Current:Home > InvestTennis balls are causing arm injuries, top players say. Now, a review is underway -GrowthInsight
Tennis balls are causing arm injuries, top players say. Now, a review is underway
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 18:04:19
You can't play tennis without tennis balls.
Yet an increasingly vocal group of players says that the tennis balls used on tour are behind a major problem: They're causing injuries. Top players contend the lack of consistency in the balls is linked to a rash of significant shoulder, elbow and wrist injuries.
As the season gets into full swing Sunday with the start of the Australian Open, players are ramping up pressure for changes.
"Right now if you go into the locker room, I want to say almost half the guys on tour ... are dealing with some kind of arm issue," said Vasek Pospisil, the co-founder of the Professional Tennis Players Association, a players advocacy group.
The world's No. 1 men's player, Novak Djokovic, who co-founded the players association with Pospisil, also says the tennis balls are a problem.
"There is certainly a connection between frequent injuries of the wrist, elbow and shoulder with ball changes," Djokovic told the sports website Sportal last year. "I am absolutely in favor of choosing one ball with which we will play all ATP tournaments."
After months of public outcry from players over the balls, their complaints finally appear to be having an impact.
The ATP and the WTA, the governing bodies for men's and women's professional tennis, respectively, last week announced a strategic review of the balls used on the tours, a move taken, they said, as "a direct result of player input."
In a joint statement, they said the goal is to deliver greater ball consistency, "while not adversely affecting revenue streams for tournaments."
In response to the announcement, Pospisil tweeted on X: "Really hope they are thorough with this and that's it's not just smoke and mirrors."
The balls keep changing
Pospisil, 33, said when he joined the tour 16 years ago, elbow injuries were rare, almost unheard of. He won the 2014 men's Wimbledon doubles title with partner Jack Sock, but he has suffered from elbow ligament and tendon tears that have derailed his career for the past two years.
The balls used during the grueling tennis season (which lasts about 11 months) often change from tournament to tournament, from week to week, depending on contracts that tournaments have with manufacturers.
With their finely calibrated strokes, players are attuned to slight variations in a ball's weight or pressure. And a lack of consistency isn't their only complaint. Chief among them is that the balls feel heavy upon impact.
"I have to hit the ball with significantly more force for the ball to even do anything, to try to make an effective shot," said Pospisil. "So right away you're applying a lot more force. There's more pressure on impact."
"Like a grapefruit"
Daniil Medvedev, the men's world No. 3, last year said the balls used in a tournament in Beijing quickly expanded and became fluffy, making aggressive, point-ending shots much more difficult. "They become like a grapefruit. ... We're basically playing 30-shot rallies because it's almost impossible to hit a winner."
The extended rallies increase fatigue and the pressure on a player's arm.
Taylor Fritz, the top American male player, posted on X about struggling with wrist problems due to frequent ball changes.
Robby Sikka, a physician with a focus on sports medicine who has consulted with the Professional Tennis Players Association, said, "There's no question that the changing of ball technology and the lack of consistency has had an impact on increasing injury risk to players."
He thinks tours should move quickly to determine whether certain balls may be unsafe. "We should pull those from the market just like the FDA does, or recall. ... We can't have the Wild, Wild West of tennis balls and expect this to be OK."
To Pospisil, there is a path to standardizing the balls without jeopardizing the revenue generated for tournaments from unique deals with manufacturers: a stricter standard ball, designed for specific surfaces — grass, clay or hard court, and for indoors.
All the manufacturers would make the same ball, under the same, more exacting specifications. To ensure exclusivity and visibility, they would stamp their brand name on the ball.
Brands used in tournament play include Dunlop, Wilson, Penn and Slazenger. The companies that make those balls were unavailable for comment.
veryGood! (641)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- The Supreme Court upholds a gun control law intended to protect domestic violence victims
- Prosecution rests in the trial of a woman accused of killing her Boston police officer boyfriend
- Still need your landline? California regulators just stopped AT&T from pulling the plug
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Still need your landline? California regulators just stopped AT&T from pulling the plug
- Vitamix recalls 569,000 blending containers and blade bases after dozens of lacerations
- Here’s the landscape 2 years after the Supreme Court overturned a national right to abortion
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Suspect in murders in Oklahoma and Alabama nabbed in Arkansas
Ranking
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Reality TV’s Julie Chrisley must be resentenced in bank fraud, tax evasion case, appeals judges rule
- New coffee center in Northern California aims to give a jolt to research and education
- American woman killed by elephant in Zambia, the second such attack this year
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Prosecution rests in the trial of a woman accused of killing her Boston police officer boyfriend
- 'Bachelor' star Clayton Echard wins paternity suit; judge refers accuser for prosecution
- MLB at Rickwood Field: 10 things we learned at MLB's event honoring Negro Leagues
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
NY prosecutors urge judge to keep gag order blocking Trump from criticizing jurors who convicted him
Taylor Swift put out a fire in her NYC apartment: Watch Gracie Abrams' video of the ordeal
88-year-old Montana man who was getaway driver in bank robberies sentenced to 2 years in prison
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
Stock market today: Asian shares mostly decline as Nvidia weighs on Wall Street
Gayle King calls Justin Timberlake a 'great guy' after DWI arrest: 'He's not an irresponsible person'
Gold bars and Sen. Bob Menendez’s curiosity about their price takes central role at bribery trial