I'm half-watching a U.S. Open tennis match between top-ranked Rafael Nadal and Nikoloz Basilashvili over the weekend. Aside from the impressive power, agility, speed and court range of both men, I noticed what was making Nadal so good (at least in this match): Making fewer mistakes than his opponent.
While tennis does feature direct-competition, I see it as somewhat in the middle in terms of defensive opportunity between competitors, somewhere in between basketball — where some physical contact is allowed to try and stop the other guy — and golf, where you can’t do anything to hinder the opponent. In tennis, all I can do is hit the ball over the net, and be ready to hit it again should you send it back. And we just keep going until somebody misses a shot or can’t get to a ball.
While it is true that one player’s shot placement can facilitate the other’s mistakes (Nadal did this very well in the first two sets of the match I'm watching), I think the game is/was much more Mental than it looks.
#WorkOnYourGame