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Create and share a session report

Turn your sessions into a clear report you can keep or share with a coach — key metrics, findings, trends, and drills.

  • Type: Walkthrough
  • Sport: All sports
  • Level: Intermediate
  • Area: Share & Coach
  • Watch: 0:33
  • Read: 1 min
  • Updated: Jun 2026

What you'll learn

  • How to generate a report from your sessions
  • What a good report includes
  • How to share it with a coach or keep a record

Before you start

  • At least one saved session or analysis to summarize.
  • The recipient in mind (coach, parent, or program) so you share the right view.

Step by step

  1. Generating a report

    Select one or more sessions and choose "Generate Report." The report includes your key metrics, identified issues, trends, and drill recommendations.

  2. Sharing with a coach

    Download the report as a PDF or copy the summary to share with your coach. This gives your coach context about what you've been working on.

Try it now

Put this into practice in SwingVantage — free to start, no account needed.

Try it now

Common mistakes

  • Trying to change everything at once.

    Follow the one-fix idea: work a single priority, then retest before moving on.

  • Skipping the retest, so you never confirm the change stuck.

    Re-record the same way after practicing and compare against where you started.

What happens next

Save & share your progress

Keep a record you can revisit, back up, or share with a coach.

The next lessons that build on this one.

Trust & accuracy

SwingVantage is honest about certainty: findings are labeled by how they were produced and how confident they are. Treat them as a strong starting point you confirm with your own retest, not a final verdict.

Frequently asked

Can I share a report with my coach?

Yes — download it or copy the summary so your coach has context on exactly what you’ve been working on.

Full transcript
  1. Select one or more sessions and generate a report with metrics, issues, trends, and drills.
  2. Download it as a PDF or copy a summary to send to a coach.
  3. It gives whoever helps you the full context of what you’ve been working on.
  4. Reports are a simple bridge between solo practice and real coaching.
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