Making a Racket about the Racquet
I don’t want to admit that I am a pretentious tennis snob, but comes down to using “racquet” or the “racket” spelling, then there is really no contest. Sometimes you just have to be who you are.
An engineer overthinks tennis in a daily journal.
I don’t want to admit that I am a pretentious tennis snob, but comes down to using “racquet” or the “racket” spelling, then there is really no contest. Sometimes you just have to be who you are.
Today we come to the first of two places in the Friend at Court where material changes to the ball are covered. May a player cause a ball to become wet by using the ball to wipe perspiration from the player’s body?
Exploring the question of why red seems to be associated with regular duty or clay courts eventually leads to Penn.
2 responsesToday I am exploring the possibility that I may have possibly once won a point due to a faulty rules interpretation from a USTA official.
2 responsesMy engineer brain took one look at the ITF ball specification table and all the “WTF” synapses simultaneously fired off. Fortunately, the ITF provides a very detailed description of the testing process.
No discussion of the ITF rules and standards for the tennis ball can be complete without discussing the hubbub surrounding the controversial introduction of a new ball at the French Open in 2011.
My engineer brain is fascinated with how things are made. The process for manufacturing tennis balls is complex to the point that I was astonishedRead More
If you give an engineer some data in tabular form, she will probably put it into a spreadsheet and plunge into statistical analysis.
Did you know that there are 4 types of balls approved for 78 foot court play?
2 responses