problem not a technique problem, and what a string with a few beads on it can do for your game that no amount of drilling ever will. Key Takeaways: ·      Recovery beats vision every time. "Hit and admire" — watching your ball instead of resetting — is the #1 performance killer, and it throws everything that comes after it off.·      Late prep, bad spacing, and mis-timed swings are all vision problems. Those aren't technique issues — they're almost entirely driven by how well your visual system is functioning.·      Watching the ball at contact is the icing, not the cake. Djokovic has won more than anyone alive while already looking down the other end on half his forehands — fix the underlying problems first.·      Screen time is wrecking your visual system. Four to five hours a day on phones and TVs trains your eyes for up-close bright screens, not for reading a tennis ball — ten minutes of distance gazing a day is the counter.·      The Brock String is the one tool worth owning. A string with a few beads on it tests and trains whether your brain is fusing both eyes together — the foundation of depth perception and distance judgment on court.·      Vision training structurally rewires your brain in 8–10 weeks. An hour a week is enough to produce measurable changes that stick for months — three 20-minute sessions a week gets you there."So many of the best players in the world don't watch the ball at contact." — Richard Brice "The number one problem for most players is not recovering after the previous shot." — Richard Brice Richard Brice – TennisHacker.netYouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@TennisHacker ⏱️ Chapters: 0:00 — Introduction1:32 — What "using your eyes well" really means in senior tennis3:02 — The #1 mistake players over 50 make (it's NOT watching the ball)5:43 — How to tell if your vision is holding you back7:06 — The truth about watching the ball through to contact9:21 — Vision, spacing, and why your T-Rex forehand is a spacing problem15:27 — Screen time is wrecking your game — here's the fix16:44 — The Brock String explained — and how to use it18:47 — How long does vision training take?22:50 — Connect with Richard Brice / Show Wrap Up#SeniorTennis #TennisTips #TennisVision #Over50Tennis #TennisTraining #MastersTennis #TennisPerformance

Podzilla Summary coming soon

Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.

Get Free Summaries →

Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Listen to This Episode

Get summaries like this every morning.

Free AI-powered recaps of Insider's Playbook: Smart Strategies for Competitive Senior Tennis Players Over 50 and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.

Get Free Summaries →

Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.