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Tennis for girls

Chapter 12: MIXED DOUBLES.
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About This Book

A practical instructional manual aimed at young female players provides step-by-step guidance on equipment selection, grips, stance, and the principal strokes. It explains serving, returning, volleying, footwork, and common tactical patterns, while outlining rules, scoring, and court dimensions. Illustrated drills and progressive practice routines teach skill development, consistency, and court positioning. Guidance on physical conditioning, appropriate attire, etiquette, and match preparation addresses health and sportsmanship. Organized into concise chapters with diagrams and drills, the text suits beginners and instructors seeking a structured course in lawn tennis fundamentals.

MIXED DOUBLES.

Opinion as to court position in mixed doubles seems to be divided in the minds of the men who play it, some men preferring the girl to take the net and stay there under all circumstances, letting the man do his share of the net play, and all the backcourt work. Others insist that as a girl is naturally a baseline player, her job should be to guard the back court while the man plays at the net. This latter seems the more logical of the two plans, for it gives both players their natural positions. Furthermore, a man is usually much more effective in his volleying than the girl, no matter how good she may be. But as girls develop their net play, devoting more time to their volleying and their overhead work, both in singles and in doubles, they will quickly learn to do their fair share of work in mixed doubles and not merely occupy a small portion of the court. They will play it as a regular doubles game, with both partners up or back together, making it much more interesting for all concerned.