For tennis parents

YOU'RE ALREADY HAVING THE CONVERSATION.

The one in your head — driving home from a tournament, the week before a big draw, the match she should have won but tightened up and pushed away. Bring it here instead. Make it your edge.

Five real examples — pick one to watch ↓
After a tournament match

Your kid's information stays yours. We don't sell it, and we never use it to train AI models. And the kid never logs in — this is your space, not theirs.

For
Parents of tennis kids, ages 6 to 18. The kid never logs in. It remembers everything — and gets to know your kid as an athlete better than anyone except you.
Every sport we cover
Made by a parent, for parents

EVERYBODY HAS A PIECE OF YOUR KID.
NOBODY HAS THE WHOLE PICTURE.

If your kid's serious about their sport, you know the drill — camps, trainers, teams, leagues, tournaments, most nights and most weekends. You're all in, because they're all in.

Here's what nobody tells you: every one of those people only sees a slice. This trainer has their plan. That coach has this season. The tournament is one weekend. None of them know where your kid was six months ago, where they're headed, or what they actually want. You're the only one holding the whole picture — and that's a lot to hold.

That's what I built ParentEdge to do. You tell it about your kid, and it remembers — month to month, year to year. So when you're wondering what to do Tuesday, what to say before the event, or how to handle the ride home after a rough one, it answers knowing your whole kid, not a snapshot.

It's not another app for your kid to stare at. It's for you — to help you help them. That's the edge.

— Chris, ParentEdge founder · a sports parent, same as you
From one real season

WHAT IT ACTUALLY
MAKES FOR YOU.

Ask in plain language, have it in seconds — every one built for your player, from everything you've told it. This all comes from one junior player's real season: a 12-year-old baseliner we're calling Nina. This is the actual depth you get, not demo copy.

The living summary of who your kid is as a player — built from everything you’ve shared, and yours to hand a coach. This is the real card, not a mockup.

Also produced: skill roadmaps · goal worksheets · pre-round routines · weekly summariesSee all outputs →
Why month six sounds different from month one

ONE THREAD,
BUILT OVER YEARS.

The way we remember one parent's thread — not a feed, a picture of a kid that keeps getting sharper, until we know them as an athlete better than anyone except you.

MAR
First sessions
Intake — tennis, age 12, junior tournaments. You saw it right away: clean strokes off both wings, and then a second serve she double-faulted, pushing on the big points, and nerves between them. All the strokes, not the wins. We kept all of it.
APR
A serve she can trust
Built a spin second serve — brush up the back of the ball, margin over the net, so she can go for it instead of double-faulting or floating it up to be attacked. The free points start drying up.
APR
Playing offense
First-strike patterns — take the short ball, step in, hit through it. On the big points, the answer is more offense, not less. Retraining the exact instinct that used to shrink.
MAY
One point at a time
The between-points routine — turn, strings, breath, next point. Alone out there, this is how a lost point stops snowballing into a lost game.
MAY
Losing a point the right way
Big-point simulations — where losing on offense counts as a win. She started going for her shot on pressure points instead of pushing and hoping.
JUN
It clicked
The three-setter she won — down in the third, kept playing offense, held with the spin serve, closed it out. A match she'd have lost in March, won with the exact things we'd built. That's the whole season in one match.
Whatever they're chasing
Elite success?We got you.
Making the team?We got you.
Feeling good about themselves?We got you.
Sharper skills, the right way?We got you.

Whatever you need for them in their sport — ParentEdge is there.

What it sounds like

EVERY CONVERSATION
SHARPENS THE PICTURE.

It remembers last week, the goal you set months ago, and the event that's coming up — and it factors all of it into what it tells you today.

It remembers the pattern
"She lost to a grinder again — cleaner strokes, worse result. I don’t get it."
You're right that it's not the strokes — it never has been. It's the big points: she gets tentative, double-faults or pushes, and lets the grinder outlast her. Good news: that's the most fixable thing in her game. She doesn't need better strokes, she needs a second serve she trusts and the nerve to play offense. Want the plan we've been building?
It knows what's coming
"What should she work on this week?"
The tournament's Saturday, so I'd keep it sharp, not heavy — spin second serves and a few big-point points, nothing that plants a new stroke thought two days out. Want a light session that leaves her trusting her serve and playing offense?
From real parents

Everyone always complimented her strokes, and then she'd lose to a grinder. This was the season she started winning the close ones — she trusts her serve now, she goes for it when it's tight, and I finally know what to say instead of nothing. That was the moment I got it.

Anthony V.
Tennis parent · Age 12

START THE
CONVERSATION.

Five minutes of setup and we'll already have a picture of your athlete. From there, we keep going — every car ride, every tough week, every weekend. Try it free today.

Your kid's information stays yours. We don't sell it, and we never use it to train AI models. And the kid never logs in — this is your space, not theirs.