The training plans · club player

Fitter. Calmer.
Harder to beat.

Evidence-based plans for the player who fades late, tightens under pressure, wilts in the heat, and wants to drop weight and win more. Pick a plan by your schedule or your goal, then raid the exercise library to build your own.

Beat nervesCut fatigueBuild enduranceHandle the heatLose weightAdd powerWin more
← Back to the handbook
01Start here

At club level, consistency and fitness win — not winners

Here's the freeing truth backed by match data: at recreational level, points are mostly lost, not won. The player who simply puts one more ball in the court takes the majority of matches, and lower unforced-error rates strongly predict winning.12 So these plans aren't about hitting harder. They build a body that doesn't fade, a mind that doesn't rush, and the engine to keep your feet moving in the heat — and, if you want it, real explosive power on top.

Your fatigue, nerves, heat trouble, and weight feed each other — and a bigger aerobic base plus some lost kilos attacks all of them at once. Excess weight even makes you run hotter: heavier bodies show a larger rise in core temperature and heart rate in the heat, and obesity is a recognised heat-illness risk factor.8

“You don't need a bigger forehand to win at club level. You need to still be making that forehand at 4–4 in the third, with a calm head and a body that isn't cooking.”

02The science

Eight ideas that shape every plan

01 · The sport

Tennis is intervals, not a jog

Points average under 10s but matches last hours — you need bursts of power plus an aerobic base to recover between them.1

02 · Fat loss

Intervals burn efficiently

High-intensity intervals cut total, belly and visceral fat — and double as match conditioning.3

03 · Keep muscle

Lift while you diet

Strength work plus protein keeps the muscle you'd lose in a deficit — protecting power and metabolism.4

04 · The heat

Heat tolerance is trainable

1–2 weeks of controlled heat lowers heart rate and core temperature at the same effort.6

05 · The nerves

Calm is a trained skill

Slow, structured breathing lowers competitive anxiety and even sharpens reaction time.9

06 · Power

Plyometrics add pop

Jump and bound training lifts serve velocity, sprint speed, power and agility.14

07 · Rotation

Power comes from the trunk

Rotational medicine-ball throws predict racquet-head and serve speed — train the twist.16

08 · Stay healthy

The best plan isn't interrupted

A little eccentric and mobility prehab lowers injury risk and keeps you on court.17

03Pick your plan

Choose by the time you actually have

Three weekly templates, same engine — strength + intervals + on-court. Pick the one that fits a realistic week (the best plan is the one you repeat), then tilt it toward a goal with the add-on blocks below.

3 days · busy weeks

The Minimum

For weeks when life is full. Hits the essentials: strength, one hard interval session, and short sprints. Maintains and still drives fat loss.

  1. Mon Full-body strength + core
  2. Wed On-court HIIT (4×3 min) + consistency drills
  3. Fri Full-body strength + repeated sprints
Recommended
5 days · the flagship

The Court-Ready Build

The complete 4-week plan detailed below. Balances strength, aerobic base, intervals and match play — the best all-round choice for fat loss, fitness and nerves.

  1. Mon Strength A · Tue Court + sprints
  2. Wed Zone-2 aerobic
  3. Thu Strength B · Fri HIIT + match play
  4. Wknd Match play + rest
6 days · time-rich

The Full Engine

When you're fitter and have the hours. Adds a second aerobic day and a dedicated power/footwork session for faster gains — watch recovery and heat.

  1. Mon Strength A · Tue Court + sprints
  2. Wed Zone-2 · Thu Strength B + plyo
  3. Fri HIIT · Sat Match play + footwork
04The flagship, week by week

The Court-Ready Build, in detail

Train the cool hours (before ~10am or after ~6pm) for Weeks 1–2, then deliberately add heat in Weeks 3–4. New to training? Drop Wednesday in Week 1 and build up.

DaySessionWhat it's for
MonStrength A — full body, ~40 minKeep muscle in a deficit; build the legs that move you
TueOn-court — consistency drills + short sprintsFewer errors + the 5–10s burst tennis uses
WedZone-2 aerobic, 30–40 minThe base that kills fatigue and burns fat
ThuStrength B — full body, ~40 minBalance the body; core for steadier strokes
FriOn-court HIIT + match-play practiceVO₂max, fat loss, and pressure reps
Sat / SunMatch play (1 day) · rest / easy walk (1 day)Compete with the routine; then recover
05The core sessions

What to do, set by set

Strength A — Monday

Full body · ~40 min · rest 90s
Exercise
Sets × reps
Why it's here
Goblet squat
3 × 10
Biggest muscle group to protect in a deficit; legs that chase balls
DB Romanian deadlift
3 × 10
Posterior chain — power for serve and direction changes
Push-up (incline if needed)
3 × 8–12
Pressing strength for serve and volley
One-arm DB row
3 × 10 / side
Balances pressing; protects the shoulder
Plank
3 × 30–45s
Trunk transfers force; steadier strokes when tired

Why lift when the goal is weight loss? Dieting without lifting costs muscle, power and metabolism. Strength work plus protein keeps the good stuff while the fat goes.4

On-court — Tuesday

Consistency + repeated sprints
Block
Dose
Why it's here
Cooperative crosscourt rallies
aim 20 in a row
Trains the #1 win lever: keep the ball in with margin
"One more ball" target games
10–15 min
Win points by not missing, not by going for lines
Court sprints (baseline ↔ service line)
6 × ~5s, 25s walk, ×2
The exact 5–10s burst of a real point

This is your "win more" session. Cutting unforced errors does more for your record than any winner, and short repeated sprints build the burst-and-recover engine.13

Zone-2 aerobic — Wednesday

30–40 min · talk-test pace
Option
Effort
Why it's here
Brisk incline walk, bike, or easy jog
can talk in full sentences
Builds the aerobic base that speeds recovery and burns fat without piling on fatigue

The anti-fatigue session. A bigger base turns "gassed in set two" into "still moving in the third." Bike or incline walk is gentler on the joints while you carry extra weight.1

Strength B — Thursday

Full body · ~40 min
Exercise
Sets × reps
Why it's here
Split squat (rear foot down)
3 × 8 / leg
One leg at a time — tennis is played on one leg
DB shoulder press
3 × 10
Serve and overhead durability
Band / lat pulldown
3 × 12
Decelerates the serve arm; shoulder health
Glute bridge
3 × 12
Hips drive every stroke and first step
Pallof press (anti-rotation)
3 × 12 / side
Rotational control = cleaner groundstrokes

Strength even helps the serve. Beyond protecting muscle, resistance training is linked to faster serve speed.10

On-court HIIT — Friday

The fat-loss + fitness engine
Block
Dose
Why it's here
Hard court movement (suicides, side-shuffles, shadow swings)
4 × 3 min hard, 3 min walk
~85–90% max HR intervals drive VO₂max and visceral-fat loss
Practice points / sets afterward
20–30 min
Pressure reps — run your between-point routine every point

One session, two wins. On-court interval work improves VO₂max, sprint and agility while burning fat. Heat caution: Weeks 1–2 do this in cool hours only.2

06Goal-based add-on blocks

Bolt on the block for what you want most

Each block is a 15–20 minute module. Add one to the end of a strength or on-court day (1–2× per week). Don't stack everything at once — pick the one or two goals that matter most this month.

Block A · 1–2×/week

Power & Serve

  • Box jumps / squat jumps 3×5
  • Lateral bounds (skaters) 3×6/side
  • MB rotational throw into wall 3×6/side
  • MB overhead slam 3×6

Plyometrics raise serve velocity, power and agility, and rotational throws transfer directly to racquet-head speed.14

Block B · 1–2×/week

Footwork & Agility

  • Ladder drills (in-in-out-out) 3×2 lengths
  • 5-cone spider drill 4–6 reps
  • Reactive shuffle (partner points) 3×20s
  • Split-step → sprint to cone 6 reps

Plyometric and change-of-direction work improves court speed and reactive agility — getting to more balls in position.15

Block C · 1–2×/week

Endurance Engine

  • Longer Zone-2 (bike/walk/jog) 45–60 min
  • Tempo intervals 5×3 min moderate, 90s easy
  • Continuous on-court movement 10–15 min

For the player who fades: extra aerobic volume widens the base that powers between-point recovery across long matches.1

Block D · 2–3×/week

Injury-Proof & Prehab

  • Nordic hamstring curl (assisted) 2×4–6
  • Band shoulder external rotation 3×15
  • Calf raises + ankle mobility 3×15
  • Thoracic rotations + 90/90 hips daily

A few minutes of eccentric and mobility work lowers injury risk — and the best plan is the one an injury never interrupts.17

07The exercise library

Build your own — the full menu

Every exercise the plans draw from, grouped by purpose, with a starting dose and the reason it earns a place. Swap freely within a category to keep training fresh.

L Lower body & legs

The engine for every step, push-off and recovery.
  • Goblet squat3×10 Quad & glute base of court movement.
  • Bulgarian split squat3×8/leg Single-leg power & balance — how tennis is actually played.
  • Romanian deadlift3×8–10 Hip-hinge power for serve and change of direction.
  • Walking lunge2×10/leg Strength for lunging to wide balls.
  • Step-up3×10/leg Explosive single-leg drive and first step.
  • Lateral / Cossack squat2×8/side Lateral range for defensive slides.
  • Calf raise3×15 Ankle stiffness for quick first step and jumps.

U Upper body & serve

Press, pull, and protect the serving shoulder.
  • DB bench / push-up3×8–12 Pressing power for serve and volley.
  • DB shoulder press3×10 Overhead strength and durability.
  • One-arm row3×10/side Back strength, posture, balances pressing.
  • Lat pulldown / pull-up3×8–12 Helps decelerate the serve arm.
  • Band external rotation3×15 Rotator-cuff health — key serve prehab.
  • Face pull3×15 Rear shoulder & posture for overhead safety.

C Core & rotation

The link that transfers leg power into the racquet.
  • Plank / side plank3×30–45s Trunk stability under fatigue.
  • Pallof press3×12/side Anti-rotation control = cleaner strokes.
  • Dead bug3×10/side Low-back-safe deep core.
  • Cable / band woodchop3×10/side Rotational strength along the stroke path.
  • Controlled Russian twist2×12/side Rotational endurance.

P Power & plyometrics

Store and release elastic energy — the source of pop.14
  • Box jump / squat jump3×5 Lower-body explosive power and serve drive.
  • Broad jump3×4 Horizontal power and first step.
  • Lateral bound (skater)3×6/side The push-off for defensive slides.
  • Pogo / ankle hops3×15 Reactive stiffness for quick feet.
  • Depth drop → soft landing3×5 Eccentric braking — safe deceleration.
  • MB rotational throw3×6/side Trunk-rotation power for serve & groundstrokes.
  • MB overhead slam3×6 Total-body power, serve-like overhead.

A Agility & footwork

Get to the ball early, in balance.15
  • Ladder drills3×2 lengths Foot speed and coordination.
  • 5-cone spider drill4–6 reps Court-specific change of direction.
  • Reactive shuffle3×20s React, don't predict — partner points the way.
  • Split-step → sprint6 reps The universal tennis ready move.
  • Resisted sprints (band/sled)4×10–15m Acceleration & COD (for advancing players).18

M Mobility & prehab

A few minutes that keep you on court.17
  • Nordic hamstring curl (assisted)2×4–6 Eccentric hamstring strength, injury prevention.
  • Band shoulder external rotation3×15 Rotator-cuff health for serving.
  • Ankle dorsiflexion mobility2×10/side Lunge depth and knee health.
  • Thoracic spine rotations2×8/side The rotation your serve & backhand need.
  • Eccentric wrist curls2×12 Tennis-elbow prevention for the forearm.
  • 90/90 hips + world's greatest stretchdaily Hip mobility and rotation.

O On-court conditioning

Where fitness becomes match fitness.
  • Cooperative crosscourt rallies20 in a row Build the consistency that wins club matches.
  • Baseline "suicides"4×3 min The HIIT engine on the court.
  • Repeated court sprints6×5–8s, 25s rest The point-length burst.
  • Shadow-swing intervals4×60s Movement + technique under fatigue.
  • Live points with consequences20–30 min Pressure training that transfers to matches.
08Fueling & the heat

The two things that actually move the needle

Nutrition — where the weight goes

  • Moderate deficit, ~300–500 kcal/day → about 0.5 kg/week. Faster and you lose muscle and feel tired.
  • Protein ~1.6 g/kg/day — a palm at each meal. Protects muscle in a deficit and aids fat loss.5
  • Cut liquid calories first — juice, soda, beer. Often the whole deficit.
  • Half your plate vegetables — fullness with few calories.

Heat — your two-stage protocol

  • Weeks 1–2 · avoid + hydrate. Cool hours. Pre-hydrate ~500 ml two hours before; sip during; pre-cool with a cold towel.7
  • Weeks 3–4 · build tolerance. Move 2–3 sessions into warmer conditions, 30–40 min building toward 60, effort moderate.6
  • Losing weight is part of the fix — heavier bodies heat up faster, so the kilos you drop buy heat tolerance.8
  • Stop immediately on dizziness, no sweating, headache or chills.
09Calm & competitive

Beat the nerves, then beat the opponent

Your between-point routine

  • Turn away, racket to the left hand — reset, head up.
  • One box breath — in 4s, hold 4s, out 4s, hold 4s.11
  • One cue word — "smooth," or "high and deep."
  • Same routine on 0–0 and game point.

Full toolkit: the situational playbook & frameworks.

The "win more" mindset

  • Play the percentages. Higher over the net, deeper, bigger targets. Hit one more ball than they do.
  • Track your unforced errors for a few matches — watching the number shrinks it.12
  • Let the fitness talk. Still moving in the third set? The errors pile up across the net.
  • Pick one pressure pattern you trust on big points.
10What to expect

After four weeks, realistically

AreaRealistic outcome
Weight−1.5 to −2.5 kg, mostly fat; a repeatable habit
FatigueBetter recovery between points; finishing sets stronger
EnduranceHigher aerobic base — "gassed in set two" fades
HeatLower HR and later overheating in warm play (after Wk 3–4)
PowerIf you ran the power block: a touch more pop and quicker first step
NervesA routine you trust; fewer rushed, tight errors
ResultsFewer unforced errors → more games won on the same strokes
Be honest with yourself, and with your health. Four weeks builds the engine and habits; bigger weight goals take 2–3 months — just repeat the block. Given heat sensitivity or extra weight, clear new exercise and heat training with your doctor first, start conservative, and stop at the first warning sign of heat illness. Ease into plyometrics and resisted sprints once your base strength is solid. Track weekly: bodyweight, one strength lift, resting heart rate, and your unforced-error count.
11The evidence

The findings, in their own words

01
"Points average under 10 seconds, but matches can last hours; tennis needs anaerobic power combined with high aerobic capacity."
Kovacs, Sports Medicine, 2007 · source ↗
02
"On-court tennis training with HIIT improved VO₂max, 5-m sprint and agility," with VO₂max improving most.
On-court HIIT vs RST, RCT · source ↗
03
"HIIT significantly reduced total, abdominal and visceral fat mass."
Maillard et al., Sports Medicine, 2018 · source ↗
04
"Caloric restriction with resistance training retained significantly more lean mass" than dieting or aerobic exercise alone.
Resistance training for weight loss, Frontiers, 2025 · source ↗
05
"Dietary protein supplementation significantly increased fat-free-mass gains during resistance training" (supports ~1.6 g/kg/day).
Protein & RT meta-analysis · source ↗
06
"Heat acclimatisation over 1–2 weeks lowers heart rate and core temperature and reduces the risk of serious heat illness."
Consensus on training in the heat · source ↗
07
"Begin sessions euhydrated, minimise dehydration, and use cooling strategies" — practitioner heat guidelines.
Heat-alleviation strategies & guidelines · source ↗
08
"Physical activity in the heat produces a higher rise in body temperature and heart rate in heavier people; obesity is a heat-illness risk factor."
Exercise under heat stress, Physiological Reviews · source ↗
09
"Box breathing reduced cognitive anxiety (22.4 → 14.25) and improved reaction time (312 → 274 ms)" in tennis players.
Pre-match breathing techniques in tennis · source ↗
10
"Strength and conditioning interventions improved serve speed in tennis players."
Serve-speed systematic review & meta-analysis · source ↗
11
"HRV biofeedback via slow breathing reduced anxiety and improved performance" — slow breathing alone was the key element.
HRV biofeedback & slow-breathing studies · source ↗
12
"The player who hits one more ball in the court wins most matches; reducing unforced errors beats hitting more winners" at recreational level.
Winner/unforced-error analyses · source ↗ · analysis ↗
13
"Low-volume court-based sprint interval training improved anaerobic capacity and sport-specific performance" in tennis players.
Court-based SIT, Scientific Reports · source ↗
14
"Plyometric training improved maximal serve velocity (ES = 0.75) plus sprint speed, lower-body power and agility" in tennis players.
Plyometric training in tennis, systematic review & meta-analysis, 2022 · source ↗
15
"Plyometric training improved change-of-direction speed and reactive agility in young tennis players."
Plyometric COD & agility RCT · source ↗
16
"Medicine-ball throw performance strongly predicts serve velocity; it's recommended for transfer to serve speed" in tennis players.
Medicine-ball power & serve velocity · source ↗
17
"Injury-prevention programs including the Nordic hamstring exercise reduced hamstring-injury rates substantially (~50%)" — though later reappraisals call the evidence mixed.
Nordic hamstring injury-prevention meta-analysis · source ↗
18
"Resisted sprint training significantly improves agility and change-of-direction performance" in athletes (effect larger in trained athletes).
Resisted sprint training meta-analysis, 2025 · source ↗