Coaching On The ATP Tour: My Memoirs

Explore insights on coaching on the ATP Tour from a seasoned coach’s perspective, filled with personal experiences and reflections.

It is amazing. Even though you are well educated and have a proven track record of success you are basically forced to stop working because you are surrounded by brain-amputated individuals and can’t take it anymore.

What’s even more amazing is the fact you can share your experience, private or public, and nobody seems to care.

I want to share my experiences, maybe it’s helpful to somebody. Without great work ethic and dedication it’s best to pursue something else.

My Memoirs: Coaching On The ATP Tour

I’m at a point in my life where I’m reviewing my accomplishments and want to share some of my experiences and opinion along the way. Towards the end I also provide some food for thought.

As a player I was decent. When I was a junior I was amongst the best players in my state and made it to the “Westfalenmeisterschaften” in Germany.

In men’s tennis in Germany I made it as far as “Oberliga” (4th highest division) and in the US I played very successful NCAA (Division III) but my focus at that time was mainly on my studies, tennis was just for fun.

To make a long story short, I finished my master’s degree in Exercise & Sports Science in Miami, worked with collegiate (NCAA Div 1) and professional athletes (tennis & NBA players).

Fred Stolle Knows How To Hit A Volley

Fred Stolle & Philipp Halfmann
Fred Stolle and Philipp Halfmann

With regards to tennis I learned a lot from Australian tennis legend Fred Stolle and Owen Davidson (e.g. “you learn how to volley at the (tennis) wall, not on the court”), while working as the Head Tennis Professional at the Turnberry Isle Resort & Club in Miami, before I met Alexander Ritschard at a Junior ITF tennis tournament in Miami.

Alex was 14 years old at the time when I became his coach (tennis + strength & conditioning) and we started working together for 6 years.

Owen Davidson and Philipp Halfmann
Owen Davidson and Philipp Halfmann

During my time as his coach, I was responsible for the following:

  • Designing and implementing strength & conditioning programs on tour and at home thereby minimizing injury-related breaks to less than 2 weeks annually
  • overall player development, including tennis, fitness, massage and taping

“Nutrition” was Alex’s mom, Heidi, ressort.

The tennis specific training (e.g. stroke productions) was developed in consultation with his father, Hans Ritschard, also a former ATP tour player (top 200).

We agreed Alexander needed to have a full arsenal of shots if he was to become a successful tennis player who could beat a e.g. Roger Federer. Slices, drive, topspin, drop shot for groundstrokes, swinging and “classic” volleys and flat, kick or slice serves.

Alexander had an aggressive style of play with tremendous ground strokes…but how are you supposed to continuously beat “ball machine” type players and win a tournament (not simply a match) if you cannot finish the point at the net? Exactly, you can’t!

Hence you must learn how to volley “like a wall”. How do you do that? One way is you show your athlete the proper stroke mechanics (e.g. continental grip, point of contact in front of the body, etc.), then you find a “tennis wall” and have him/her practice volleys for 5 minutes/training session.

Because you are a great coach you are familiar with training intensities and rest intervals, right? So, you watch and make sure the athlete performs in perfect form and doesn’t get sloppy with the execution.

Philipp Halfmann and Alexander Ritschard Swiss Junior Champion 2010
Philipp Halfmann & Alexander Ritschard Swiss Junior Champion 2010

Then you incorporate volleys into your on-court tennis training drills and during match training he/she has the task to play serve and volley from time to time and/or finish 1-2 points/game at the net.

During training blocks we would train tennis 2x/day, which meant 10 minutes of volleys/day at the wall, 5 days a week. In addition to the aforementioned tennis drills & match training, after 2-3 months, your player knows how to volley properly, as if he/she was Australian.

From a strength and conditioning perspective we were working on the “Ideal Tennis Player Body: Lean Mean Machine”.

More specifically, we were working on improving:

We achieved continuous improvements because, amongst other factors, Alexander stayed healthy during the process.

As a result, Alexander:

  • Won Swiss National Junior Championships 4 years in a row, singles and doubles
  • Won his first ATP point at age 16, which was accomplished by only five players
    worldwide in 2010
  • Improved junior ITF ranking by 600 spots in 12 months and reached a high of 65
  • Reached career high ATP ranking of 648 at age 17
  • was offered a full scholarship and won the 2015 NCAA Men’s Tennis
    Championship
    with University of Virginia (UVa)

Swiss Tennis

During my time working with Alexander I had the privilege of living in Zurich, Switzerland, and getting to know a lot of people at Swiss Tennis in Biel.

Roger Federer & Martina Hingis were doing well at the time, Stan Wawrinka wasn’t doing much worse either, and Alexander had the privilege to be invited to practice with Swiss Tennis top players.

For me it was a privilege to get to know most members of their coaching teams. Beni Linder, for example, was Head Strength & Conditioning Coach for Swiss Tennis at the time and we had a lot of interesting conversations since I published my book at the time (Advanced Concepts of Strength & Conditioning for Tennis).

At that time Swiss Tennis top male junior players were:

Coaching Staff

  • Roland Burtscher (Head Tennis Coach)
  • Beni Linder (Strength & Conditioning Coach)

University of Virginia (UVa)

Because of his promising style of play and accomplishments Alexander was offered a full scholarship at the University of Virginia (UVa) in Charlottesville by then Head Coach Brian Boland.

UVa Men’s Tennis program was considered top 3 in the nation at the time and the team consisted of the following players when I was there (2014):

Coaching Staff

  • Brian Boland (Men’s Tennis Head Coach)
  • Dustin Taylor (Men’s Tennis Assistant Coach)
  • Pat Etcheberry (Strength & Conditioning Coach)

While I was at UVa with Alexander in 2014 we had the privilege of practicing at their facilities on campus and at Boars Head.

I had some meetings with Head Coach Brian Boland about how I could help the team in the future with strength & conditioning; Alexander was not part of the official team yet.

Once Alexander became a member of the official team roster that same year training was conducted by the UVa coaching staff and I was taking a backseat as to comply with NCAA regulations at the time.

At the end of the day I didn’t stay and left UVa in March of 2015. Also my coaching career with Alexander came to an end.

DTB

Since I live close to the Leistungszentrum in Kamen and Daniel Masur, same age as Alex, trains in Kamen and knows Alex from Junior ITF tournaments, we were invited by Jens Woehrmann to stop by and practice from time to time.

Marvin Netuschil was also practicing in Kamen, who was just 3 years older, and Johannes Haerteis was one of the players at the Tennis Base in Munich.

Jan-Lennard Struff was also training in Kamen at the time but was much older and more successful at the time.

Other notable junior players were Matthias Wunner, Maximilian Marterer (both Niedersachsen Leistungszentrum) and Julian Lenz.

Alexander beat Matthias Wunner 3:6/7:6/6:3 in the finals of the junior event at the BMW Open in Munich 2011, which granted Alexander a Wildcard for the following year’s ATP tour tournament in Munich.

Here are the highest rankings of the aforementioned players:

Alexander reached a career high ATP ranking of 99 (09.30.2024) and won the NCAA Men’s Tennis Championship 2015, 2016, 2017 with the University of Virginia (UVa).

Alexander beats Jan-Lennard Struff 7:5/7:5, Germany’s new Nr.1, in Munich in April 2023.

What I’m Proud Of

Coaching On The ATP Tour.

Unlike many other coaches, I only had Alexander to work with and I’m proud that he learned all the basics and has a great foundation so he can compete with the best in the world and pursue his dreams as a professional tennis player.

Alexander was able to win a set against two top 10 players (Stefanos Tsitsipas & Felix Auger Aliassime) at Grand Slams in 2022 and he had to qualify first.

Not only can he compete at the Grand Slam level but he also has a Bachelor’s degree from an Ivy League school in the USA, which allows him to do whatever he wants after his professional career has ended.

While working with Alexander I also wrote and published my book, basically sleeping 5-6 hrs/day for 3 years.

Coaching On The ATP Tour.
Xenia Knoll & Philipp Halfmann

When you look at all the players of Swiss Tennis at the time you’ll notice none of them made it on tour. None of them reached Alexander’s spot at age 17 of 648. They also couldn’t do it as adults.

When you take a look at all his teammates at UVa you’ll notice Alexander reached the highest ranking (99 ATP) so far.

He can take sets off top 10 players and beat Germany’s Nr. 1 recently.

Conclusion

So, in conclusion:

  • I have a bachelor’s in Business Administration from Baruch College (top university in the USA)
  • a master’s degree in Exercise & Sports Science from Florida International University (FIU)
  • wrote & published 2 books in the field of strength & conditioning
  • was a decent player myself
  • learned tennis from an Australian tennis legend (Fred Stolle)
  • learned strength & conditioning from Mick Smith (15 year NBA veteran strength coach & also worked with Monica Seles)
  • taught at universities in the US
  • worked with NCAA division 1 athletes, NBA players and tennis professionals

Wherever I went, FIU or UVa or working with Alex, I always delivered outstanding results without causing injuries, no matter what.

I have shared my knowledge online, for free via text and videos and thousands of people visit my website every month.

Here Is Some Food For Thought

  • Why is it that I don’t have a permanent job working with professional athletes?
  • Why is it that I “only” had one player to work with? Don’t I deserve more even though I had a 100% success rate? Especially when you take a look at the success rate at Swiss Tennis, UVa or the DTB?
  • When you look at my accomplishments is it too much to ask to receive a 1 or 2 year contract, with benefits, to develop athletes?
  • Why is it that I’m not wanted to teach in Germany even though they supposedly need teachers “desperately”?

Bare in mind that other e.g. national federation players have 3 coaches who do what I do and also have access to a pool of great players at the high performance training centers.

I appreciate your feedback…maybe you know something I don’t?

But before you make a decision I invite you read the following article.

FYI: Alexander was 20 years old when I finished working with him. He suffered his injuries while training at the university, approximately 2 years later.

Don’t get me wrong. On the one hand I had opportunities presented to me to work with other athletes, on the other hand it wasn’t a good fit for me.

Tour Coach: Dream or Nightmare?

Working as a tour coach has 2 sides to it.

First of all, it is different to develop a complete athlete when it comes to technical, physical and mental abilities than coaching a player who has already the quality to be in the top 100. It’s not necessarily easier, it’s different.

Spending time on the ITF circuit is not glamorous, it can be a grind. Most will fail to reach the next level, the ATP Challenger tour, within 2 years.

Once you reach the Challenger level it finally feels like professional tennis, but it’s basically 2nd devision. You play in nice arenas, stay in comfortable hotels, eat great food, have drivers and other amenities.

And if you do a good job on the Challenger level and further improve the game of your athlete to a top 50 player than life is good, right?

You tell me. Here is the downside for many coaches, amongst other things:

  • you travel 40+ weeks/year, which means you have no social life…no/few friends because you never know for sure when you’ll be somewhere…if your player looses you travel straight to the next tournament…most coaches are getting divorced and have no friends because they are never home…you can top the situation by having kids, who you never get to see in person because you are barely home. Imagine your wife home with 2 kids without you…that’s not what she had in mind when she married you…divorce is coming…and usually not for free either…and who do you think your kids are blaming?
  • pressure to deliver results – if the player looses 7x in the 1st round you are fired. Why did they lose? Doesn’t matter. On tour you follow the motto: “champions find a way, losers find excuses”.
  • no job security – if you are not a national federation coach you don’t have job security – most coaches don’t get health insurance or 401K options…and what about overtime or undertime? It is not unheard of to have weekly or monthly contracts offered on tour.
Alexander Ritschard (Finalist Future in Romerberg) & Philipp Halfmann
Alexander Ritschard (Finalist Future in Romerberg) & Philipp Halfmann

More Food For Thought

  • Would you do it?
  • What salary is worth the aforementioned risks to you?
  • What does it say about you if you accept weekly or monthly contracts?

I’m celebrating my 22nd wedding anniversary this year with the love of my life, my wife, Sophia.

Surrounded by Mediocracy

98% of the time I encounter people in leading positions who do not have a track record of success nor the educational qualifications to justify their position.

One highlight was a 50 year old Director of Operations, who couldn’t speak English and a General Manager with an “Associates Degree”.

Another was a Head Strength & Conditioning Coach of a well-known tennis federation doing “Hang Snatches – 135lbs” with teenage players, who had shoulder flexibility issues (limited range of motion – many couldn’t raise their arms behind the head).

Or university NCAA division 1 head coaches who didn’t know the difference between carbohydrates, protein or lipids or aerobic vs anaerobic energy systems. Those are basics, like adding and subtracting.

One of the top guys I studied with in the Master’s Degree Program in Strength & Conditioning at the university started working at a national tennis federation and decided to quit after 1 1/2 years and work as a bouncer instead.

Why You May Ask?

He couldn’t take the incompetence of the tennis coaches, who had no clue about anatomy, physiology and/or kinesiology principles, which meant he was never able to advance the athletes because he had to constantly “repair” injuries caused by the tennis coaches during on court training (e.g. 15 minutes of 1st serves without adequate rest intervals).

Take a closer look and do your own research. Here are some questions you should try and find the answers to:

How many talented junior athletes make it in pro sports and how many athletes never have a chance for success due to injuries…caused by whom?

If you want to go further down the rabbit hole check out how many former professional athletes amputate their limbs due to chronic pain stemming from their career.

How many players e.g. went to IMG academies / NCAA division 1 tennis programs and didn’t make it…and why?

Are you a great coach or do you have a great program if you have 500 top junior athletes to train and 3 to 5 make it as a pro athlete?

Coaching On The ATP Tour. Philipp Halfmann signing autograph at the Miami Open
Philipp Halfmann signing autograph at the Miami Open

I personally missed out on 2 great job opportunities because I had a penis. I was informed they needed to hire a woman. Awesome.

Or a player like Marco Trungelliti (around 100 – 200 ATP ranking) was critical about Roger Federer’s & Rafael Nadal’s (lack of) contribution with regards to prize money for the Challenger & ITF events.

The majority of the people commenting on the article were of the opinion Marco Trungelliti should do something else if he doesn’t like it. Really?

If you were a top 200 soccer player in the world you would be a star, a national team player, but you should do something else with your career?

Let’s do the math a 5 year old would be able to follow. Here are 10 countries that are big in soccer:

  1. Germany
  2. England
  3. Italy
  4. France
  5. Spain
  6. Netherlands
  7. Brazil
  8. Argentina
  9. Portugal
  10. Belgium

Now let’s assume there are 20 players / team (in realty they can have a squad of 23 players / team) and, viola, we have 200 soccer players in total. How many people do you know who are top 200 in the world in whatever they do?

I Have A Dream

I don’t know how many of you have read Plato’s “The Republic” but I had the pleasure of reading it during my days at Baruch College in NYC.

In a nutshell. The country (Republic) should be managed by the brightest minds, by people who have accomplished things in life. That’s the theory.

And when you compare the theory with nowadays reality you’ll notice a difference like night & day.

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