I have been wearing glasses most of my life.
If I play tennis, I do the following things to cope with the spectacles.
1) Wear spectacle hooks.
They keep the glasses secured cos you don't want them to drop on the hard tennis court and break your lenses.
Happened to me once. Never again.
Here's a link link to a cheap online merchant that sells in Singapore.
SGD$1.50 per pair, but you got to pay a bit more for the shipping.
I always bring an extra pair in the tennis bag. They are pretty light, anyways.
2) Bring a clean and dry towel.
The glasses could get blurry with oil and sweat.
In the tropical climate I play, it happens. Frequently.
Towel them during changeovers.
3) Fitover sunglasses for mid-day games.
I usually play in the late afternoon to evening.
I wouldn't recommend games in the Singapore mid-day sun cos of the sun exposure.
When I was younger, I played too many times in early afternoon sun, and well ... I reckon I look a lot older than my age as a result of it. Folks I know, tell me too. Too late for me.
But ... recently, I got invited to play with an old classmate that was came back to Singapore for a short visit, and the only time our host could get a court was at 1-3pm.
I used a fitover sunglasses I got from ebay and it was working very well.
I even forgot I was wearing one until the game was over.
The link looks expired, but you can still search for "fitover sunglasses" in ebay or amazon.
ebay seems to have cheaper ones.
So from my experience, this product will not only shield your eyes from the bright sun, it also allows you to see the ball.
The price as of writing this is USD$13 with shipping.
Nice.
Saturday, 21 January 2012
Monday, 16 January 2012
Read up - A tennis classic
Obviously, a blog like this should have a reference to the master pusher himself.
It's great reading for the recreational player.
For folks just picking up the game, it's helpful in terms of understanding this deceptively simple yet complex game we all love.
Cement walls for tennis fences?
This must only happen in Singapore ...
I mean, don't these guys know that the balls are just gonna rebound back into the middle of the court or bounce them out of court into the bushes or carpark?
C'mon guys, please just put the regular chain fence.
The chain fences absorb the impact and land the balls usually nicely into the sides of the court.
Your tennis playing residents and guests will thank you for it.
Sunday, 15 January 2012
Tennis after Wet weather
Playing after wet weather?
All of us have been through it. At least, in rainy Singapore...
You are all ready for the game, then one or two hour before the game, it starts to pour.
And it stops ... 30 minutes before the game is supposed to start.
In Singapore, you get two kinds of weather - dry or wet.
Playing tennis in Singapore means you got to get use to dealing with a wet court.
The folks I play with have two general attitudes to wet courts, one will like to work the court rollers til the court is nice and dry. The others start playing in the puddles after some cursory rolling cos, after all, it could start raining again during play, right?
So ... what are things to expect when you play on wet/semi-dry courts?
1) The Balls will Skid.
Initially, if the court is really full of puddles, balls may skid easily and add a very unpredictable bounce.
This happens commonly on serve or off strokes that have underspin.
Dealing with it requires some adjustment. Such as backing a half step to a full step while preparing for a return.
Mentally allow yourself more time to adjust after the bounce.
If it really skids bad and you can't reach the ball, it's ok, your opponent needs to deal with it too. So here's how to use it to your benefit.
Think more slice serve, especially on the second serve, and the occasional underspin on the ground strokes.
Aim at the puddles. haha. I mean, if you really can, wow, I'm impressed with your technique.
2) Bounce, or lack of.
The water absorbed by the wet balls (for lack of a better word) will make them travel slower, bounce lower, heavier to hit and service tosses lower.
I don't really like to warm up my serve on wet balls.
I feel that my regular service motion may get spoilt. I'm finicky that way.
Ground strokes that you hit that should be landing deep will not.
Hit harder.
Or hit higher, aim for a higher clearance above the net to get a deeper ball in.
Btw, in my experience topspin somehow does not work well on wet balls.
On the serve, be prepared to get your face wet when your racket hits the fuzzy green thing and squeezes out the water onto you.
You should get it more when you go for the slice serve as you swipe across the ball.
Just think of the crazy spin your serve will get when it skids off the puddles to comfort yourself ... and just wipe off the dirty court water off with your sleeve or dry towel during changeovers. No pain no gain.
Playing against big hitters?
Think pusher tennis ... but with a variation.
As a pusher on a wet court, I like to hit soft and aim at the "T".
Big hitters aren't usually used to hitting wet balls.
They will try to put away the short ball and ... based on their own adjustments while hitting the wet balls before attempting the put away, will usually overhit. Point to you.
All of us have been through it. At least, in rainy Singapore...
You are all ready for the game, then one or two hour before the game, it starts to pour.
And it stops ... 30 minutes before the game is supposed to start.
In Singapore, you get two kinds of weather - dry or wet.
Playing tennis in Singapore means you got to get use to dealing with a wet court.
The folks I play with have two general attitudes to wet courts, one will like to work the court rollers til the court is nice and dry. The others start playing in the puddles after some cursory rolling cos, after all, it could start raining again during play, right?
So ... what are things to expect when you play on wet/semi-dry courts?
1) The Balls will Skid.
Initially, if the court is really full of puddles, balls may skid easily and add a very unpredictable bounce.
This happens commonly on serve or off strokes that have underspin.
Dealing with it requires some adjustment. Such as backing a half step to a full step while preparing for a return.
Mentally allow yourself more time to adjust after the bounce.
If it really skids bad and you can't reach the ball, it's ok, your opponent needs to deal with it too. So here's how to use it to your benefit.
Think more slice serve, especially on the second serve, and the occasional underspin on the ground strokes.
Aim at the puddles. haha. I mean, if you really can, wow, I'm impressed with your technique.
2) Bounce, or lack of.
The water absorbed by the wet balls (for lack of a better word) will make them travel slower, bounce lower, heavier to hit and service tosses lower.
I don't really like to warm up my serve on wet balls.
I feel that my regular service motion may get spoilt. I'm finicky that way.
Ground strokes that you hit that should be landing deep will not.
Hit harder.
Or hit higher, aim for a higher clearance above the net to get a deeper ball in.
Btw, in my experience topspin somehow does not work well on wet balls.
On the serve, be prepared to get your face wet when your racket hits the fuzzy green thing and squeezes out the water onto you.
You should get it more when you go for the slice serve as you swipe across the ball.
Just think of the crazy spin your serve will get when it skids off the puddles to comfort yourself ... and just wipe off the dirty court water off with your sleeve or dry towel during changeovers. No pain no gain.
Playing against big hitters?
Think pusher tennis ... but with a variation.
As a pusher on a wet court, I like to hit soft and aim at the "T".
Big hitters aren't usually used to hitting wet balls.
They will try to put away the short ball and ... based on their own adjustments while hitting the wet balls before attempting the put away, will usually overhit. Point to you.
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