How to stop cheaters (Zverev hooked in finals)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
  • email coachvctennis@gmail.com for free cheaters decoded training
    title- Destroy Cheaters
    Coach VC teaches you how to stop cheaters from stealing matches from you and goes over what really happened to Zverev in the finals.
    Learn how to stop cheaters in tennis and still win despite bad line calls. Watch this video to discover strategies to deal with cheating players and unfair line calls in your matches.
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Комментарии • 31

  • @coachvctennis
    @coachvctennis  Месяц назад +2

    This video is to help players deal with cheaters… it appears many defend the cheaters and say just accept and move on… I say defend yourself and speak up
    #stopcheaters #playfrom2all

    • @stevemclean7473
      @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад

      And this is being demonstrated by flipping video to avoid a copyright infringement lawsuit 🤦‍♂️
      Oh the irony 🙄

  • @yeongjinshin6124
    @yeongjinshin6124 Месяц назад +1

    I can't understand what you are saying at all. And why is the video flipped?

    • @coachvctennis
      @coachvctennis  Месяц назад +1

      Will make adjustments to audio
      Had to flip it so I can show points

    • @stevemclean7473
      @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад

      Had to flip it to avoid a lawsuit

  • @stevemclean7473
    @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад +1

    New videos every week! 37 in 5 years 🤣
    Maybe you should learn to count.
    What a joke 🤣

    • @er33tgaming78
      @er33tgaming78 Месяц назад +1

      Once again Steve, you appear to be lacking even the most basic logical thoughts. Why would anyone retroactively apply a statement along the lines of scheduling to years previous to said statement being made? If you tell me you're going to do something today, does that mean I should laugh at you for not doing it 10 years ago beforehand? Should I wine about how you did not commit to something ten years ago that you just said today you have planned? What an absolute imbecile. I hope Coach VC bars you from viewing next week's video so I don't have to see your incoherent rambling thoughts! I know you can turn this around with enough dedication to self education moving forward, and am rooting for you.

    • @aspiteyt
      @aspiteyt Месяц назад

      lol

  • @stevemclean7473
    @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад +4

    No one cheated in this match. To imply that Alcaraz tried to influence the umpire is a real stretch. If the umpire sees it as in then the player has to accept that call. There will always be times that you feel you got a bad call but it's how you respond that defines you. Zverev responded by losing every single subsequent game. Why? You already answered that, Alcaraz is the superior player.

    • @coachvctennis
      @coachvctennis  Месяц назад +7

      Are you saying that the superior player always wins?
      And no feelings on getting cheated- fact ball was out and Zverev got cheated… Alcaraz should have conceded the point like a true champion

    • @stevemclean7473
      @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад +3

      @coachvctennis you're making an assumption that Alcaraz saw it as out. If he saw it as being in, and the umpire called it in, then why should he concede the point?
      And yes, generally speaking, the superior player wins. Yes, there are times that there are 'upsets' but it's those players that are serial winners that challenge for Grand Slams and the number 1 ranking.
      Now one thing I should point out that is that, historically, I've always thought that Zverev was overhyped and not a genuine contender in Grand Slams. He is now, however, an altogether different player and his level has been phenomenal! If he had beaten Alcaraz I'd not have begrudged the result. Your are basing your entire analysis on one singular point as being the reason he lost. Really? Calls go against players all the time and you just have to deal with it. Frankly it seems like Zverev dealt with it far better than you did 😉

    • @coachvctennis
      @coachvctennis  Месяц назад +5

      How could Alcaraz not see the shot spot replay clearly out… so that destroys your first point
      Second point for Zverev that was a critical switch because it went from 2-2 to 1-3 especially for the “inferior player”
      Tommy Robredo defeated Federer at US open which would be a truly inferior player defeating a superior player… Zverev’s level as a top 5 player makes this a close matchup
      Are you implying to just accept horrendous calls and do nothing… Hmm…
      It was never about how Zverev responded there is nothing he can do about that
      It was about Alcaraz clearly seeing shot spot show ball was out and he did nothing
      Would you accept a point knowing your shot was out? I personally would not want a point by seeing my ball was clearly out
      Done!
      That had to hurt getting dismantled
      Logic prevails

    • @stevemclean7473
      @stevemclean7473 Месяц назад +1

      @coachvctennis 292 points played in the final over 4 hours and 19 minutes and you honestly believe that just one call made the difference? Get a grip! Tennis managed for decades without Hawkeye and, as far as I knew, there has always been resistance to it being implemented on clay as there is more margin for error than on grass or hard courts 🤷
      Look we can argue about this all evening but it won't change anything. Zverev accepted it, maybe you should too? If you're struggling I suggest you get a shrink.
      Anyway, I'm done, have a nice life 👍

    • @er33tgaming78
      @er33tgaming78 Месяц назад +8

      ​@@stevemclean7473I have throughout a competitive junior career experienced a number of matches that were decided by one particular key point. This is tied to the psychological ramifications of losing or winning at an important moment, which can often snowball in momentum. Even moreso with young players now adays, and if you add something like a bad call into the equation, it can have a very dramatic effect on the outcome (depending on the psyche of both players, and downstream effects). These are human beings involved, not robots, and for that reason alone a pivotal point can absolutely change the course of an entire match.