Modern tennis demands power. From explosive serves to punishing groundstrokes, the physical demands of the game have increased dramatically. Proper strength training helps you generate more racquet head speed, cover the court faster, and reduce injury risk.

Tennis strength training

Why Strength Training Matters for Tennis

Tennis is a rotational sport requiring power from the ground up through the kinetic chain. Strength training builds the foundation for this power production while also protecting your joints from the repetitive stress of thousands of strokes.

Key Benefits

Core Exercises for Tennis

The core is the power transfer centre of the body. Every stroke in tennis involves rotation through the torso, making core strength essential.

1. Medicine Ball Rotational Throws

Stand perpendicular to a wall with feet shoulder-width apart. Rotate explosively from the hips, releasing the medicine ball into the wall. Catch and repeat. This directly mimics the rotational pattern of groundstrokes.

2. Pallof Press

Using a cable machine or resistance band, stand side-on to the anchor point. Press the handle away from your chest and resist the rotational pull. This builds anti-rotation strength crucial for stability during strokes.

Core Training Focus

Tennis requires rotational power, so prioritise exercises that involve rotation or resist rotation. Traditional crunches have limited transfer to tennis performance compared to rotational movements and planks.

Lower Body Exercises

Power generation starts from the ground. Your legs provide the foundation for every serve and groundstroke.

1. Single-Leg Romanian Deadlift

This exercise builds hip stability and posterior chain strength essential for loading during strokes and maintaining balance during wide shots.

2. Lateral Lunges

Tennis involves significant lateral movement. Lateral lunges build strength in the movement patterns you use constantly on court.

3. Split Squat Jump

Explosive jumping exercises build the fast-twitch muscle fibres needed for first-step quickness and explosive movement.

Upper Body Exercises

While power comes from the legs and core, upper body strength ensures efficient energy transfer to the racquet and protects the shoulder from injury.

1. Cable External Rotation

The rotator cuff muscles stabilise the shoulder during serves and overhead shots. This exercise specifically targets external rotation strength, often a weak link in tennis players.

2. Dumbbell Rows

Pulling exercises balance the pushing motions of tennis strokes and build scapular stability for a healthy shoulder.

3. Push-Up Variations

Push-ups build pressing strength while requiring core stability. Progress from standard to medicine ball or plyometric variations.

Balance is Key

Tennis players often develop muscle imbalances from repeated one-sided movements. Include exercises that work both sides equally, and pay extra attention to the non-dominant side and posterior chain muscles.

Programming Your Training

In-Season

Off-Season

Injury Prevention Focus

Tennis places significant stress on the shoulder, elbow, wrist, and lower back. Include these exercises to protect vulnerable areas.