#1 why I lose matches? It's because I'm the one who dictates if I'm going to lose or win. I don't know what idiotic thing springs in my mind a couple of hours before a match, but it just puts me in a "either I'm going to demolish my opponent 6/0 6/0 or he's going to win 6/0 6/0". Then I would go into that said match trying to play lights out tennis and guess what? First set is over in 20 mins, 6/1 for him, with 5 winners, about a dozen unforced errors from me and add about 4 double faults and, well, you get the picture. Then, inner Paire/Fognini/Kyrgios comes out and I start insulting myself, "you're a moron, what are you even doing playing this sport?" and all that stuff. After another 20 mins or so, match is over 6/1 6/0 and I lost to someone who looks like he just picked a racquet 3 weeks ago.
You’re watching too much TV pro tennis matches. Remember at even the highest non pro levels the unforced error still rules. You should accept this written in stone tennis truth and throttle back to bring the number of unforced errors down. Even the occurrence of more winners vs errors in a pro level match is a relatively recent phenomenon. It would happen occasionally in the 80s and TV commentators would often point it out since it didn’t happen all the time. Even today I’d bet the majority of pro matches is determined by who hits less errors and not more winners. This rule is why Pushers dominate at the rec level.
Wow! Thank you so much Pete! This has to be the most valueable Video of all time. Guys, watch this video over and over again, this man really knows his business. It took me sooo many years to figure out the things he mentioned here, gonna definitely come back every couple of weeks to remind myself of what is really important during matches. From my own experience the biggest game changer is improving your fitness. Especially on the slow clay courts here in Germany it oftentimes gave me a huge advantage. You can really improve your consistency and just grind people down without having to dramatically imrpove your technique. Over time that helped me to win an insane amount of thight matches through basically just outlasting my opponents. So the best tips I can give you Guys: Improve your stamina, get a lot of balls into play (crosscourt and high net clearance) and MOST IMPORTANTLY compete for every singe point!!
Your comments are as good as the video above. Pete really knows the game. I watched the video 6 month ago and now I watched it again. In 30 minutes you get the essential areas which you have to improve, if you want to reach the next level.
1 NOT RELAXED IN MIND & BODY 2 INACTIVE FOOTWORK 3 MID COURT WEAKNESS 4 POOR SHOT SELECTION 5 FEELING LOST IN LOOSING 6 PROVIDING YOUR OPPONENT 7 NO RELIABLE SPIN 8 NO MASTERY OF SPIN 9 MISSING TOO MUCH OVERHEADS 10 WEAK RETURN
Thanks coach Pete! There are so many videos on strokes and technique. But i really love your videos on strategy and mental, which we tend to overlook. Really great stuff, please keep these coming!
I take a lot of lessons. I take lessons whenever I travel and I am always meeting with different instructors in DC. One coach recently said: I only use positive language on the court. We can figure out why something went wrong and reinforce it positively with new movement or new thinking. But there’s no point in saying to yourself “that’s my problem” or “I’m terrible at backhand volleys.” Everything can be worked on and reinforced positively. The negative is always 10 times more powerful than the positive so you have to do a paradigm shift when it comes to attitude.
Now I know why I get beaten by the players I think I should beat every single time. Bad luck for them I came across this video. By the way I am 56 and a great tennis enthusiast ! Thank you very much Pete !
Thanks Pete for all you do ! I’m sixty two with a lot of experience on the court but always learning and open minded . You top ten is dead on in this content . These are all things we should work on and practice . K
I like all of these 10 reasons and agree that most of them are very important to win. The only thing I don't understand is that serves haven't been mentioned as one reason, because the serve is one of the most important things in tennis. I know your serve is great, but for me it's the worst part of my game while my return is probably the best. :)
Hey Peter, awesome video. I can't get to see in the end where to click for next free training series. Please suggest and keep doing such great stuff. Thanks
Can't agree more, I just cannot relax because too afraid of losing, I know if I can relax, my shots are much better, more pace, more aggressive and probably more consistent. 10 Thank You for the 10 Reasons !
great job!! I have played a lot of tennis and most players that are average or below make these same mistakes that I have played including myself!! Thanks!!
The relax part is the most true! I play so good during Training and then during the Match I am totally tensioned and miss all the shots. Also footwork is totally off. Finishing the shot in 2 steps is a great idea but if you miss it you can easily be caught off guard. The areas idea is just genius I have to study this more as I have problems making winners from area 3. I will try the chip approach shot as a backup solution. Also the perfect game is so true, sometimes you have to just win ugly, perfect play is for training. My second serve is a pushed one, that is a big liability that I have to deal with. My return is my best part of my game, I can actually make more points on return than on my serve. I think you forgot one big point, not thinking during the game and analysing your opponent and learning his game and patterns.
Great video, usefull tips. One more that applies to me and many others: you dont prepare early enough, you wait for the ball to hit your side of the court before doing the unit turn.
coach, I am very happy such a Great guy like you puts such an effort like this quality training lesson free for every body in the world . I am a 5- 5.5 player who spent tons of dollars ( 30 k usd) over 20 years to just learn different things you are giving it for FREE. love you and hope some day we meet up and hit some quality shots and days. best wishes for 2020 and happy new year.
@@PeterFreemantennis It's already going! I held off hard serves from a higher level player. Very gratifying. She's not used to seeing her serves come right back! You've changed my thinking.
You don’t need a practice partner with a big serve to work on your return. Have them serve from the service line instead of the baseline. The shorter distance helps you to work on shortening your backswing, moving with the ball toss and following the ball to the landing in your service box. Take turns serving a bucket to each side. I would add that when returning or serving always make decisions according to the service score. Don’t go for winners or aces on add out. If you’re up then play aggressive and put the pressure on. If you play baseball you already know about playing to the count on the batter, runners on base, outs and game score. It’s similar in tennis 🎾
110% CORRECT...#1=playing with fear! Youre a middle aged 4.0+ player new to a club or group of guys and you’ve got to be social...play with lower guys in order to get introduced to your level players. You’re playing doubles and every mistake you make your partner grumbles under his breath. The other players are pushers, slicers and old fart dicers and you’re still trying to play your A game...how do you play down against these guys? ...you get frustrated and try to hit shots with all your mite with perfect form and grossly mess up. They’ll spray the ball in every direction 9 out of 10 times then once you adjust they hit a winner BY ACCIDENT, how does a good 4.0+ player play lower level players (yeah, you’re gonna say DONT play with them, but there are times you need to. You’re new to a club and have to play your way to your level. You’re in a casual club tourney and have to play the lower seeds. How do you play without fear? The tips here in the video are great mechanical tips, but the root of fear is HATE. You HATE to lose. You HATE to play what you think are lessor players. You HATE to make mistakes. All these things make you tighten up, play wildly and with anger. Loosen up, relax, HAVE FUN, stop over thinking and trust in your abilities. I recently saw a TH-cam video of young tennis star Christopher Eubanks playing (I forgot her name) a female basketball star at a challenge contest where they’d play each athletes game of expertise, them play a neutral game as a playoff. I was waiting for Chris to POUND every shot, every forehand, backhand as if he was playing on the tour. Instead he was forced to dink around with her looking foolish. But he clearly is a tennis pro...he had confidence in himself such as not to get frustrated. I’ve always said, there are THOUSANDS of tennis pros all with the same bag of shots in their skill set. But what differentiates the top 10 players above the rest...is the mental toughness!
Just what I needed. Most of all - evaluating the opponent looking to make them play weaker. I definitely do not problem solve like this well enough because I dont think this way enough. in fact couple players next level from me have said that as good as I play, they 'like' my balls (often into their ideal hitting zones). while I can hit all shots, I dont hit enough of the shots they arent comfortable with. will think back and figure what those are. Thank you Pete!
Amazing video, top top content and really well presented, credit to yourself! Thanks for helping many of us improve :) also love how you just casually whip those forehand winner short balls with barely any backswing, such good technique!! Did you used to play on the tour or what was your rating as your technique etc looks like you could easily be former pro or 2.1,3.1 etc. Anyway great vid!
this guy is a pro coach, no bullsh*t I am like a 6.0 and all of his points I struggle with from time to time.. and every reason is exactly why ... you beat yourself and results in loosing..
Wow! Priceless points made. I’m pretty sure like many others I ticked off at least 8 of the 10 reasons! Don’t you wish you could have a mini coach on your shoulder to keep reminding you of these reasons!?
I lose cuz my buddy is an astronaut and all I get are moonballs, so I always have all day to think about how I’m going to crush my shot and then I shank it in to the stands
What if you do all those tips and have good control? My flaws are being too relaxed at all times and never feeling any urgency to challenge the opponent. I can act as a wall to return most balls but it's always a long grinding point when I win.
The number one reasons are besides the obvious. You’re not looking at the ball. You’re thinking about the next point before you finished the current point.
If you only lose to players who are really better, then you have already mastered the 10 reasons here. I guess you haven't. So you might defeat some of those 'better' players if you work on your deficies. ;)
a lot of great points but I sure wish the audio production was better. It would almost be better to just have quality voice over instead of all the super distracting noise
Does your opponent win most of the points or do you miss most of the points? When you realize it, that's a good starting point and then you can identify from these 10 most common reasons where you need to improve. Maybe it's just three or five out of ten that count for the most points you lose.
I use to play tennis when I was 11 to 15 with my dad. I was so good like a pro. I want to start again now I'm in my late 30's and I know I have what it takes to compete in the Opens. I was that good. My father stopped playing with me b/c his goldigger gf used to tell him not to play w/ me anymore and he was stupid enought to listen to her and getting BOOTY was more important to him then his daughter getting a tennis superstar carieer. I did start playing at 31 again and it all came back to me b/c I had the experience from before and I was really good again. I know I have what it takes to compete in the OPEN"S b/c it is never to late to become a superstar tennis player or to become a superstar in no matter what career to choose to do . Age doesn't matter it just a number.
Pete thanks for the video. However, I don’t see any improvement in your forehand. Didn’t you spend all that money and time to be coached by the best? But your technique doesn’t even look like anything’s changed. Maybe you are not coachable or you reverted back to old habits? Maybe the Turkish Nightmare can coach you up. His technique looks better than yours.
Richard Williams is one of the best coaches tennis has ever seen. Does he have the best forehand technique? Do what Pete says not what he does. Don't Wally, be Happy:)
Hi, I am in 200 seniors ITF players, playing tennis 50 years,and this person did grate job !!! Bravo !!!
From the UK… we were discussing these points today.. your video
Is spot on..
Superb video Pete. This maybe the most useful video I've ever seen for competitive recreational players!
Many thanks, Dave from England
Thanks mate
I watched your video the night before my club tournament and I won all of my matches!!
wow that's confidence for me ! i'm watching it as i have my match tomorrow and m really everything he said i hope things turn out well for me too !!
#1 why I lose matches? It's because I'm the one who dictates if I'm going to lose or win. I don't know what idiotic thing springs in my mind a couple of hours before a match, but it just puts me in a "either I'm going to demolish my opponent 6/0 6/0 or he's going to win 6/0 6/0". Then I would go into that said match trying to play lights out tennis and guess what? First set is over in 20 mins, 6/1 for him, with 5 winners, about a dozen unforced errors from me and add about 4 double faults and, well, you get the picture. Then, inner Paire/Fognini/Kyrgios comes out and I start insulting myself, "you're a moron, what are you even doing playing this sport?" and all that stuff. After another 20 mins or so, match is over 6/1 6/0 and I lost to someone who looks like he just picked a racquet 3 weeks ago.
Focus on the positive stuff. Play one point at a time. You are over thinking. Just have fun out there.
Kinda nailed it! Unfortunate, but true. 😭
You’re watching too much TV pro tennis matches. Remember at even the highest non pro levels the unforced error still rules. You should accept this written in stone tennis truth and throttle back to bring the number of unforced errors down. Even the occurrence of more winners vs errors in a pro level match is a relatively recent phenomenon. It would happen occasionally in the 80s and TV commentators would often point it out since it didn’t happen all the time. Even today I’d bet the majority of pro matches is determined by who hits less errors and not more winners. This rule is why Pushers dominate at the rec level.
Relatable.
Wow! Thank you so much Pete! This has to be the most valueable Video of all time. Guys, watch this video over and over again, this man really knows his business. It took me sooo many years to figure out the things he mentioned here, gonna definitely come back every couple of weeks to remind myself of what is really important during matches.
From my own experience the biggest game changer is improving your fitness. Especially on the slow clay courts here in Germany it oftentimes gave me a huge advantage. You can really improve your consistency and just grind people down without having to dramatically imrpove your technique. Over time that helped me to win an insane amount of thight matches through basically just outlasting my opponents.
So the best tips I can give you Guys: Improve your stamina, get a lot of balls into play (crosscourt and high net clearance) and MOST IMPORTANTLY compete for every singe point!!
Great stuff!!! Good comments and advice
Your comments are as good as the video above. Pete really knows the game. I watched the video 6 month ago and now I watched it again. In 30 minutes you get the essential areas which you have to improve, if you want to reach the next level.
1 NOT RELAXED IN MIND & BODY
2 INACTIVE FOOTWORK
3 MID COURT WEAKNESS
4 POOR SHOT SELECTION
5 FEELING LOST IN LOOSING
6 PROVIDING YOUR OPPONENT
7 NO RELIABLE SPIN
8 NO MASTERY OF SPIN
9 MISSING TOO MUCH OVERHEADS
10 WEAK RETURN
Thanks coach Pete! There are so many videos on strokes and technique. But i really love your videos on strategy and mental, which we tend to overlook. Really great stuff, please keep these coming!
Fantastic video Pete! Thanks
Rick Macci is a gift for learners. Thanks for sharing
Thank you for this excellent lesson 🙏 appreciate
I take a lot of lessons. I take lessons whenever I travel and I am always meeting with different instructors in DC. One coach recently said: I only use positive language on the court. We can figure out why something went wrong and reinforce it positively with new movement or new thinking. But there’s no point in saying to yourself “that’s my problem” or “I’m terrible at backhand volleys.” Everything can be worked on and reinforced positively. The negative is always 10 times more powerful than the positive so you have to do a paradigm shift when it comes to attitude.
Now I know why I get beaten by the players I think I should beat every single time. Bad luck for them I came across this video. By the way I am 56 and a great tennis enthusiast ! Thank you very much Pete !
Thanks Pete for all you do ! I’m sixty two with a lot of experience on the court but always learning and open minded . You top ten is dead on in this content . These are all things we should work on and practice . K
thanks Keith keep on swinging,,,,glad you liked it
I like all of these 10 reasons and agree that most of them are very important to win. The only thing I don't understand is that serves haven't been mentioned as one reason, because the serve is one of the most important things in tennis. I know your serve is great, but for me it's the worst part of my game while my return is probably the best. :)
Awesome tips! Totally relevant and spot on.
Awesome video and bang on point. I can see myself returning to this one many times after losses. Thanks Pete.
thanks mate
Hey Peter, awesome video. I can't get to see in the end where to click for next free training series. Please suggest and keep doing such great stuff. Thanks
here is the link....it is really a great training series: crunchtimecoaching.com/tennis-thrive/the-next-level/
Excellent,very informative. Thanks coach
you are welcome mate
You nailed it!! Haven't heard coaching like this in a long time! Thanks for sharing the top 10! I'm in!!😎
Can't agree more, I just cannot relax because too afraid of losing, I know if I can relax, my shots are much better, more pace, more aggressive and probably more consistent. 10 Thank You for the 10 Reasons !
great job!! I have played a lot of tennis and most players that are average or below make these same mistakes that I have played including myself!! Thanks!!
The relax part is the most true! I play so good during Training and then during the Match I am totally tensioned and miss all the shots. Also footwork is totally off. Finishing the shot in 2 steps is a great idea but if you miss it you can easily be caught off guard. The areas idea is just genius I have to study this more as I have problems making winners from area 3. I will try the chip approach shot as a backup solution. Also the perfect game is so true, sometimes you have to just win ugly, perfect play is for training. My second serve is a pushed one, that is a big liability that I have to deal with. My return is my best part of my game, I can actually make more points on return than on my serve. I think you forgot one big point, not thinking during the game and analysing your opponent and learning his game and patterns.
Yes relaxing is a BIG one for almost everyone...thanks for you positive feedback
Wow. I feel relatable to everything u said here! 🙌
Nice video, I think most people will find this very informational :)
Great video, usefull tips. One more that applies to me and many others: you dont prepare early enough, you wait for the ball to hit your side of the court before doing the unit turn.
Des conseils pertinents et avisés Grateful Thank U
coach, I am very happy such a Great guy like you puts such an effort like this quality training lesson free for every body in the world . I am a 5- 5.5 player who spent tons of dollars ( 30 k usd) over 20 years to just learn different things you are giving it for FREE. love you and hope some day we meet up and hit some quality shots and days. best wishes for 2020 and happy new year.
you are making my day mate...have a great one Reza
Well done Pete. Good info
Great coaching! New ideas and so easy to remember. I just practiced your recommendations today and learned what I COULD do in a match now.
Let me know how it goes
@@PeterFreemantennis It's already going! I held off hard serves from a higher level player. Very gratifying. She's not used to seeing her serves come right back! You've changed my thinking.
Excellent video
Great Video!!
Pete that was awesome!
thanks
great breakdown especially showing the offensive/defensive zones of the court...played 25 yrs without learning this 😩
You don’t need a practice partner with a big serve to work on your return. Have them serve from the service line instead of the baseline. The shorter distance helps you to work on shortening your backswing, moving with the ball toss and following the ball to the landing in your service box. Take turns serving a bucket to each side. I would add that when returning or serving always make decisions according to the service score. Don’t go for winners or aces on add out. If you’re up then play aggressive and put the pressure on. If you play baseball you already know about playing to the count on the batter, runners on base, outs and game score. It’s similar in tennis 🎾
Covered it. Great job coach.
Thanks Pete, I Always see this video, over and over, and it's helpfull. Henry from Genoa.
One of the best videos I have seen.
Thanks
great stuff! Thanks!
Thank you ! Watching you from Ethiopia .
Spot on! Great tips Pete...
thanks Dj
Excelent video great coach thanks.
What do you do in your laptop for tennis . Pl. Comment
This video is so helpful!!
110% CORRECT...#1=playing with fear! Youre a middle aged 4.0+ player new to a club or group of guys and you’ve got to be social...play with lower guys in order to get introduced to your level players. You’re playing doubles and every mistake you make your partner grumbles under his breath. The other players are pushers, slicers and old fart dicers and you’re still trying to play your A game...how do you play down against these guys? ...you get frustrated and try to hit shots with all your mite with perfect form and grossly mess up. They’ll spray the ball in every direction 9 out of 10 times then once you adjust they hit a winner BY ACCIDENT, how does a good 4.0+ player play lower level players (yeah, you’re gonna say DONT play with them, but there are times you need to. You’re new to a club and have to play your way to your level. You’re in a casual club tourney and have to play the lower seeds.
How do you play without fear? The tips here in the video are great mechanical tips, but the root of fear is HATE. You HATE to lose. You HATE to play what you think are lessor players. You HATE to make mistakes. All these things make you tighten up, play wildly and with anger. Loosen up, relax, HAVE FUN, stop over thinking and trust in your abilities. I recently saw a TH-cam video of young tennis star Christopher Eubanks playing (I forgot her name) a female basketball star at a challenge contest where they’d play each athletes game of expertise, them play a neutral game as a playoff. I was waiting for Chris to POUND every shot, every forehand, backhand as if he was playing on the tour. Instead he was forced to dink around with her looking foolish. But he clearly is a tennis pro...he had confidence in himself such as not to get frustrated.
I’ve always said, there are THOUSANDS of tennis pros all with the same bag of shots in their skill set. But what differentiates the top 10 players above the rest...is the mental toughness!
One of your best videos I've seen man! Awesome!
I love giving up early. I never really remember if I won or lost, but my body remembers for days when I tried too hard.
Just what I needed. Most of all - evaluating the opponent looking to make them play weaker. I definitely do not problem solve like this well enough because I dont think this way enough. in fact couple players next level from me have said that as good as I play, they 'like' my balls (often into their ideal hitting zones). while I can hit all shots, I dont hit enough of the shots they arent comfortable with. will think back and figure what those are. Thank you Pete!
Great video i took notes
Love it
Amazing video, top top content and really well presented, credit to yourself! Thanks for helping many of us improve :) also love how you just casually whip those forehand winner short balls with barely any backswing, such good technique!! Did you used to play on the tour or what was your rating as your technique etc looks like you could easily be former pro or 2.1,3.1 etc. Anyway great vid!
Thanks a ton! no I never played on the tour but I appreciate the compliment
this guy is a pro coach, no bullsh*t
I am like a 6.0 and all of his points I struggle with from time to time.. and every reason is exactly why ... you beat yourself and results in loosing..
thanks my friend...I appreciate your support
Wow! Priceless points made. I’m pretty sure like many others I ticked off at least 8 of the 10 reasons! Don’t you wish you could have a mini coach on your shoulder to keep reminding you of these reasons!?
Great advice thank you.
This is what I needed thanks Pete
you are most welcome
THANK YOU COACH, GOOD VIDEO
Great Video!!!!
Good tips there!
I lose cuz my buddy is an astronaut and all I get are moonballs, so I always have all day to think about how I’m going to crush my shot and then I shank it in to the stands
Wow, this was a fantastic video! I hope it doesn't get too popular though so my club members don't find it ;)
thanks so much Nick!
Gracias
Imagine if he went:
"1. You suck
2. You suck
3. You suck
4. You suck
5. You suck
6. You suck
7. You suck
8. You suck
9. You suck
10. You suck"
that was my original script lol
this is awesome man
thanks
Amazing video!
thanks!!!
Brillant. Absolutely spot on.
What if you do all those tips and have good control? My flaws are being too relaxed at all times and never feeling any urgency to challenge the opponent. I can act as a wall to return most balls but it's always a long grinding point when I win.
We r on the beach in Cardiff by the Sea in Calif. bummer. Need a great coach to work with .wanna win a gold ball in the 60s next yr
Come out to one of my clinics...we have people from all over the country ...I am in Cincinnati this week
The number one reasons are besides the obvious. You’re not looking at the ball. You’re thinking about the next point before you finished the current point.
Great video !!!
thanks
Wow, what a great, beefy lesson!
#1 real reason you lose, the other guy plays better.
And your teammate sucks at tennis
If you only lose to players who are really better, then you have already mastered the 10 reasons here. I guess you haven't. So you might defeat some of those 'better' players if you work on your deficies. ;)
a lot of great points but I sure wish the audio production was better. It would almost be better to just have quality voice over instead of all the super distracting noise
think this is really cool and it can help lots of players
Who else paused this video to watch the highlights of the Nadal / Thiem match, It was amazing go watch!
ABSOLUTELY PANICKING AND RUSHING WORKS AGAINST YOU , THE 10 COMMANDMENTS NOT TO BE BROKEN LOL , THANK YOU
Does your opponent win most of the points or do you miss most of the points? When you realize it, that's a good starting point and then you can identify from these 10 most common reasons where you need to improve. Maybe it's just three or five out of ten that count for the most points you lose.
Where do you teach?
Atlanta
Excellent summary.
thanks Jack
where are subtitles ?
Good tips- I am currently competing with a consumate junk-baller, so it's all good.
ok.lets use those advices and see.
I couldn't get what is the meaning of "Turkish nightmare" "Burgers and forehands"
How about the meat balls? Did they come with fried rice?
I have 9 of 10 flaws
that is funny
I lose matches BECAUSE I relax 😂
its not how to lose a game but how you can win them
Great lesson, reason 11 I'm shi*!
I’m told that I go to easy on my opponent and my coach is right
I use to play tennis when I was 11 to 15 with my dad. I was so good like a pro. I want to start again now I'm in my late 30's and I know I have what it takes to compete in the Opens. I was that good. My father stopped playing with me b/c his goldigger gf used to tell him not to play w/ me anymore and he was stupid enought to listen to her and getting BOOTY was more important to him then his daughter getting a tennis superstar carieer. I did start playing at 31 again and it all came back to me b/c I had the experience from before and I was really good again. I know I have what it takes to compete in the OPEN"S b/c it is never to late to become a superstar tennis player or to become a superstar in no matter what career to choose to do . Age doesn't matter it just a number.
great stuff thanks for sharing
😭
Love reason 5
Thanks mate
Bro you dont know nothing whats 6x6 like logan paul vs ksi😂
Great content, but … could you please lower your voice and talk slower - Relax - it’s exhausting listening to your machine-gun delivery. Thanks
Pete thanks for the video. However, I don’t see any improvement in your forehand. Didn’t you spend all that money and time to be coached by the best? But your technique doesn’t even look like anything’s changed. Maybe you are not coachable or you reverted back to old habits? Maybe the Turkish Nightmare can coach you up. His technique looks better than yours.
Richard Williams is one of the best coaches tennis has ever seen. Does he have the best forehand technique? Do what Pete says not what he does. Don't Wally, be Happy:)
@@novastarexpress1302 YES SIR
What the hell is the T shirt about?
Turkish nightmares