
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Rather than accepting the Red–Orange–Green pathway as a one-size-fits-all solution, this episode challenges current assumptions and argues that young talents should have appropriate opportunities to train with yellow balls, alongside scaled equipment, when developmentally ready.
🎾 Key themes in this episode include:
• Why the Red, Orange, and Green Ball system can limit long-term potential if applied rigidly
• The difference between recreational participation and high-performance development
• Why some young players need earlier exposure to yellow balls for timing, spacing, and skill acquisition
• How over-protecting young players can delay technical and athletic growth
• A more flexible, individualized approach to junior development
This episode is especially valuable for parents of talented young players, coaches working in high-performance pathways, and anyone interested in the long-term development of elite junior tennis players.
This is a golden oldie from the archive, but the discussion remains highly relevant today as junior tennis continues to debate the best developmental models for young athletes.
📌 Prodigy Maker Tennis Show – Episode 110
Hosted by Chris Lewit
0:00 Introduction and show update
1:00 Topic overview: Red, Orange, Green, and U10 tennis
2:20 Why this is a controversial issue in junior development
3:40 Injury prevention myth with low compression balls
5:30 Tournament mandates and parent frustration
7:30 Racket size vs ball type for young players
9:00 Power development concerns with soft balls
11:00 Why some juniors struggle to develop pace
13:00 U10 vs U6: Rethinking the age model
15:00 Can young kids handle a full court?
17:00 Movement, footwork, and athletic development
19:00 Benefits of Red/Orange/Green for grassroots tennis
21:00 Why ROG is not ideal for high performance players
23:00 Coaching vs equipment in technique development
25:00 Tactical development myths
27:00 Teaching movement instead of slowing the ball
29:00 Can talented kids play yellow ball early?
31:00 Problems with holding players back too long
33:00 Tournament progression rules explained
35:00 Why parents want choice, not mandates
37:00 Evidence vs opinion in junior tennis systems
39:00 Marketing, misinformation, and pressure on parents
41:00 Why tennis development is both a sprint and a marathon
44:00 Consequences of delayed development
46:00 Can elite players survive ROG systems?
48:00 Where junior tennis should go next
50:00 The culture of debate and dissent in tennis
52:00 Final thoughts for parents and coaches
🎾 The Prodigy Maker Tennis Show (PMTS) explores the intersection of junior tennis development, cutting-edge sport science, fitness, health, and human performance. Hosted by world-renowned coach Chris Lewit — author of The Secrets of Spanish Tennis and Winning Pretty, and developer of numerous No. 1 juniors in the U.S. — PMTS brings together coaching wisdom, research, and technology to shape the future of tennis and human performance.
👉 Subscribe and listen on
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/id1456148452
https://open.spotify.com/show/3Wu0PXf9IXneu0ogrzujZN
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLR2QscfBfEs9dtttR6XNhduNlWYmZIfy-
🌐 https://shows.acast.com/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/about
📖 Books: The Secrets of Spanish Tennis | Winning Pretty
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Chris Lewit5
2525 ratings
Rather than accepting the Red–Orange–Green pathway as a one-size-fits-all solution, this episode challenges current assumptions and argues that young talents should have appropriate opportunities to train with yellow balls, alongside scaled equipment, when developmentally ready.
🎾 Key themes in this episode include:
• Why the Red, Orange, and Green Ball system can limit long-term potential if applied rigidly
• The difference between recreational participation and high-performance development
• Why some young players need earlier exposure to yellow balls for timing, spacing, and skill acquisition
• How over-protecting young players can delay technical and athletic growth
• A more flexible, individualized approach to junior development
This episode is especially valuable for parents of talented young players, coaches working in high-performance pathways, and anyone interested in the long-term development of elite junior tennis players.
This is a golden oldie from the archive, but the discussion remains highly relevant today as junior tennis continues to debate the best developmental models for young athletes.
📌 Prodigy Maker Tennis Show – Episode 110
Hosted by Chris Lewit
0:00 Introduction and show update
1:00 Topic overview: Red, Orange, Green, and U10 tennis
2:20 Why this is a controversial issue in junior development
3:40 Injury prevention myth with low compression balls
5:30 Tournament mandates and parent frustration
7:30 Racket size vs ball type for young players
9:00 Power development concerns with soft balls
11:00 Why some juniors struggle to develop pace
13:00 U10 vs U6: Rethinking the age model
15:00 Can young kids handle a full court?
17:00 Movement, footwork, and athletic development
19:00 Benefits of Red/Orange/Green for grassroots tennis
21:00 Why ROG is not ideal for high performance players
23:00 Coaching vs equipment in technique development
25:00 Tactical development myths
27:00 Teaching movement instead of slowing the ball
29:00 Can talented kids play yellow ball early?
31:00 Problems with holding players back too long
33:00 Tournament progression rules explained
35:00 Why parents want choice, not mandates
37:00 Evidence vs opinion in junior tennis systems
39:00 Marketing, misinformation, and pressure on parents
41:00 Why tennis development is both a sprint and a marathon
44:00 Consequences of delayed development
46:00 Can elite players survive ROG systems?
48:00 Where junior tennis should go next
50:00 The culture of debate and dissent in tennis
52:00 Final thoughts for parents and coaches
🎾 The Prodigy Maker Tennis Show (PMTS) explores the intersection of junior tennis development, cutting-edge sport science, fitness, health, and human performance. Hosted by world-renowned coach Chris Lewit — author of The Secrets of Spanish Tennis and Winning Pretty, and developer of numerous No. 1 juniors in the U.S. — PMTS brings together coaching wisdom, research, and technology to shape the future of tennis and human performance.
👉 Subscribe and listen on
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/id1456148452
https://open.spotify.com/show/3Wu0PXf9IXneu0ogrzujZN
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLR2QscfBfEs9dtttR6XNhduNlWYmZIfy-
🌐 https://shows.acast.com/the-prodigy-maker-tennis-show/about
📖 Books: The Secrets of Spanish Tennis | Winning Pretty
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

229,020 Listeners

160 Listeners

1,398 Listeners

80 Listeners

424 Listeners

178 Listeners

105 Listeners

2,651 Listeners

34 Listeners

276 Listeners

1,095 Listeners

81 Listeners

551 Listeners

42 Listeners

5 Listeners