A Ball Control Tennis program has already experienced some amazing and instant success with young students at the Fremont Tennis Center in Fremont California. Also, it is absolutely clear that the tennis champions on TV ALL have ball control strokes. The students can learn the forehand ball control stroke in an hour and learn to play tennis in three hours. Ball Control Tennis simply puts the most advanced and subtle movement of tennis champions, who must be steady enough to pass through a whole field of professional tennis players to get to the finals, into the hand of all the players from the beginners to professionals. The same skill can also be carried over from tennis to their other sports activities. However, tennis currently is the only rational sport, which admits ball control and its consequence of double-hitting; tennis is the right sport to introduce ball control, for all the sports.
Practically, Ball Control Tennis is very easy to explain. The current tennis instructor teach the student to follow through in their strokes after the impact. Ball Control Tennis introduces the additional movement of applying jumpulse, which is a sudden change of force, at the moment of contact. Jumpulse is a word coined by the late Dr. Ta-You Wu, who collaborated in robot touch research with Dr. Hugh Ching, the discoverer of ball control, and Dr. T. L. Kunii, Founder of the Information Science Department at the University of Tokyo. When beginners get the feeling of carrying the ball on their racket, they will continue to do so throughout their lives, whenever ball control is needed.
At the fastest rate, Ball Control Tennis can be taught in three hours and Certified Ball Control Coach can be trained in additional three hours, making a total of six hours. Soon, there will be a cadre of assistant Certified Ball Control Coaches who could spread the new knowledge of ball control throughout the tennis world in an explosive chain reaction. Complete Automation Laboratory will have the exclusive right to certify all the Ball Control Coaches because all the Certified Ball Control Coaches should have some knowledge of jumpulse, which, if they cannot explain, they can always refer their students to members of CAL and the books published by CAL, which recently published the book Knowledge, in which ball control is explained, for the first time, in full detail in non-technical terms. CAL plans to charge for each Certificate from $100, for the first two coaches from each city, to $20,000 for the Doctor of Post-Science Certificate with training in both theory and practice, resulting in a potentially $1,000,000 annual income and, with 40% growth, an initial market cap of about $2,000,000.