One Tennis Academy
A compact, international high‑performance base inside Boca Lago Country Club, One Tennis Academy offers dual‑surface training, transparent pricing, and practical boarding for juniors and aspiring pros in Boca Raton.

Introduction
One Tennis Academy is a compact, high-performance base tucked inside Boca Lago Country Club on the west side of Boca Raton. The setting feels private and focused, with courts surrounded by quiet neighborhoods and palm-lined fairways rather than busy streets. That calm is part of the appeal. The academy was designed to offer serious training without the sprawl or spectacle of the mega-camp model. Families come for a clear daily rhythm, coaches who stay on court, and access to both clay and hard courts in one place.
Founding story and leadership
The academy traces its roots to 2020, when former WTA professional Yuliya Beygelzimer stepped into the director role with a simple promise: keep group sizes tight, hire coaches who have done the work at tour level, and publish schedules and prices transparently. The leadership team built a program that feels intentionally international. Many athletes arrive from Latin America and Europe to chase the dense Florida tournament calendar while keeping a training base that is small enough to know your habits. High performance lead Terhemba Makurdi adds tour context from stints with top professionals, and head coach Johnie Brown anchors the day-to-day on-court work. The message to families is consistent. You are not buying a brand name as much as you are securing daily contact hours with coaches who have operated in the sport’s real pressure points.
Location, climate, and why Boca matters
Boca Raton is a logistics dream for tennis. The climate allows year-round outdoor training, with mild winters and long summer days that build match toughness. Heat and thunderstorms do shape the schedule, but the staff plan around it, shifting classroom sessions and mental training indoors when necessary. Three major airports sit within a practical radius, which means boarders and traveling pros can arrive without long drives. Just as important is what sits within a short competitive radius. South Florida hosts a steady churn of USTA events, ITF Junior stops, and college tournaments. Players can compete often, then be back on court the next day to turn results into new drills.
Facilities and surfaces
The training base is built around a 20-court complex with 16 Har-Tru clay courts and 4 hard courts, several with lights for evening play. That dual-surface setup is a genuine advantage for player development. Coaches run pattern work on clay to stretch points, train spacing, and force problem-solving, then compress the same patterns on hard courts to take time away. Athletes learn to adjust height, spin, and intent rather than simply repeating a single-speed game.
Beyond courts, the country club footprint adds practical comforts. A dedicated clubhouse, locker rooms, a pro-shop environment, and a pool area provide places to recover between sessions and reset during long weeks. Fitness work happens in spaces set up for tennis-specific strength and mobility, with emphasis on footwork ladders, medicine-ball sequencing, hip and trunk stability, and shoulder-prehab routines that keep players healthy through tournament blocks.
Boarding and daily rhythm
Boarding is off-site in academy-run dorms about 15 minutes from the courts. Rooms are shared, a dorm keeper is on site, and a shuttle runs players back and forth. Kitchens and laundry are part of the setup, so older juniors build independence around meals and routines. It is practical rather than luxurious, and that is the point. This is a base for training and competing, not a resort.
The full-time day typically follows a two-a-day tennis format with two additional fitness blocks. A sample schedule might run 7:45 to 9:45 on court, 10:00 to 11:00 in fitness, then a second court block mid-afternoon followed by conditioning or mobility. Weekly yoga helps with recovery and body control. Rain does not become downtime. Coaches use weather windows for film review, tactical planning, and mental rehearsal. The goal is a week with no wasted days.
Coaching staff and philosophy
The staff’s core strength is clarity. Sessions are designed with a theme, the theme is reinforced through ball baskets and live points, and players are accountable for how they train. You will hear the same language repeated until it sticks: movement quality, spacing to contact, ball trajectory, court position, and smart patterns under fatigue. Coaches chart practice sets and matches often enough to catch trends quickly. They also make an important distinction for parents. Staff résumés include meaningful tour experience and work with top-tier players, but those affiliations are not promises about outcomes. The promise is process. If an athlete buys into the daily structure and competes often, improvements follow in measurable ways.
Programs and who they serve
One Tennis Academy offers a stack of programs designed around commitment level and tournament goals.
- High Performance Program. This is the flagship track for juniors who treat tennis as a full-time pursuit. Expect two on-court sessions daily, nine weekly fitness blocks, one yoga session, and frequent match play. Athletes in this group plan calendars that include sectional, national, and international events.
- Developmental Program. Built for committed younger players who are moving beyond recreational lessons but are not yet ready for the full high-performance load. The structure mirrors the flagship track with court and fitness volume scaled to age and readiness.
- Afterschool Program. A school-year option that moves the core training block to late afternoons, mixing technical themes, live-ball drills, and a compact fitness hour.
- Pro and College Base. Visiting pros, college players, and rising juniors on school breaks drop in for one or more weeks to lock in quality reps and sparring partners. The academy can add boarding when space is available.
- Pre-tournament and seasonal camps. These are built around Florida’s headline junior weeks, with match-toughness sessions, serve and return focuses, and structured tie-break play to sharpen decision-making before main draws.
- Private lessons. Players use one-on-one time for targeted rebuilds, most often on the serve, return, and two to three priority patterns.
The academy publishes prices openly and updates them as needed. Recent schedules and rates indicate that families can book by the month or week, with clear add-on options for boarding and private lessons. Always confirm current numbers, especially around peak periods when demand spikes.
Training and player development approach
The training model marries disciplined repetition with frequent competition. Key pillars include:
- Technical detail. Coaches stress swing shapes that travel under pressure, repeatable contact points, and footwork that gives the body time to prepare. Basket work is used deliberately to isolate a single variable, then progressions move quickly into live exchanges.
- Tactical clarity. Players learn to build points around two or three core patterns that suit their identity. On clay, the patterns may emphasize height and depth to create short balls. On hard courts, the same patterns are trimmed to take time away and finish on the next ball.
- Physical preparation. Fitness is tennis-specific. Expect acceleration and deceleration work, multi-directional sprints, lateral plyometrics, medicine-ball sequencing for rotational power, and mobility circuits for hips, thoracic spine, and shoulders. Recovery is taught rather than assumed.
- Mental skills. Daily habits are the foundation. Players rehearse routines between points, practice score awareness, and run post-match reflections to identify one or two corrections for the next outing. Pressure drills simulate breaker finishes and no-ad situations so nerves are trained, not ignored.
- Measurement. Coaches keep simple metrics such as first-serve percentage, break-point conversion, plus-minus on unforced errors in the first four balls, and patterns used to finish points. Those numbers inform the next week’s themes.
Competition pathway and calendar
South Florida’s tournament density is one of the academy’s greatest assets. Players rarely need to travel far to find matches that count. The academy builds pre-event camps around key junior dates, lines up match play on site, and encourages athletes to watch stronger players compete. When the calendar cooperates, the campus hosts events, which means athletes can experience a pro-level environment without leaving their training base. Families should expect the staff to help map an annual plan that phases training blocks around targeted events rather than chasing every draw that appears on the schedule.
For families comparing options, it can help to see how One’s competition-first approach stacks up with other Florida choices. If you want a larger residential campus with extensive on-site academics, you can compare with Evert Tennis Academy. If a mega-campus with expansive sport science and multi-sport infrastructure is the priority, consider IMG Academy Tennis in Bradenton. For another South Florida program with a strong college pipeline, look at the Gooding Todero Academy pathway.
Academics and the college pathway
One Tennis Academy is a training center rather than a school. Full-time juniors typically enroll in online education or attend local schools that allow flexible schedules. The academy supports families with planning, from syncs on school workload to help with travel logistics. On the college side, staff encourage early alignment between game identity and target programs. Players assemble film, results, and coach references well before junior year. The goal is realistic placement where tennis fit, academic interest, and team culture intersect.
Costs, access, and how to budget
One of the academy’s strengths is transparent pricing. Current materials show clear monthly and weekly options for each program tier, boarding priced on a weekly and monthly basis, and straightforward private-lesson rates that vary by coach seniority. For budgeting, families often start with a baseline that includes the core program fee plus boarding if needed, then layer tournament entry fees, stringing, and occasional private lessons. Meal costs are worth attention because boarding is self-catered. The shuttle covers training runs, but rides to errands or airports can add up, so plan those into the travel line item. Scholarships are not widely advertised, though half-time or custom packages may be possible when discussed in advance.
Alumni, outcomes, and reasonable expectations
This academy is young compared with legacy programs, yet it has already placed players into solid college programs and produced consistent progress for sectional and national-level juniors. The staff’s résumés include experience with top WTA and ATP athletes, which matters less as a list of names and more as a signal about standards. Families should treat those affiliations as proof of coaching fluency rather than as a pipeline. What you can expect is incremental improvement tracked across months, honest feedback about competitive readiness, and help converting practice themes into match behaviors.
Culture and community
The day-to-day tone is competitive and warm. You will hear several languages around the courts, and the mix of boarders and locals creates a healthy flow of sparring partners. Punctuality, deliberate warm-ups, and accurate scorekeeping are non-negotiables. Coaches are present for matches and often debrief under the shade near the clubhouse rather than sending players off with vague advice. Because the academy shares a country club campus, families have pleasant spaces to work or relax between sessions. That balance keeps weeks productive without turning the experience into a grind.
What sets One Tennis Academy apart
- Dual-surface training at one site, which allows weekly periodization without commuting across town.
- A compact scale that preserves individual attention while still supporting robust groups.
- Transparent schedules and pricing that let families plan realistically.
- Practical boarding with a shuttle model that works for visiting players and long-stay trainees.
- A tournament-rich ecosystem on the doorstep, meaning the chance to practice, compete, measure, and adjust with minimal downtime.
Future outlook and vision
At its five-year milestone, the academy appears committed to measured growth. The leadership favors quality over headcount, adding targeted camps and event weeks where they reinforce the training mission rather than distract from it. Expect continued investment in coaching staff, fitness support, and match-analysis tools as the player base matures. With Florida continuing to redevelop older sports facilities, the stability of a country club home base also looks like a prudent long-term choice.
Is it the right fit for you
Choose One Tennis Academy if you want a serious daily structure, skilled coaches who stay on court, and the ability to switch between clay and hard courts without leaving the property. The off-site boarding model rewards self-reliant juniors who are comfortable managing meals and routines. If you need a fully integrated academic campus or hotel-style housing, another option may suit you better. But if your goals include climbing sectional and national rankings, earning a college roster spot, or sharpening a pro-style game through frequent competition, this is a strong shortlist choice.
Bottom line
One Tennis Academy offers an efficient, no-nonsense path for players who thrive on structure and accountability. The combination of dual surfaces, experienced coaches, and a tournament-dense location creates a training loop that builds real improvements. Visit on a normal training day, watch how sessions are run, and speak with the staff about your goals. If the tone feels right and the schedule matches your ambitions, you will find a reliable base in Boca Raton that can support real progress over months and years.
Features
- 20-court complex: 16 Har-Tru clay courts and 4 quick-dry hard courts with lights
- Tennis clubhouse with swimming pool, jacuzzi, pro shop, café, and locker rooms
- Full-time and half-time high-performance programs
- Developmental program for younger juniors (approx. 8–12 age range)
- Afterschool program (school-year training blocks)
- Pro and college base weeks (flexible week-by-week options)
- Pre-tournament camps and themed prep weeks for major Florida junior events (Eddie Herr, Orange Bowl, USTA events)
- Tennis-specific fitness training focused on mobility, stability, flexibility, and injury prevention
- Weekly yoga integrated into program schedules
- Mental skills and match-strategy sessions (moved indoors on rainy days)
- Private lessons with coaches who have professional tour experience
- Off-site boarding dorms (typically 2–3 per room) with a dorm keeper and shuttle to the academy
- Airport pickup and drop-off services available (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach) for an additional cost
- Transparent public pricing for programs, camps, boarding, and private lessons
- College recruiting and placement support via a partnership with University Sports Program
- On-site and frequent local tournament hosting, including pro-level weeks
- Structured daily schedule with multiple on-court sessions and fitness blocks
Programs
High Performance Program — Full Time
Price: $850 per week or $2,700 per monthLevel: ProDuration: Year‑round; monthly or weekly entryAge: 12–19 yearsFull‑time, two‑a‑day on‑court training combined with twice‑daily tennis‑specific fitness designed for committed juniors aiming at regional, national, and international competition. Weekly structure typically includes 10 on‑court tennis sessions, 9 fitness sessions, and one yoga session per week, plus classroom strategy and mental‑skills work on rainy days. Boarding can be added subject to availability.
High Performance Program — Half Time
Price: $600 per week or $1,800 per monthLevel: AdvancedDuration: Year‑round; monthly or weekly entryAge: 12–19 yearsCondensed version of the full‑time track for players balancing school or other commitments. Provides a high‑quality training day with focused on‑court live‑ball work and a tennis‑specific fitness session, plus access to yoga and strategy sessions. Ideal for players maintaining competitive schedules while limiting daily hours.
Developmental Program — Full Time
Price: $2,950 per month or $31,500 per yearLevel: IntermediateDuration: Year‑round; semester, monthly, or annual optionsAge: 8–12 yearsDaily, full‑time program for younger juniors ready to increase training volume. Emphasis on stroke foundations, serve/return, footwork, spacing and basic point construction. Typical week mirrors the high‑performance structure scaled to age and maturity, with options to add private lessons for targeted technical work.
Developmental Program — Half Time
Price: $2,100 per month or $22,500 per yearLevel: BeginnerDuration: Year‑round; semester, monthly, or annual optionsAge: 8–12 yearsA scaled program delivering one on‑court session and one fitness session per day (or equivalent weekly total), focused on coordination, fundamentals, and gradual skill progression. Suited to younger players who require structured development without a full‑time schedule.
Afterschool Program
Price: $840–$1,320 per month; school‑year packages availableLevel: Beginner–IntermediateDuration: School‑year; 3 or 5 days per week (or drop‑in)Age: Juniors yearsAfterschool training that fits around standard school hours. Sessions generally run in the late afternoon and combine basket feeding, footwork, live‑ball drills, supervised match play and a short fitness block. Options include three days per week, five days per week, weekly or drop‑in pricing.
Pro and College Training Base
Price: $750 per weekLevel: ProDuration: Weekly blocks; year‑roundAge: 17+ (college players and professionals) yearsFlexible week‑by‑week training base for traveling professionals and collegiate players needing South Florida preparation. Players integrate into appropriate academy groups for drilling, match play and fitness, with the option to add boarding subject to availability.
Pre‑Tournament Camps
Price: $650–$955 per week; day rates and 10‑day packages availableLevel: Advanced–ProDuration: 1 week (seasonal; scheduled around major junior events)Age: Juniors and Collegiate yearsIntensive preparation weeks timed to local and regional junior events. Camps focus on high‑rep live‑ball patterns, match simulation, tactical sessions and end‑of‑week video/analysis. Suitable for players seeking a short, concentrated block of competition‑specific preparation. Day rates and multi‑day packages are offered for flexibility.
Private Lessons
Price: $80–$200 per lesson; multi‑lesson packages availableLevel: All levelsDuration: By appointmentAge: All ages yearsOne‑to‑one and semi‑private coaching for technical adjustments, serve and return work, tactical refinement or short‑term performance blocks. Lessons are scheduled by appointment and multi‑lesson packages are available for families planning concentrated progress.