Engineering tennis - slowing the game down

HAAKE, Steve, CHADWICK, S. G., DIGNALL, R. J., GOODWILL, S. and ROSE, P. (2000). Engineering tennis - slowing the game down. Sports engineering, 3 (2), 131-143.

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Link to published version:: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1460-2687.2000.00040.x

Abstract

Analysis of results from the four major tennis tournaments shows that the percentage of tie breaks in the men's game has been increasing over the last 30 years. It is hypothesised that this is due to the increasing speed of the serve in the game. There was found to be a significant difference in tie breaks between slower clay surfaces and faster grass surfaces. The women's game, on the other hand, showed no increase in tie-breaks and no difference in the number of tie-breaks between court surfaces.

A larger tennis ball was assessed to see its effect in slowing the game down. Standard and 6% larger pressurised tennis balls were used in experiments to study impacts with a fixed and a freely suspended tennis racket. The coefficient of restitution of the larger ball was found to be larger in the fixed racket tests and analysis of a serve showed that the larger ball would be served marginally faster than a standard sized ball.

Drag forces on tennis balls in flight were analysed by mounting tennis balls in a wind tunnel at wind speeds up to 66.6 ms−1 (150 mph). It was found that different brands of standard size tennis ball and a larger tennis ball had a drag coefficient of approximately 0.55. Raising or reducing the nap of the ball changed the drag coefficient by about 10%. Impact experiments of tennis balls on court surfaces showed that the larger and standard tennis balls rebounded at approximately the same speed at 70% of impact speed on acrylic and 64% of impact speed on clay. Both sizes of ball bounced steeper off clay than on acrylic. It appeared that the larger ball rebounded steeper than the standard ball, although evidence for this was clouded by considerable scatter in the data.

A computer trajectory program was used to analyse simulated first and second serves at nominally 53.3 ms−1 (120 mph) and 40 ms−1 (90 mph). It was found that a larger ball would increase travel time to the baseline by approximately 10 ms for a first serve and up to 16 ms for a second serve. This increase was found to be just less than half that between acrylic and clay for the same ball. Travel time is increased further if the ball is increased in diameter. It was concluded therefore that the introduction of a larger ball could slow the game of tennis for all strokes and increase the time available for the receiver to return the ball.

Item Type: Article
Research Institute, Centre or Group - Does NOT include content added after October 2018: Centre for Sports Engineering Research
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1460-2687.2000.00040.x
Page Range: 131-143
Depositing User: Carole Harris
Date Deposited: 24 Jun 2010 14:10
Last Modified: 18 Mar 2021 09:30
URI: https://shura.shu.ac.uk/id/eprint/2182

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