Mental

Tennis is one of the few sports that can be compared to a lifespan: a match can be short, or very long (such

as the one in Wimbledon in 2010 between Frenchman Nicolas Mahut and American John Isner, it finished

after 11 hours in 3-days play and a 70-68 score in the 5th set).

The tennis player must create the game, think, dare, manage stress, regain confidence, nurture his

motivation, suffer fatigue, regain control of the game, and face adversity. It’s a pictorial summary of life, no

matter if ordinary or exceptional.

As a former non profesional player and now photographer, I’m interested in what's behind the game, what

are the players feelings, their struggles, commitments and devotion. Players have an inner fight with

making split second decisions before hitting the ball.

Being mentally prepared and focused is as important as hitting the ball, controlling the game, managing the

fears, confusion. Bright moments could be followed by dark periods or vice versa.Tennis is about feeling the

ball, and when it happens, the racket becomes an extension of your arm.

As a professional photographer I found a strong similarity between tennis and photography.

Taking pictures is mainly looking for the right moment. Focusing, shooting, controlling the situation, creating

the game, and being mentally connected with body and mind.

The camera could be compared with the racket, an extension of the body - spiritually speaking.

This set of pictures were taken during the ATP Tour venues in Paris, Marseille, Montpellier, Lyon, Barcelona

and Buenos Aires championships and is a chapter of an ongoing project on what’s behind sport values.

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