Tennis : blessures causées par des balles trop pesantes?
Vasek Pospisil en a assez.
Le joueur de tennis canadien trouve que les balles sont trop pesantes.
Le résultat : de nombreuses blessures aux poignets, aux coudes et aux épaules chez les joueurs de l'ATP et les joueuses de la WTA.
Selon lui, les organisations ont augmenté le poids des balles afin de ralentir le jeu pour que les spectateurs puissent avoir droit à des échanges plus long. Mais l'effet du poids des balles se fait sentir sur le corps des athlètes.
..feels the same way. I've never seen more wrist, elbow, and shoulder injuries in the locker room. If these changes to the ball don't start getting reversed, it's only going to get worse. Please start listening @atptour @wtatour. Player injuries are bad for you too. [2/2]
— Vasek Pospisil (@VasekPospisil) September 2, 2023
De nombreux joueurs et joueuses, à la retraite ou non, appuient Pospisil.
I don't think they listen players 🤷🏻♂️😂
— Stanislas Wawrinka (@stanwawrinka) September 3, 2023
This can't be more spot on. I struggled with my arm every day because of the different weight of the balls week to week. Need 15 minutes to warm my arm up now just to play catch with my son
— Mardy Fish (@MardyFish) September 3, 2023
So true!!!👌 https://t.co/5j0a8CAdM4
— Urszula Radwanska (@ula_radwanska) September 3, 2023
The main issue is having one ball throughout the year with the same felt, pressure and weight. Very easy solution to stop injuries. Same discussion even when I was playing 30 years ago . Nothing changes. Problem is that tournaments have different ball sponsors.
— Greg Rusedski (@GregRusedski1) September 3, 2023
I've been complaining about this on every Challenger player survey since I can remember. The balls are ridiculous now and everyone complains about it but nothing gets done.
— Benjamin Lock (@Benjamm1ng) September 3, 2023
Une balle de tennis pèse entre 56 et 59,4 grammes selon les normes de l'ITF.