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Tuesday, 05 October 2010 20:47

How Grunting Could Improve Your Tennis Game

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Perhaps the lethal part of Monica Seles’ tennis game wasn’t her devastating backhand or her footwork along the baseline. Turns out, it may have been her legendary grunts.

Researchers from Hawaii and Canada have found that tennis players who let out some sort of audible grunt as they strike the ball

can elicit a longer response delay from their opponent. They showed videos of players striking a tennis ball to more than 30 University of British Columbia undergrads and asked them to indicate, as fast as possible, where the shot would end up on the other side of the court.

For those clips that included a grunt, respondents had a slower response and were less accurate about the location of the forthcoming shot. The authors, while concluding that future on-court study needs to be conducted, posit one possible explanation, that “the interfering auditory stimulus masks the sound of the ball being struck by the racket or it distracts an opponent’s attention away from the sound of the ball.”

Maybe they can also explain why Andy Roddick has yet to win a major.

Image: Flickr/leprecon, CC

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Authors: Erik Malinowski

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