Explore every episode of the podcast PathWays by Path
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Coach in the Room | 09 Jun 2026 | 00:05:28 | |
The best coaches aren't trying to be the most important person on the court. They're trying to make themselves unnecessary. Lior Avraham breaks down what real coaching looks like and what happens to a junior player when the triangle around them breaks down | |||
| The Parent on the Sideline | 01 Jun 2026 | 00:06:21 | |
The hardest role in junior tennis isn't the player's. It's the parent's. Rachel Brennan spent years thinking doing more meant helping more. She was wrong. In this episode, she talks about getting out of your kid's way without disappearing, communicating with the coach without becoming the problem, and why the car ride home after a loss matters more than you think. "Keep the home a soft place to land." pathtennis.com | |||
| What the PathWay really looks like | 19 May 2026 | 00:05:12 | |
Most families enter competitive junior tennis without a map. A career in the U.S. system can cost anywhere from $10,000 to over $100,000 a year and almost no one explains how the pieces fit together. In this episode, Evan Rhodes sits down with junior coach Ana Solano to break down the real shape of the U.S. development pathway: the seven USTA tournament levels, the ITF Junior circuit, the recruiting metrics that college coaches actually look at and the most expensive mistake families make along the way. The takeaway: the pathway isn't a ladder. It's a river. Your job is to stay in the boat long enough to find the current that's right for you. | |||
| The Mind Behind the Forehand | 11 May 2026 | 00:09:19 | |
Most juniors lose more matches to their own thoughts than to their opponent's strokes. In our first episode, sports psychologist Marcus Whitfield breaks down why the mental game decides everything and why it can be coached just like a serve. | |||