EZ-Tennis.com it’s easy as
1 2 3
 
    Our Mission
We want everyone to know tennis is an easy sport to learn, enjoy the game and love the sport for a lifetime. Is tennis really this simple? Yes!

Introduction
A new Modern Tennis Methodology by Oscar Wegner helps any beginner play tennis well in two hours. Visit our tips and drills for a preview of Oscar’s simple and insightful look at how to play more like the pros—guaranteed to put a smile on your face when you try them on the court.

Conventional tennis teaching has been proven to impair hand-eye coordination. Oscar Wegner has proven that his techniques help players to “Play Like the Pros” in a very natural, instinctive way.

 
  Demonstrating to Ryan how
the power comes from pulling
the arm towards the finish
over the shoulder, not down
the target line.
Oscar has coached players like Bjorn Borg, Vince Spadea, and Guga Kuerten. Oscar actually likes coaching coaches to reach more players, and thus has spent much of the last thirty years overseas reforming tennis instruction and influencing junior programs that still churn out top pros today. The Williams Sisters were coached with instructional videos and watched Oscar’s videos daily. Their father, Richard Williams, was years ahead of the rest when he saw the genius of Oscar’s Modern Tennis Methodology and coached his daughters to become two of the top female players in the world.

I believe that our industry has complicated the learning process for so many players that they become discouraged and leave our sport too quickly. Oscar’s ideas simplify matters, and this is crucial. His teaching methods are light years ahead of those from most teaching professionals.
Bill Mountford, Director of Tennis, USTA National Tennis Center - Flushing Meadows, NY. (Site of the US Open.) Bill also writes the tennis tips for the USTA Newsletters, and is the President of the USPTA Eastern Division, as well as on the National Executive Committee.

Tennis is a simple game to play well. Top pros swing the racquet the way they do because it is the easiest and most efficient way, not because it is difficult. It is their technique that makes them great. Oscar Wegner recognizes and explains the differences in how the game is taught versus how top professionals play in his first book, You Can Play Tennis in 2 Hours. “The New Tennis Magazine Show” has called Oscar “the father of modern tennis.” His TV commentaries overseas, ESPN International Tennis Tips, visits to Spain, Germany, and Brazil have reformed the entire game of tennis overseas at the professional level. A tennis-teaching overhaul occurred in Russia when Oscar’s first book was made available there in the early 1990s. The Russians have been dominating tennis in recent years on the women’s side. Oscar has spent most of his career in a quest to reform tennis coaching around the world showing how easily you can teach anyone to keep the ball in play and to love the sport for a lifetime. It’s now your turn to discover how easy tennis is to learn.

Oscar’s 5 videos (on 3 DVDs), the jam packed EZ-Tennis CD-ROM , and his book, You Can Play Tennis in 2 Hours will fascinate you and allow you to succeed at tennis for the rest of your life.

Known and respected all around the world, Oscar has given us another great contribution to tennis….  
Jacy Carpenter, 13, doing Oscar’s famous hand ball drill: finding it, feeling it, and finishing it.
Gustavo Kuerten, three-time French Open champion and world champion in 2000  
Oscar is a great coach. He makes the most advanced techniques simple and clear. In a few days he helped me regain my strokes and my feel for the ball.  
Bjorn Borg, five time Wimbledon Champion  
Wegner strips instruction of all those accepted phrases and directions that only clutter your mind and confuse. Pros play a totally different game of tennis that what is taught by conventional teaching methods, but it’s obviously the right way to play the game. You will find it worthwhile to dump the past and join Oscar in your tennis future. In listening to him I’ve unlearned a few things myself that I long considered gospel.
Bud Collins, tennis historian/commentator

Oscar has broken the mold, demystifying the modern tennis stroke. There’s genius in his analysis of pro techniques—the dynamics of what the racquet does to the ball, how power and spin are added. He understands how top pros really stroke the ball, and always have, all the way back to Tilden.
Andy Rosenberg, Director for NBC Sports Wimbledon and French Open