Video Analysis
On Tuesday I did a video analysis for a top USA junior player. I've been doing this for $150, but I just raised the price to $200 - it just takes too long to make it worth the time otherwise. This one took over six and a half hours, and ran 18 pages (single spaced in Times Roman 12 point) and 8653 words, my longest one to date. (I'm not doing any more until January - too busy.) The one I did yesterday covered seven games against four opponents, plus video of him practicing. (One of the games he played ended 25-23!!! Yes, in a game to 11.) Here's my video analysis page, which includes two samples of ones I've done.
I break my video analysis into four parts:
- Point-by-point analysis of several games or matches.
- Analysis of the games, both on how the player can improve and tactical suggestions against that player.
- Player analysis, where I analyze the player's game and what he needs to work on to improve.
- Drilling suggestions, where I describe drills for this player.
When I do the point-by-point analysis (the most time consuming part), I write about what happened in every point, usually watching each point 2-3 times. Then I go over those notes to analyze the match itself. Then I go over each match analysis to analyze the player's game, and work out what drills he needs to work on.
In the one I did yesterday, some of the things I found (and gave recommendations on how to improve) included:


Photo by Donna Sakai


