L Sanchez MD wrote:You're right of course. I was thinking of getting a coach for some lessons, but not something I could afford long term. Maybe work on fundamentals, and especially serve
I think this is the best piece of advice you can get at this level and I wish someone had told me when I was there.
It is VERY important for every beginner in tennis to take some lessons by a good coach.A coach at this stage will help you learn the fundamentals in footwork,grips and strokes which are essential.Even if you can't afford it long term,don't worry.Get the basics right so you've got a base you can then build on.
If you don't do that and just try improve by playing,you'll develop your own wrong technique,in an effort to get the ball over the net.There will be a time with this self-taught technique though,when you've reached your limits and can no longer improve (and I guarantee you it'll be soon enough and at a disappointing level).
The worst thing is that if you try and learn ''proper'' tennis at that time it will be 100 times more difficult for you.Cause then your brain will have to ''erase'' all the mistakes you are used to making and learn everything from ground zero.
Since you and your friend are at about the same level,I'd suggest the two of you hiring a good coach.It's so much more efficient than being in a tennis group and since you pay half the price it's not very expensive.
As for the tips djarvik gave you,it is very good but I disagree on one thing:don't overlook the feet.Footwork for me is the most important thing in tennis and you should work on the basics (like checking before your opponent hits,setting your feet nicely so you get torque and acceleration by weight transfer etc)
Hope any of this helps!