Thursday, December 15, 2011

Tennis Elbow Treatment

Gloria Rivas, a San Antonio homemaker, protected her right arm in a sling.

Brett Hoskins, owner of a Houston medical company, wouldn't shake with his right hand.

Both came to UT Medicine San Antonio on Dec. 5 seeking relief from the pain of tennis elbow. Both are now pain-free with full range of motion, thanks to a 15-minute minimally invasive procedure. They can resume full activities without restriction by year's end.

The procedure, called FAST (focused aspiration of scar tissue), is performed in the Ambulatory Surgical Center at the Medical Arts and Research Center, a UT Medicine location. UT Medicine is the clinical practice of the School of Medicine at the UT Health Science Center San Antonio.

FAST uses an ultrasound-guided probe the size of a toothpick to reach the exact area of the elbow where dead tissue is causing pain. “The probe liquefies the bad tissue, runs fluid through it and sucks it out,” said Anil Dutta, a UT Medicine orthopedic surgeon whose specialty is the shoulder and elbow.

FAST requires no surgical incision and is inserted through the skin after only local anesthetic with the patient fully awake. A console emits a patented and optimized form of energy to a handpiece with a needlelike tip that specifically breaks up and removes damaged tissue. The aspirated damaged tissue is collected in a bag and the entire device is then discarded.

“It has a very carefully designed energy that gets emitted through the probe. This eliminates diseased tissue without damaging healthy tissue,” said Bernard Morrey, clinical professor with UT Medicine and chairman emeritus of orthopedic surgery at the Mayo Clinic.

Morrey participated in the development of the device and performed the procedures on Rivas and Hoskins, plus more than 20 other patients worldwide. Because of his stature in orthopedic medicine, Morrey was asked to lead a clinical trial that demonstrated FAST's safety and effectiveness. He is the personal physician to President George H.W. and Barbara Bush.

Rivas and Hoskins reported virtually no discomfort. “I feel like a new woman,” Rivas said. “I had six months of pain, and the cortisone shot I had lasted a week. This procedure was no pain. I had no pain.”

Hoskins said: “I had chronic tendonitis from fly fishing. I did ice, ibuprofen, more ice, an injection, in six months another injection—it was chronic and getting worse. Shaking hands was very difficult, as was picking up a suitcase or briefcase. It had a huge effect on my daily activities.”

Of the new procedure, he said: “It was far less painful than a shot in my elbow. During the procedure I felt no pressure or pain. An hour after the procedure, I don't have the pain I had when I walked in here. It's completely gone.”

Read more: http://www.mysanantonio.com/community/northwest/news/article/Ultrasound-guided-probe-repairs-tennis-elbow-in-a-2400916.php#ixzz1gdPeO1wR

Friday, December 9, 2011

Soderling Has Mono

Dec 9 (Reuters) - Robin Soderling will miss the Australian Open as he battles to recover from illness, the 13th-ranked Swede said.

Soderling, twice a French Open finalist, has been suffering from the viral infection mononucleosis and has not played since he won in Bastad last July.

"My recovery has been longer than expected. I am feeling better with each day but it will still take some time before I can start practicing in full speed," Soderling said in a post on his Twitter account.

"My goal is to start with practice in January and I hope for tournament comeback in February but at this stage it is hard to know when and where.

"I hope my body will allow me to do that."

The former world number four made the fourth round at Melbourne Park earlier this year, after never passing the second round in five previous appearances.

Roger Federer, also had mono in 2008, starting at the Oz, but nothing was revealed for months.

He did win the US Open that summer against a healthy, but burned out Murray. Federer was good for 1 1/2 sets and then dropped off.

Ancic never recovered and retired from the ATP tour.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Blind Spots Eliminated

Subscribe to Car and Driver magazine

The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) published a paper in 1995 suggesting how outside mirrors could be adjusted to eliminate blind spots. The paper advocates adjusting the mirrors so far outward that the viewing angle of the side mirrors just overlaps that of the cabin’s rearview mirror. This can be disorienting for drivers used to seeing the flanks of their own car in the side mirrors. But when correctly positioned, the mirrors negate a car’s blind spots. This obviates the need to glance over your shoulder to safely change lanes as well as the need for an expensive blind-spot warning system.

image

Monday, November 28, 2011

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Rafael Osuna

CNN

The original Rafa: The best tennis player you never knew

By Paul Gittings, CNN

November 23, 2011 -- Updated 1549 GMT (2349 HKT)

Rafael Osuna will always be remembered for his outstanding play and sportsmanship. Rafael Osuna will always be remembered for his outstanding play and sportsmanship.

 

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Rafael Osuna is Mexico's greatest ever tennis player
  • He was tragically killed in an air crash in 1969 aged just 30
  • Osuna was the first player from Latin America to be World No. 1
  • He won the U.S. Open in 1963 and three grand slam doubles titles

(CNN) -- When Mexican Airways Flight 704 crashed into the mountains near Monterrey on June 4, 1969, it claimed the lives of 79 people including a national hero and one of the greatest players to wield a tennis racket.

He had carried the hopes of his country for a decade until his life was tragically cut short, just days after leading Mexico to an epic victory over all-conquering Australia in a Davis Cup tie, the crowning achievement of a remarkable career.

He was a grand slam winner, a former world number one and one of the most innovative doubles players in the sport's history.

Rafael Osuna Herrera was, quite possibly, the greatest tennis player you never knew, a compelling and inspirational figure, but more than 40 years since his death he has been largely forgotten.

Tennis' first Rafa

Perhaps this is because Osuna was at his peak during the 1960s, before the blanket television coverage of grand slams and major competitions such as the Davis Cup.

Clips of him in action are mostly in grainy black and white, but even to the non-expert eye his style of play and breathtaking speed on the court stood out.

His modern namesake Rafael Nadal batters opponents into submission with grueling baseline rallies, but Osuna used his lightning-fast reactions to shorten points, rushing to the net behind his service to pull off unlikely volleyed winners.

He was such a popular player, always with such good sportsmanship and always with a smile.
Bud Collins

"He was the quickest of his era," recalled legendary tennis broadcaster Bud Collins, who commentated on many of the Mexican star's biggest matches, including his 1963 U.S. Open final win over Frank Froehling on the grass of Forest Hills.

Osuna's nephew Rafael Belmar said his uncle had developed his quickness about court from his early days as a junior table tennis player, when forced to run around the table to reach the drop shots of canny older opponents.

Belmar also recalled a chance conversation with karate legend Chuck Norris, who he met while studying in the United States.

Norris was telling a story about the only two men he knew who could catch a fly with two fingers. One was the martial arts and film legend Bruce Lee, the other was Belmar's uncle Rafael.

"I was amazed," Belmar told CNN. "But in a way not surprised, he could intercept an opponent's drop shot before it bounced!"

We had to tear his game apart, but he could move like a God
George Toley

Osuna, who came from a middle-class Mexican family, studied at University of South California (USC), going there as a raw freshman and developing his game under the tutelage of coach George Toley.

"Everything he did on court was bad fundamentally, in part because he was such a natural and could get away with it," Toley wrote in a book about his experiences at USC.

"We had to tear his game apart, but he could move like a GOD!"

Osuna's first notable success came at Wimbledon in 1960 when he won the doubles with his USC roommate Dennis Ralston, the first unseeded pair to achieve the feat.

It was the catalyst for an outstanding doubles career, which saw him claim further grand slam titles at the U.S. Open in 1962 and Wimbledon in 1964 with his compatriot and Davis Cup partner Antonio Palafox.

Maybe Mexico is not so good at celebrating our heroes
Rafael Belmar

Their doubles combination helped Mexico to the Davis Cup final in 1962, but they were beaten by one of the greatest Australian line-ups of all-time, spearheaded by Rod Laver.

Collins believes that had Osuna maintained his college partnership with Ralston, his success might have been even greater in grand slams, but it was with Palafox that the pair experimented with a new formation that is commonly used today.

When serving, the other player would straddle the center line, keeping hunched down low to avoid being hit, before springing up to intercept their opponent's return.

It's called the "I-formation" but Collins said Osuna and Palafox were the first to use it.

Such unconventional tactics were Osuna's hallmark and played a major part in his only grand slam singles success in 1963.

Froehling was renowned for his big serve-and-volley game. Osuna confounded him by standing way back behind the baseline and then floating back lobbed returns.

An easy 7-5 6-4 6-2 victory followed and a place is tennis history as the first and only grand slam champion from Mexico.

The man surpasses his achievements
Manuel Santana

It earned Osuna the International Tennis Federation's world No. 1 ranking at the end of 1963, the same year he graduated from USC with a degree in business administration.

In the pre-Open era, a professional circuit ran in opposition to the regular tennis calendar, with players like Laver joining the paid ranks after accumulating grand slam titles.

Osuna, however, spurned the opportunity and took a job with the tobacco giant Phillip Morris, while still playing full time.

"He was offered $120,000 in 1962 by Jack Kramer (who ran the pro tour) but turned it down," claimed Belmar.

"My uncle had houses in Beverly Hills, in Mexico City and the Venezuelan capital of Caracas, so money was clearly never an issue."

Keeping his amateur status meant Osuna could continue to play at Wimbledon, where with Palafox he won his final grand slam doubles crown and became the first and only Mexican to grace the cover of the official tournament program in 1964.

Osuna reached the semifinals of the U.S. Open the following year, and when the Olympic Games came to Mexico in 1968 he won the exhibition tournament in both singles and doubles.

Tennis did not become an official medal sport until the 1988 Games in Seoul but the Osuna family still hold dear the gold medals he was awarded.

Approaching the end of his career at the top, Osuna continued to play Davis Cup and on the clay in Mexico City summoned up one last giant effort as 17-time winners Australia visited for a zonal final.

Osuna won all three points for Mexico in a 3-2 victory, including a crucial singles win over Australian No. 1 Bill Bowery, again deploying unusual tactics in the fourth set to prevent his opponent from volleying before breaking his service for the final time.

No-one can know if Mexico might have progressed further -- the team lost in the next round to Brazil after Osuna had lost his life in one of his country's worse airline disasters.

Since his death, Osuna has been honored, with a statue erected and a tennis stadium in Mexico named after him.

The ultimate accolade came in 1979 when he was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame, but in recent years, with Mexicans struggling to make an impression on the courts of the world, his place in the national consciousness has waned.

"Maybe Mexico is not so good at celebrating our heroes, he has become an obscure figure from the past," Belmar said.

Belmar tried to follow in his uncle's footsteps, playing collegiate tennis, while others such as top 10-ranked Raul Ramirez were also inspired by his achievements.

Spanish player Manuel Santana, the 1966 men's Wimbledon champion, perhaps best sums it up: "The man surpasses his achievements."

 

CNN TV | HLN | Transcripts

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Monday, October 24, 2011

AGING AND FITNESS

In a study published last year in the journal Deutsches Ärzteblatt International, Dieter Leyk and colleagues crunched finish-time data for more than 900,000 marathon and half-marathon finishers in German races, with ages ranging from 20 to 79.

The results were startling: No significant age-related decline in performance appeared before the age of 55. And even beyond that age, the decline was surprisingly gentle. In the 65-to-69 group, a full 25 per cent of the runners had times that would have ranked as above average among 20- to 54-year-olds.

Crucially, the runners in the study trained a similar amount (typically three to four times a week, for about an hour at a time) no matter what their age.

The conclusion is clear, the study authors write: “Performance losses in middle age are mainly due to a sedentary lifestyle rather than biological aging.”

Of course, few people manage to sustain even that fairly moderate level of exercise into their 40s and beyond. There are numerous possible explanations for the drop-off, including the time pressure of raising families and increased responsibilities at work. But a more subtle contribution may come from a gradual decline in the “intrinsic drive” to exercise.

When mice are left to their own devices in a cage with an exercise wheel, the amount they choose to run declines with age, long before any changes in their physical capacity are evident. While it’s not clear what determines this “intrinsic drive,” research by Mark Davis and colleagues at the University of South Carolina has suggested that it’s linked to levels of mitochondria in the brain.

Mitochondria are the “power plants” that provide energy to cells and muscle fibres. It has long been known that aerobic exercise boosts levels of mitochondria in your muscles, but a study just published by Dr. Davis’s group shows for the first time that aerobic exercise also stimulates the growth of new mitochondria in the brain.

This research remains in its preliminary stages, but the implication is that the brain responds to training like a muscle – and if it gets out of shape, it too is susceptible to fatigue and more likely to opt to stay on the couch. Regular exercise, on the other hand, doesn’t just preserve your ability to exercise as you get older; it also preserves your desire to exercise.

Alex Hutchinson blogs about research on exercise at sweatscience.com. His new book – Which Comes First, Cardio or Weights? – is now available.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Raonic - Hip Surgery

image Canadian No. 1 Milos Raonic is expected to return to the practice courts in six weeks after undergoing hip surgery 5 July in Vail, Colo.

The 20 year old sustained the hip injury during his second-round match against Gilles Muller at Wimbledon and retired from the encounter after playing five games. He subsequently withdrew from Canada’s Davis Cup tie versus Ecuador.

ATP

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Sunday, June 19, 2011

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST. JOHN - THE BLASPHEMIST

WIMBLEDON, England — The pastor of a Baptist church near this tabernacle of tennis has posted what could be the perfect topic for his Sunday sermon on the eve of the 125th Wimbledon Tennis Championships at the All England Club.

image THE NEW YORK TIMES

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Cat Gut ...... Not!

A firm in Norfolk collects cow intestines by the bucketful from local abattoirs and turns them into the kind of natural gut strings favoured by many of the world's top tennis players.

"It takes about four cow's guts to string the average racquet," production manager Rosina explains.

To produce the strings, the cow guts are cleaned and cut into 40ft strands before being chemically treated to preserve them.

Each string is made up of 15 individual strands which are spun very tightly together to coalesce them, before being dried out in a humid room to prevent cracking.

It is a painstaking process that takes six weeks from start to finish, but according to Rosina, it is worth the wait.

"With synthetic string, once it's in the racquet and is hit by a ball, it will stretch and stay stretched, but because gut has a natural memory, it always tries to return to its original form, therefore absorbing the shock a lot more and reducing the risk of tennis elbow."

The company, which has been plying its unusual trade for more than 100 years, also uses the same techniques to produce gut strings for harps and other early instruments.

BBC

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Nestor-Mirnyi win Paris

Canadian Daniel Nestor retained his Roland Garros doubles crown as he and Belarusian partner Max Mirnyi won their first Grand Slam title together by defeating South Americans Juan Sebastian Cabal and Eduardo Schwank 7-6(3), 3-6, 6-4 in Saturday’s final in Paris.

"It's unbelievable. I never get too old," declared Nestor. "[The] biggest goal in my career is winning Grand Slams. They're all special for different reasons. Every time you win with a new partner, that first one is an amazing feeling. Today is no exception."

Added Mirnyi, "I think any Grand Slam is a special win, but particularly for a new team it's a very important hump to get over. We knew on paper we're capable of playing well together. [But] up until you produce a result, you never know. Now having won a Grand Slam we know what we need to work on. We hope to maintain the level and hopefully get many more important wins."

World No. 3 Nestor lifted the winners’ trophy last year with Serbia’s Nenad Zimonjic, and had also triumphed in 2007 with former long-time partner Mark Knowles of the Bahamas. The 33-year-old Mirnyi also won the title for the third time, having won back-to-back trophies with Jonas Bjorkman in 2005-2006.

Tour-level debutant Cabal and partner Schwank had been the surprise of the tournament on their way through to the final, including taking out World No. 1 pairing Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan in the semi-finals. The Colombian-Argentine duo carried their good form into the final as they pushed second seeds Mirnyi and Nestor to a first-set tie-break before surrendering the opener.

ATP

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Are You Rotten To The Core

With well-built cores, ATP World Tour players not only enhance performance but guard against injury by stabilising an integral part of their bodies. When players undertake a strengthening program, they quickly learn that that there’s a lot more to core stability thant good-looking abs.

“People mistakenly picture a guy in a Calvin Klein commercial with washboard abs,’ says Todd Ellenbecker, Director of Sports Medicine for the ATP World Tour. “The core is really an all-encompassing cylinder, including the abdominal musculature, the muscles on the side of the body like the obliques, lower back muscles, some of the muscles in the pelvic floor that go all the way into the pelvis, and as high up as the muscles that stabilize our scapulae. That’s a very large area of musculature.” 

ATP players spend a sizable amount of time off court building up their mid-sections to help combat future injuries. By bolstering the core it protects the spine, one of the most frequently injured areas among elite-level tennis players. “ATP players like to strengthen their core to minimize or reduce the risk of injuring their spines. It makes the spine more resilient against injury,” Ellenbecker says.

In addition to averting injuries, strong cores act as a performance enhancer on court. When you see Rafael Nadal hit a punishing forehand, or Novak Djokovic rip a backhand, the immediate thought is ‘his arm is really strong’. While that‘s true, it’s not the determining factor in the power they generate, says Ellenbecker. “We know that most of the power we get in tennis, 54%, comes from our legs and the core.”

The core plays a key role in a player’s ability to hit booming shots, as well as striking the ball with consistency, transferring power from the legs to the shoulders. “You have this very strong transference from the lower body to the upper body, and the core is exactly what fits in between that,” explains Ellenbecker. “By having a strong core then, they’re able to harness that power from the legs, transfer that into the upper body, and then ultimately into the ball and the racquet.”

Boosting Core Strength

The exercises below are great for ATP World Tour players and club players because they can be done at home or on the road.

Arm and Leg Extension ('Bird Dog')

This exercise strengthens lower-back muscles.

1. Lay face down on an exercise ball.

2. Place your arms, knees, hands and legs on the ground.

3. Extend your left arm and right leg, holding for two seconds, then return to the starting position.

4. Extend your right arm and left leg, and hold for two seconds, returning back to the starting position.

5. Go back and forth between the diagonals and try to keep yourself stable on top of the exercise ball.

Ellenbecker Says: “A lot of players already have strong abdominals, but where they’re particularly weak many times is in the low-back muscles. There’s a certain balance of strength that has to occur between the abdominal muscles and the low back muscles… otherwise it can leave them vulnerable to injury.” 

Seated Ball Rotation

This exercise works all of the core muscles, simulating forehands and backhands. It requires a partner.

1. Sit on an exercise ball with your feet on the ground, shoulder-width apart.

2. Using a four-to-six pound medicine ball, throw the ball to your partner with both hands as if you were hitting a forehand.

3. Mix up your simulation with cross-court and down-the-line patterns in sets of 30 seconds.

4. Switch to the backhand side, and repeat steps above.

Ellenbecker Says: “The advantage is that there is a lot of rotation. What we think about is that almost every shot, every movement we perform in tennis, involves a significant amount of rotation in the lower back. So if we use a rotation movement, a concept called ‘specificity,’ you actually train the body in the specific way it’s used on court. Players enjoy it, which is why you see a lot of them doing it.”

The Plank, The Plange, TV Watching

This exercise improves your core stability.

1. Assume a position on both elbows and your toes, maintaining a straight alignment.

2. Look straight down at a point slightly in front of you.

3. Maintain the pose for 30 seconds, doing several sets.

A Side Plank is a beneficial variation of the exercise, working the obliques and other side muscles.

1. Lie on your side and brace yourself on your right elbow and the outside of your right foot, again keeping a straight alignment.

2. Maintain the pose for 30 seconds, doing several sets.

3. Switch to your left side and repeat.

Ellenbecker Says: “This is really good for working the obliques, which helps to rotate the body on court.”

Core Myths

“In order to have a strong core, you have to go to a gym and use all sorts of fancy machines.”

Ellenbecker Says: “That’s actually quite far from true, as we’ve found it’s better to use things like the Swiss ball, medicine balls, and functional movements, which are more effective in many cases than machines. When using a machine, you’re only working in one direction.”

“A few sets of 10 sit-ups a day is enough for a strong core.”

Ellenbecker Says: “That’s just working the abdominals. You may look good, having nice-looking abs, but you won’t have the injury prevention protection that you would if you worked all areas of the core.”

“When I do sit-ups, I need my feet held to the ground by another person or a couch.”

Ellenbecker Says: “What we’ve found is that when you have your feet in a fixed manner, it actually ends up using more of your hip flexors than your abdominals. What we recommend is that the feet are just on the ground or even off the ground so that it takes the hip flexors out of the exercise. Very few people, especially athletes, have weak hip flexors. You don’t want to use the hip flexors to substitute for a weak core.”

ATP

Thursday, April 28, 2011

RAONIC INTO QUARTERS

(AFP) ESTORIL, Portugal

Canadian Milos Raonic reached his first career quarter-final on clay with a 6-3, 6-3 defeat of Portugal's Joao Sousa at the ATP-WTA Estoril Open here on Thursday.

Raonic, seeded fifth and ranked 26th, kept his level high on the clay as he prepares to play as a seed at Roland Garros starting May 22.

The youngster who began the season just inside the Top 200 before breaking through with a title in San Jose and final a week later in Memphis, will Friday face the French fourth seed Gilles Simon.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

TOMMY HAAS

GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany, April 26 (Reuters) - Former world number two Tommy Haas made his comeback on Tuesday after missing 14 months through injury when he competed in the doubles event at the Munich Open.

The 33-year-old German, who had reached his career-high ranking in May 2002 and played in four grand slam semi-finals, has won 12 singles titles but has been plagued by injuries for much of his career.

Haas, who has also taken on U.S. nationality, partnered close friend and Florida neighbour Czech Radek Stepanek but lost to Sweden's Simon Aspelin and Australian Paul Hanley 2-6 6-3 10-8.

"I would have also liked to play in the singles but I have not reached that point yet," Haas told reporters. "It was good experience but we came up a bit short."

He had last played on Feb. 22, 2010 at the Delray Beach International, following which he underwent hip and elbow surgery.

(Writing by Karolos Grohmann, Editing by Mark Meadows and Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Thursday, April 21, 2011

PLAYERS AND THEIR STRINGS

Here are the strings the world’s top tennis players, (and a few recently retired players), are using in their rackets, together with the rackets they’re using, and the tensions, (in lbs), they most commonly string at.  These tensions are known as ‘Reference Tensions’, and are the tensions the pros will hit with when they arrive at a tournament.  Having seen how the racket feels at the Reference Tension, they’ll then, if necessary, take the tension up or down a couple of pounds at a time until the get the feel they’re looking for.  Things such as court surface, temperature, altitude, as well as their next opponent, will all contribute to any change required, but everything will start from the Reference Tension.

Where two tensions are shown the first is the tension of the main strings, and the second is the tension of the cross strings.

Where hybrid stringing is shown, the first named string is used for the main strings, and the second named is used for the cross strings. For example, Australia’s Lleyton Hewitt uses Babolat VS Team for his main strings, and Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power for his cross strings, whereas Sweden’s Joachim Johansson uses Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power for his main strings, and Babolat VS Touch for his cross strings.

Latest Update: Hopman Cup/Doha/Sydney/Australian Open - January 2011

Mario Ancic Yonex RDS 002 Tour

Luxilon Big Banger Original 62lbs

Marcos Baghdatis Tecnifibre T-Flash 315 Speedflex

Tecnifibre X-One BiPhase 46/51lbs

Tomas Berdych Head YouTek Radical MP

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 55lbs

James Blake Wilson Six.One Tour BLX

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 68lbs

Bob Bryan Prince EXO3 Rebel

Prince Natural Gut/Luxilon Big Banger TiMo 51/47lbs

Mike Bryan Prince EXO3 Rebel

Prince Natural Gut/Luxilon Big Banger TiMo 48/45lbs

Guillermo Canas Wilson nPro nCode

Wilson Enduro Tour  55lbs

Jennifer Capriati Prince Tour Diablo

Babolat VS Touch/Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 51/48lbs

Juan-Ignacio Chela Babolat Pure Storm Team

Tecnifibre Spinfire Maxi Power 58lbs

Marin Cilic Head YouTek Radical MP

Babolat VS Touch 61lbs

Kim Clijsters Babolat Pure Drive Team

Babolat VS Touch 58lbs

Guillermo Coria Head Microgel Radical

Toalson Cyber Blade Tour 52lbs

Lindsay Davenport Wilson [K]Tour

Wilson Natural Gut 63/64lbs

Nikolay Davydenko Dunlop Biomimetic 200 Plus

Polystar Energy 51lbs

Juan Martin del Potro Wilson [K] Six.One 95

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 62lbs

Novak Djokovic Head YouTek IG Speed Pro 18×20

Head Natural Gut/Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power Rough 55/52lbs

Elena Dementieva Yonex RDiS 100 Mid Plus

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 52/48lbs

Roger Federer Wilson Six.One Tour BLX

Wilson Natural Gut/Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power Rough 48.5/44lbs

David Ferrer Prince EXO3 Tour

Luxilon Big Banger Original 51lbs

Juan Carlos Ferrero Prince EXO3 Tour

Luxilon Big Banger Original 53/51lbs

Richard Gasquet Head Microgel Extreme Pro

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 58lbs

Gaston Gaudio Wilson nSix-One 95

Toalson Cyber Blade Tour 59.5lbs

Robby Ginepri Babolat Pure Storm Team

Babolat Pro Hurricane/Babolat VS Team 64lbs

Fernando Gonzalez Babolat Pure Storm Team

Babolat Pro Hurricane 60lbs

Sebastien Grosjean Head Microgel Prestige Mid

Babolat VS Touch 51lbs

Tommy Haas Head YouTek Prestige Pro

Babolat VS Team  75lbs

Daniela Hantuchova Prince EXO3 Tour

Babolat VS Touch 58lbs

Justine Henin Wilson Tour BLX

Babolat VS Touch 59.5lbs

Tim Henman Slazenger NX One

Luxilon Big Banger TiMo/Babolat VS Team 62lbs

Lleyton Hewitt Yonex RDiS 100

Babolat VS Team/Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 56lbs

Martina Hingis Yonex RQS-11

Yonex Polyester/Babolat VS Team 49/44lbs

John Isner Prince EXO3 Black

Tecnifibre Pro RedCode 62lbs

Ana Ivanovic Yonex Ezone

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power    54lbs

Jelena Jankovic Prince O3 Speedport Pro White

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power/Prince Natural Gut    64lbs

Joachim Johansson Yonex RDS 001 Mid Plus

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power/Babolat VS Touch 67lbs

Stefan Koubek Wilson nSix-One 95

Isospeed Professional 62lbs

Gustavo Kuerten Head Liquidmetal Prestige Mid

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 56lbs

Svetlana Kuznetsova Head Extreme Pro

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 57/55lbs

Ivan Ljubicic Head YouTek IG Extreme Pro

Babolat Pro Hurricane 69lbs

Michael Llodra Wilson BLX Pro Tour

Babolat VS Team 52lbs

Paul-Henri Mathieu Wilson [K]Blade 98

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 62lbs

Amélie Mauresmo Head Microgel Radical MP

Babolat VS Touch 54lbs

Jürgen Melzer Dunlop 4D 300 Tour

Isospeed Professional 75lbs

Gaël Monfils Prince EXO3 Rebel

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 57/55lbs

Carlos Moya Babolat Pure Drive Team

Luxilon Big Banger Original 60lbs

Andy Murray Head YouTek Radical Pro

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power Rough/Babolat VS Team 62lbs

Anastasia Myskina Head Liquidmetal Instinct Tour

Luxilon Big Banger Timo 56/52lbs

Rafael Nadal Babolat AeroPro Drive GT

Babolat RPM Blast 55lbs

David Nalbandian Yonex RDiS 100

Luxilon Big Banger Original 64lbs

Jiri Novak Völkl Tour 10 Mid Plus

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 64/62lbs

Flavia Pennetta Wilson Blade 98 Pink BLX

Wilson Natural Gut 63lbs

Nadia Petrova Babolat AeroStorm

Luxilon Monotec Supersense 62lbs

Mark Philippoussis Head i.Prestige

Babolat VS Team 75lbs

Mary Pierce Yonex RD Ti-80

Luxilon Big Banger TiMo 65lbs

Tommy Robredo Dunlop 4D 300

Luxilon Big Banger Original 52lbs

Andy Roddick Babolat Pure Drive Roddick

Babolat Pro Hurricane Tour/Babolat VS Team 73/61lbs

Greg Rusedski Dunlop Aerogel 200

Babolat VS Team 48lbs

Marat Safin Head Microgel Prestige Mid

Luxilon Big Banger Alu Power 60lbs

Dinara Safina Babolat AeroPro Drive GT

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from:      COLINTHESTRINGER.COM

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

RAONIC A SEED IN PARIS

Milos Raonic is guaranteed of being seeded at the second Grand Slam of the year.

The Canadian tennis sensation moved up to 28th in the world rankings Monday, meaning he will be among the seeded players for the French Open in Paris next month. Thirty-two players are seeded at the tournament, which starts May 17.

Raonic, a 20-year-old from Thornhill, Ont., has jumped 128 spots in the rankings since the start of the year. He was ranked 156th at the end of 2010.

Fifteenth-seeded Raonic will face Radek Stepanek of the Czech Republic in the first round of the Barcelona Open Tuesday.  Last week he was ousted by Spain's David Ferrer in the third round of the Monte Carlo Masters in Monaco.

In doubles play Tuesday, Raonic and Nicolas Almagro of Spain lost 6-2, 6-4 to Xavier Malise of Belgium and Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine in the first round.

QMI AGENCY

WIMBLEDON

The singles champions at Wimbledon this year will each receive 1.1 million pounds ($1.8 million), a 10 per cent increase from last year.

The All England Club chief executive Ian Ritchie announced Tuesday the total prize fund for the 125th championships is going up by 6.4 per cent to 14.6 million pounds ($23.8 million).

Because the British pound has strengthened since last year, the increase is even larger when counted in dollars.

"Leading international sports events, such as Wimbledon, are all about the quality of the players on show," All England Club chairman Philip Brook said. "It is important that we offer prize money which suitably rewards the players both for the box office appeal they bring to the event and for their supreme performances on court."

Last year, prize money for the singles champions broke the 1 million pound mark for the first time.

Ritchie said the All England Club has been asking the British government to relax tax rules to make the tournament more attractive to competitors.

Athletes visiting Britain for team sports such as football are not taxed on earnings and endorsements for their time in the country but individuals are.

Ritchie said the All England Club had also spoken with Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone, who is also making presentation to government for the change.

"If Lionel Messi comes here for a Champions League final, he does not get taxed, but Roger Federer does," Ritchie said. "We don't believe it is an impediment to Wimbledon in terms of people coming here. But it is on their radar screen, let's put it that way.

"It's the same with golf. There are certain international golfers who don't come and play here, as I understand it, for that reason."

Ritchie said tournament organizers had not heard from Serena Williams over whether she intends to defend her singles title. Williams hasn't played competitively since winning the tournament last year because of complications following a foot injury.

The 2011 Wimbledon tournament will also feature a new 2,000-seat No. 3 court featuring the same Hawk-Eye technology used on the other show courts.

With a new No. 4 court also open for the first time, the total number of courts will be back up to the traditional 19 following several years of redevelopment.

Ground capacity will increase this year from 37,500 spectators to 38,500.

Ritchie said he had also asked the government to impose the same restrictions on resale of tickets that it extends to the Olympics. Scalping — or touting as it's called in Britain — of Olympic tickets is strictly prohibited.

"I find it incongruous that the Olympics gets treated one way — the home secretary says that ticket touts will be fined 20,000 pounds — and we fail to get any legislation to protect Wimbledon," Ritchie said.

The All England Club will host the tennis competition at next year's London Olympics, but Ritchie said spectators expecting the tradition and pomp of the Wimbledon tournament may be disappointed.

"It will look and feel different to the championships," Ritchie said. "And that is entirely right and proper."

AP

Thursday, April 14, 2011

IVAN LJUBICIC: MY HERO

 

David Ferrer advanced to the quarterfinals of the Monte Carlo Masters by beating Milos Raonic 6-1, 6-3 in the third round Thursday.

The fourth-seeded Spaniard dictated most of the rallies and pegged Raonic behind the baseline. The big-serving Canadian rarely threatened, managing only one ace and losing his own serve five times.

Ferrer will next face either Tommy Robredo of Spain or Viktor Troicki of Serbia.

Ivan Ljubicic also advanced, beating fifth-seeded Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic 6-4, 6-2 to reach his third quarterfinal of the season.

Ljubicic would next meet six-time defending champion Rafael Nadal.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Sunday, April 10, 2011

MONTE CARLO DIRT

Postmedia NewsApril 10, 2011

Milos Raonic of Canada plays a volley in his match against Michael Llodra of France during Day One of the ATP Masters Series Tennis at the Monte Carlo Country Club on April 10, 2011 in Monte Carlo, Monaco.

Photograph by: Julian Finney, Getty Images

MONTE CARLO, Monaco — Rising Canadian tennis star Milos Raonic won his first senior ATP match played on clay Sunday, beating Michael Llodra of France 6-3, 0-6, 6-0 in first-round action at the Monte Carlo Masters.

Raonic, 20, of Thornhill, Ont., beat Llodra in their only other ATP Tour meeting, in the second round of the Australian Open two months ago.

Raonic will face either 14th-seeded Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine or Ernests Gulbis of Latvia in the second round.

Raonic’s booming serve is the key to his game, rendered less dangerous when playing on clay.

Still, Raonic said he’s growing accustomed to the slower surface.

“I’m liking it more and more by the day,” Raonic said of playing on clay. “I look quite frustrated because I always want to win, but it’s fun. It’s a lot more fun than I might show.

“As long as it keeps getting better day to day, week by week, I’ll be smiling more and more.”

Raonic entered the match ranked 35th in the world, while Llodra was ranked 24th.

Raonic’s previous clay experience was in a French Open junior loss and several Futures matches while a teenager.

Last month, however, he won both of his matches on the surface in Canada’s Davis Cup first-round victory at Mexico City.

© Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Thursday, April 7, 2011

ATP INJURY PREVENTION

image We’re taught from a young age that prevention is better than cure. That’s particularly true when it comes to tennis injuries.

Since 2006 the ATP has conducted player performance and injury prevention screenings three or four times a year at key events like Indian Wells, Madrid and Cincinnati. At these selected events a physical therapist and orthopedic surgeon provide a 30-minute one-on-one voluntary evaluation with players in a screening programme to check for warning signs of injury. These ATP medical staff members look at a player’s injury history and run them through a series of measures and performance movements, including muscle and flexibility tests, to identify potential problems and, if needed, tailor an individualized training regimen. “It’s one thing to provide treatment for all these injuries, but the more important question is how do we try to prevent them in the first place,” says Todd Ellenbecker, Director of Sports Medicine for the ATP.

When looking for problems, one warning sign is if the right shoulder of a right-handed player is weaker than his left shoulder (and vice-versa for left-handers). “If the rotator cuff of the dominant shoulder is weaker than the non-dominant side that concerns us and we’d look to put that player on a shoulder-strengthening programme,” Ellenbecker says. “A player should have similar strength, if not more, on his dominant side.”

Tennis players typically lose some internal rotation flexibility on their dominant shoulder, but if significant flexibility is lost, that may lead to closer monitoring and improvement can be made with specific stretches. The screening evaluation also involves up to five tests for core stability (stomach, back, muscles of the mid section). Almost all players have very good core stability, which is important for preventing back injuries.

If a player doesn’t have a really high level of core stability, a specific programme is given to strengthen these important muscles for both injury prevention and of course to enhance a player’s performance.

Shoulder tests have been an important part of the screening programme since it was launched in 2006. ATP medical staff measure the internal and external rotation range of motion to ensure flexibility is not limited. A device is also used to measure muscular strength of the rotator cuff in a very precise way. “If a player loses range of motion or strength in their shoulder we know they are susceptible to injury,” Ellenbecker says. “A player who is found to have shoulder weakness is given an exercise programme and a list of things he can do to improve these deficiencies. Free exercise equipment from Thera-band is provided for the players going through the programme as we are confident that these products provide a great training stimulus and very importantly, can be taken with the player as they travel around the world so they are never without the right equipment to get their workout done.”

Remedial work to increase shoulder strength typically involves the use of elastic tubes and bands, which players can easily throw in their bag to take on the road. Work with small medicine balls is also often recommended. Ellenbecker says, “If we find a deficiency during the screening it’s not enough for us to say, ‘Hey you’ve got problems, see you later.’ So we structure a self-sufficient training programme they can follow on the road where they may not have access for fancy equipment. And they can check in with an ATP physio at a tournament if they have any questions.”

Players are encouraged to be tested multiple times a year so improvement can be monitored. “One of the most rewarding parts of the programme is when we see the deficiencies identified through the screening phase have gone,” Ellenbecker says. 

ATP STAFF

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

PROSTATE SCREENING

Screening men for prostate cancer appears to have no significant impact on prostate cancer mortality, Swedish researchers reported in the BMJ (British Medical Journal). Screening for prostate cancer is common throughout most of the world, however, experts continue to disagree on whether their alleged life-protecting benefits are outweighed by overdiagnosis and unnecessary treatment.

Researchers from the Karolinska Institute examined a trial involving 9,026 males aged 50-59 years from Sweden's National Population Register.

1,494 of them were selected at random for prostate screening every year from 1987 to 1996. The remainder were controls (7,532 men).

The first two screenings only involved a digital rectal exam. From 1993 the screening involved both a digital rectal exam and a PSA (prostate specific antigen) test. In 1996, the fourth screening, only males up to the age of 69 years were invited.

The investigators included all the participants diagnosed with cancer up to December 31, 1999. They monitored survival rates until December 31, 2008.

5.7% (85) men were diagnosed with prostate cancer in the screened group and 3.9% (292) in the control group. Tumors were small and more frequently localized in the screened group.

The authors report that their analysis revealed no significantly longer survival or overall survival among the screened men with prostate cancer versus the control group.

A BMJ communiqué wrote:

"And while screening and treating men with detected tumours might reduce deaths specifically from prostate cancer by up to a third (at best), this would be at considerable risk of worrying overdetection and unpleasant or harmful overtreatment. Indeed, a previous trial found that to prevent one death from prostate cancer, 1,410 men would need to be screened and 48 treated. "

Before being screened, patients should be told about the risk of treatment, plus the anxiety and worry resulting from false-positive test results, the authors believe.

They add that future screenings should discriminate between indolent (slow growing) tumors and high risk ones. Less aggressive treatment should be the norm for indolent tumors. The aim should not be to simply seek to optimize the sensitivity of diagnostic tests.

The researchers concluded:

"After 20 years of follow-up, the rate of death from prostate cancer did not differ significantly between men in the screening group and those in the control group."

MEDICAL NEWS TODAY

EXERCISE AND HEART MASS

By Ransdell Pierson, ReutersApril 4, 2011

  

The first study to evaluate the effects of varying levels of lifelong exercise on heart mass was presented on Saturday at the annual scientific meeting of the American College of Cardiology in New Orleans.

Consistent lifelong exercise preserves heart muscle in the elderly to levels that match or even exceed that of healthy young sedentary people, a surprising finding that underscores the value of regular exercise training, according to a new study.

The first study to evaluate the effects of varying levels of lifelong exercise on heart mass was presented on Saturday at the annual scientific meeting of the American College of Cardiology in New Orleans.

It suggested that physical activity preserves the heart's youthful elasticity, showing that when people were sedentary, the mass of their hearts shrunk with each passing decade.

By contrast, elderly people with a documented history of exercising six to seven times a week throughout adulthood not only kept their heart mass, but built upon it -- having heart masses greater than sedentary healthy adults aged 25 to 34.

"One thing that characterizes the aging process by itself is the loss of muscle mass, particularly skeletal muscle," said Dr. Paul Bhella, a researcher from John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas who presented the study at the conference.

"But we are showing that this process is not unique to skeletal muscle, it also happens in cardiac muscle," he said. "A heart muscle that atrophies is weaker."

The study enrolled 121 healthy people with no history of heart disease. Fifty nine were sedentary subjects recruited from the Dallas Heart Study, a large multiethnic sample of Dallas County residents.

Some 62 lifelong exercisers, all over age 65, were recruited mainly from the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study, which had documented their exercise habits over a period of 25 years.

In the new study, exercise was assessed by the number of aerobic exercise sessions per week, rather than intensity or duration. Subjects were broken down into four groups: non-exercisers; casual exercisers (two to three times a week); committed exercisers (four to five times a week) and master athletes (six to seven times a week).

Heart mass measurements, taken using MRIs, showed that sedentary subjects had diminished heart mass as they aged, while lifelong exercisers had heart mass expansion with increasing frequency of exercise.

"The data suggest that if we can identify people in middle age, in the 45 to 60 year range, and get them to exercise four to five times a week, this may go a very long way in preventing some of the major heart conditions of old age, including heart failure," said Benjamin Levine of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, who headed the study.

© Copyright (c) Reuters

Friday, April 1, 2011

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

ORANGE LOVERS

“It was an annual mystery that baffled [South African] fruit farmer Alwyn van der Merwe,” The Christian Science Monitor says. “Each June, when his oranges began ripening, a troop of baboons would descend from the mountains … and target one particular tree among thousands, stripping it of all its oranges. Year after year it happened, until Mr. van der Merwe decided to inspect the lone tree and discovered that it was a different variety from the others, sweeter and ripening three weeks earlier. ‘We couldn’t believe it. The one tree was different from the thousands of others and the baboons knew it,’ he says. Samples of the tree were sent to be tested by the Citrus Growers Association, which confirmed it was a new variety of Mineola orange.”

QUADROCOPTER

Friday, March 25, 2011

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

TENNIS POSTER

image

As a 17-year-old girl during the long hot summer of 1976 Fiona Walker, then Butler, cheerfully allowed her boyfriend, Martin Elliott, to photograph her knickerless, walking towards a tennis net. Elliott sold the image to Athena, and up it speedily went on the bedroom walls of boys everywhere, becoming one of the world's biggest selling posters.

Now, the Athena Tennis Girl poster is to be included in what organisers say is the first exhibition exploring lawn tennis as a subject in fine art.

Walker was not then, nor ever has been, a tennis player. "I don't have the hand eye co-ordination," she says. Nor has she made a penny from the poster. "I was very naive and was paid nothing."

But she has fond memories of the photoshoot – in which she wore her dad's plimsolls – and harbours no embarrassment at the image. "It never ceases to make me smile when I see it, and I do sometimes see it in some very strange places. I've no regrets about it," she says.

Elliott – who did do very well out of the image – died last year.

Walker was reunited with the picture when she attended the launch of the exhibition, called Court on Canvas.The show is being held this summer at Birmingham's Barber Institute of Fine Arts, less than half a mile from Ampton Road, Edgbaston, where the sport was played for the first time.

• Court on Canvas: Tennis in Art is at the Barber Institute of Fine Art, Birmingham from 27 May to 18 September

Thursday, March 17, 2011

STRING TECHNOLOGY AND TENNIS



In the French Open final this June, many thought that 6-foot-4-inch Robin Soderling would overpower Rafael Nadal, just as he had Roger Federer in the quarter­finals. On serve at 2–1 in the second set, he hit a sharp, low slice crosscourt to Nadal’s service line—the type of shot that has been unattackable, too low and close to the net to return aggressively: hit it just a bit too hard, and it floats long.
But Nadal took three strides into the court and ripped a short-hopped forehand crosscourt from the service line. The speed of his racket put the ball on a trajectory to the back fence, but his high-tech copolyester strings bent it down inside Soderling’s own service line for an untouchable winner. Soderling dropped his head in disbelief as commentator John McEnroe prefaced the television replay: “Take a look at this ball right here!”
“Yep, that’s impossible,” Nate Ferguson, the stringer and racket technician of Federer, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, and Soderling, told me later. “The ball’s 18 inches off the ground and hit for a winner [from there]—that’s bullshit.”
Copoly strings help generate so much spin that today’s players—dubbed the “new-string generation” by Federer— can hit once-inconceivable drives, angled winners, and passing shots. But despite the widespread belief of players that copoly strings have changed the game, scientists until recently could find no evidence that a string’s material, thickness, tension, or texture made a real difference in spin generation.
Enter the Japanese engineer Yoshihiko Kawazoe. In 2004, he decided to test a string lubricant that its inventor, Kenji Okimoto, thought would “revive” old, worn strings. Kawazoe realized that, despite much research, scientists had only a shadowy idea of what happens during the 4 or 5 milli­seconds when the ball is on the strings, simply because they couldn’t see it. But with an ultra-high-speed, 10,000-frame-per-second camera, Kawazoe solved the mystery of strings and spin.
In capturing 40 to 50 frames of each ball-string impact, he saw that lubricated strings slid with the ball and snapped back as it left. As they snapped back into line, they transferred more energy to the ball in the tangential (parallel to the racket face) direction and gave it more spin—which was easily calculated from the super-slow-motion rotation of the ball as it left the strings. In technical studies published in 2006 and 2007, International Tennis Federation researchers reported that the same movement that Kawazoe observed with lubricated strings occurs with copoly as well.
Copoly strings—slippery and stiff—generate more spin not because of more friction, but because of less. “The old argument was that the better the grip between the strings and the ball, the more spin you would get. But that’s not true,” said Rod Cross, an Australian physicist and co-author of Technical Tennis.
Last April, Cross and his co-author, Crawford Lindsey, published their study showing that copoly strings generate 20 percent more spin than nylon strings, and 11 percent more than natural gut. Such differences help explain how a contemporary powerhouse like Rafael Nadal can hit with twice as much spin as Andre Agassi did.
Looking back, Lindsey and Kawazoe told me they are befuddled by how long people took to realize that polyester strings generated extra spin through sideways sliding and snapback. They should have known this, because 30 years ago, a radical innovation—“spaghetti strings”—used the same mechanism to generate more spin than even the best copolys.
“In spaghetti strings, the [horizontal and vertical] strings weren’t woven,” said Cross. “And because they weren’t woven, there was lots of freedom of movement within the string plane, and that produced almost a factor-of-two increase in the amount of spin. And that’s why the ITF banned them.”
Remarkably, the ITF’s 1978 ruling that all strings must be interwoven was the first rule constraining the design of either rackets or strings. Stuart Miller, the head of science and technology for the ITF, said that it tries to test each string that hits the market, “looking for anything that would, in our opinion, fundamentally change the nature of the game,” or introduce a “step change” in spin generation.
But two step-changing technologies have so far evaded regulation: the large-headed racket, which reached its spin potential only after three generations of technique refinements; and copoly strings, whose spin-boosting nature eluded proof for 15 years. Together, they can generate as much spin, or more, in the hands of today’s players as could a spaghetti racket wielded by a ’70s-era player.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/01/the-new-physics-of-tennis/8339/
Copyright © 2011 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

INDIAN WELLS RESULTS

image

Billionaire Larry Ellison

latimes.com

BILL DWYRE

The Oracle founder is the fifth-wealthiest man in the world, and he was willing to spend about $100 million of that fortune to buy the BNP Paribas Open, securing the future of the Indian Wells event. At 66, he's also a serious player.

image

We sat in a huge boardroom, with paneled walls, nice paintings and 20 big leather chairs so comfortable they could put you to sleep in minutes.

It was a great place to discuss software trends with Larry Ellison, who was not only deemed by Forbes last week to be the fifth wealthiest man in the world, but who has probably seen more boardrooms than anybody this side of Warren Buffett.

Of course, your typist wouldn't know a broadband from a Band-Aid. So it was a good thing the topic was one vastly more important to the welfare of Western civilization.

That would be tennis.

Last year, Ellison purchased the BNP Paribas Open, which has pretty well established itself as the next best thing in tennis after the four Grand Slams. If nothing else, its attendance, currently heading toward 350,000 for its 13-day run in the Southern California desert, proves that. Only the four majors sell more tickets.

Ellison, 66, is a tennis enthusiast, which probably understates it.

"I play five days a week," he says. "It's usually on clay. I love it."

This is not a pat-it-around guy, either. Asked if he is rated around a 4.0 or 4.5 player — ratings that indicate a strong, serious player, almost college-team level — Ellison says, "Oh, I think a little better than that."

He admits it is hard to know exactly, because he isn't playing senior tournaments, even though he smacks his lips at the thought.

"It is tempting," he says.

One might imagine that the board of directors of Oracle, his massive software company in Redwood Shores, Ca., would like competitive tennis to remain merely a temptation. He has already put together a team that won an America's Cup in sailing, so the window for more fun time can't be huge.

"Life is not practice," he says. "It can't be that all I do is work."

He says he came back and forth to the tournament a few times last year, the first year he owned the event. This time, he says, "I will stay the rest of the week. I like it here."

In corporate tennis circles, his purchase of the Indian Wells event is seen as something almost heroic, a move that not only injected cash and stability into a tournament that had become a crown jewel of the sport, but also sent an important message: If Larry Ellison thinks enough of the sport to spend around $100 million on it, and even commit to improving a tournament that didn't seem to need much, than tennis is still a big player on the international scene.

"I love the sport," he says. "Nobody had to sell me on doing this."

There had been the possibility that, with financial difficulties, this tournament might be sold and moved to another country, likely China. PM Sports Management, the Charlie Pasarell-Raymond Moore venture that owned and grew this tournament over 36 years, had gotten itself in decent shape the last few years to be able to carry on easily. But Ellison's offer was too good to refuse, as was the extra financial security.

"Nobody wanted to see this tournament go to another country," Ellison says.

He is an unabashed supporter of and optimist about the sport. He lights up when he talks about classic Jimmy Connors-John McEnroe matches he has seen. He indicates feeling honored to have met the great Aussie, Rod Laver, and says Laver's era, with Ken Rosewall and Roy Emerson, was a time of tennis pride, much like the current era of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

"They are special," Ellison says of Federer and Nadal. "I remember that Australian final, when Rafa beat Roger and Roger was so crushed by losing, and Rafa went over and put his arm around him."

Ellison is at the age when men usually turn to golf, but he says he doesn't play the game, even though he just bought a huge property in Rancho Mirage that includes its own golf course, called Porcupine Creek.

"The joke is that I don't play golf because I have only one club," Ellison says.

Fifteen minutes had passed and nary a broadband had been discussed. Nor any skinny bands. This was tennis time, and bigger things were on the agenda, such as Juan Martin Del Potro's massive forehand.

In this discussion, probably as in most business discussions, Ellison's first serves were all in.

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

A COUPLE OF UPSETS

INDIAN WELLS, California, March 12 (Reuters) - Fifth seed Andy Murray, sixth-seeded David Ferrer and defending champion Ivan Ljubicic all fell by the wayside on a day of startling upsets at the Indian Wells ATP tournament on Saturday.

British world number five Murray was eliminated 7-6 6-3 by American qualifier Donald Young, Spaniard Ferrer crashed out 7-6 6-3 at the hands of Croat Ivo Karlovic and Ljubicic was beaten 5-7 6-4 6-2 by Argentine Juan Martin del Potro.

Spanish world number one and top seed Rafa Nadal, however, had little trouble with his opening match as he demolished South African qualifier Rik de Voest 6-0 6-2 after just an hour on the showpiece center court.

"It was a good victory for me," left-hander Nadal, champion at Indian Wells in 2007 and 2009, told reporters. "Probably my opponent played a little bit more nervous than usual.

"For that reason, it wasn't one of these matches that I had to play my best tennis. I did what I had to do to win, no?"

The early exit of Murray was the most surprising of the day's upsets, despite the fact that the 23-year-old Scot had not competed in more than a month.

Murray has always enjoyed playing at Indian Wells, where he was a runner-up in 2009, but he struggled for fluency against his 143rd-ranked opponent who won the biggest match of his career with an aggressive brand of tennis.

"Most of it was not great today," a subdued Murray said after being beaten in just over an hour-and-a-half. "I didn't serve particularly well, I didn't move very well.

"He hit a lot of winners and gained in confidence, I guess, from hitting more winners."

CUT SHORT

The 32-year-old Karlovic, whose 2010 season was cut short by six months due to Achilles surgery, powered down nine aces before sealing victory against Ferrer in 95 minutes.

The six-foot 10-inch (2.08 metre) Croat won the first set tiebreaker 7-3 and then broke his opponent in the fourth game of the second before ending the match with an ace.

"I was playing well, I was returning well and I played good on my second serve, which this year has not been the case," the 239th-ranked Karlovic told Reuters. "Today was really good."

The Croat, who broke the fastest serve world record with a 251 kph (156 mph) blast during his country's Davis Cup tie against Germany in Zagreb last week, will next meet Frenchman Gilles Simon, who beat German Rainer Schuettler 6-3 7-6.

Croat Ljubicic, who upset American Andy Roddick 7-6 7-6 in last year's final, won a tight opening set against del Potro before being broken once in the second and twice in the third.

"It was not an easy draw, of course," Ljubicic said of his opponent, a former world number four who played just three tournaments last year because of an injury to his right wrist.

"He's a great player. We had some great points and I came up short in the end. Del Potro played a solid game, as normally he does, and it was too much for me today."

Del Potro, who won his eighth ATP title at last month's Delray Beach International Championships, will next meet Ukrainian Alexandr Dolgopolov, a 6-4 6-4 winner against Romania's Victor Hanescu.

In other matches, Sweden's fourth seed Robin Soderling fended off a late fightback by Germany's Michael Berrer to win 6-3 7-6 while India's Somdev Devvarman upset 19th-seeded Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis 7-5 6-0. (Editing by Frank Pingue/John O'Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Friday, March 11, 2011

ROANIC PAST FIRST TEST

Rising Canadian star Milos Raonic defeated Turkey's Marsel Ilhan 6-2, 7-6 (7-4) at the BNP Paribas Open on Friday for his first career Masters 1000 victory.

Raonic, ranked No. 37 in the world, has been on quite a roll of late. He earned his first career ATP Tour victory before reaching another tournament final and last week led Canada to a Davis Cup victory over Mexico.

However, the 20-year-old from Thornhill, Ont., had some trouble closing out the win after allowing an early break in the second set to slip away. He ultimately had to end the match by winning a tiebreaker.

Raonic is competing in his first Masters event outside of Canada, where he lost at the Rogers Cup in 2009 and 2010. He moved into a second-round match against American Mardy Fish, the 13th seed who lost the 2008 final to Novak Djokovic.

The big-hitting Raonic was held to 10 aces by Ilhan, who is ranked No. 120 in the world and dropped his ninth match of the year between ATP and Challengers levels and is still looking for his first victory.

Raonic saved two of the three break points he faced while registering three breaks of his own in a match that lasted just under 90 minutes in blazing sunny conditions.

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TSUNAMI SPEED

image

Thursday, March 10, 2011

HAWK-EYE ON EVERY COURT

Hawk-Eye is the complex ball-tracking technology used in tennis to determine the accuracy of line calls, providing quick results so not to interrupt the flow of the matches.

"It's only a positive thing," said Ivan Ljubicic, the defending men's singles champion at Indian Wells and ranked No. 16 in the world. "Less you depend on the umpires, the better. You want to be the one who decides who is better and who is not."

image Hawk-Eye performs at an average error of 3.6 millimeters, but Luke Aggas, the director of operations at Hawk-Eye Innovations Ltd., said Hawk-Eye's accuracy was measured at 2.1 at the Australian Open. The average diameter of a tennis ball is 67 millimeters, so the accuracy is the equivalent of the fluff of the ball.

Since making its debut five years, Hawk-Eye has been embraced by fans. Players appreciate the accuracy of the technology, saying it gives them a peace of mind on the court.

Aggas, who is on site to oversee the running of Hawk-Eye on all eight courts, said both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open had Hawk-Eye on three courts last year, and Wimbledon is moving to expand to four this year.

"Hawk-Eye being on every court is revolutionary," said Raymond Moore, the president of PM Sports, which runs the tournament.

Tournament officials would not comment on the price of the technology, other than PM Sports CEO Charles Pasarell saying "there's a lot of zeros behind it."

Bob Kramer, the tournament director of the Farmer's Classic in Los Angeles, said the technology ran his tournament about $60,000-$70,000 for one court, with much of that cost going to installing the infrastructure.

The estimated cost for the eight courts at the BNP Paribas Open is in the $420,000 to $490,000 range, based on the Farmer's Classic.

Included in the cost is 10 cameras per court, with two video monitors to provide replay for fans, and as many as 14 computers for each court to record the data.

The Hawk-Eye system is part of a remodeling of the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, which has gone from 11 to 33 television monitors, and added seats. There are also three command centers to handle the replays, as well as video production.

Not only is the Hawk-Eye a huge expansion for the BNP Paribas Open, but for Hawk-Eye as well. Aggas anticipates several tournaments will send representatives to the tournament or at least watch on television to see how both tournament and Hawk-Eye handle the ambitious expansion.

"I don't like to use the word gamble, but it's an untried and untested idea, and it's very adventurous of (tournament director) Steve Simon and his crew here at Indian Wells to reach out to us," Aggas said. "It wasn't us pitching to them, 'Hey we can do eight courts.'

"At this time last year on one court, they didn't raise the question of going to eight courts, saying that, we're all in our comfort zone, nothing has been jeopardized or there is nothing we can't deal with already. The infrastructure around all the court is great. We have positions where our cameras are mounted. I can't remember many sites, even the Grand Slams, having so many seats on the grounds being erected."

Part of the expansion included adding 2,600 seats on the grounds, as well as adding approximately 64 miles of data cable, 25 miles of video cable and 57 miles of electrical cable to upgrade the infrastructure.

"It's a large investment, and we're fortunate we have an owner (Larry Ellison) who has the same mind-set as we do as far as wanting to make this the very best tournament in the world," Moore said.

The question now is who,if anyone, will add Hawk-Eye to all courts next? Hawk-Eye made its debut on the tour in March 2006 at the Sony Ericsson Open in Key Biscayne, Fla. By that summer, all the US Open Series events, including the Open, had Hawk-Eye in place.

But one tennis official doesn't think other events will follow suit so quickly this time.

Franklin Johnson, who sits on the ITF board, which governs tennis' four majors, believes it's unlikely another tournament would institute Hawk-Eye on all courts, especially in an era where sponsorship dollars can be hard to come by.

"Its obviously a cost item, and it's not an insignificant cost," said Johnson, president of the U.S. Tennis Association from 2005-06. "I suppose as others join Indian Wells, it will bring pressure on the Slams to do it. I would think that would take a period of several years."

Aggas said, as of now, none of the bigger tournaments have looked into adding Hawk-Eye on all courts. The two tournaments that used three last year, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, were looking into expanding Hawk-Eye this year to four courts, he said.

"The bigger the tournament, the more red tape you have to go through. Wimbledon definitely won't be more than four. U.S. Open typically says they'll match whatever Wimbledon does, but that was assuming that would be the tournament to match," Aggas said. "Indian Wells has raised the bar."

Pasarell, who has sat on the ATP Tour board of directors, disagrees with Johnson and thinks other tournaments will jump on board sooner rather than later.

"Time will tell, but I do expect it won't take too long," Pasarell said. "I think the Slams will follow suit quickly and some of the Masters events."

However, one advantage for the BNP Paribas Open is Ellison, who Forbesmagazine ranks as the sixth-richest man in the world with a net worth of $28 billion.

The CEO of Oracle since founding the company in 1977, Ellison purchased the BNP Paribas Open in December 2009 for $100 million.

Since taking over, Ellison has had a goal of enhancing the tournament, and money doesn't appear to be a deterrent.

"There's a new sheriff in town, and his name is Larry Ellison, and he has loosened the purse strings," Moore said. "We have a blank canvas and he has allowed us to invest in the tournament and to invest in the infrastructure."

The time factor also complicates matters for bigger tournaments who might want to expand Hawk-Eye to all courts.

After Ellison purchased the BNP Paribas Open in December 2009, the tournament investigated added Hawk-Eye to its two other show courts to go with the stadium courts. However ,installing Hawk-Eye on multiple courts was too complex to complete before the 2010 tournament.

"To do it right, we knew we need a full year lead-up to put in the right infrastructure, and with Larry's guidance, take it to all courts," Simon said.

So after the 2010 tournament, the BNP executives resumed talks about expanding Hawk-Eye. That's when Ellison broached the idea of expanding Hawk-Eye to all eight courts.

"When he called and talked to us about expanding it, Steve went goo-goo eyed," Moore said. "It was the first time the purse strings have been relaxed like that and allowed Steve to really master plan the improvements that are going to be on show for 2011."

Leighton Ginn, The Desert Sun

INDIAN WELLS

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Monday, March 7, 2011

SONY BUYS HAWK-EYE

LONDON (AP)—Electronics giant Sony has completed the purchase of Hawk-Eye, the British-based company that provides ball-tracking technology in tennis and cricket.

Financial details weren’t disclosed.

Hawk-Eye is also used in snooker, while soccer world governing body FIFA could utilize the tracking system as it looks to introduce technology to rule on goal-line decisions.

Paul Hawkins, inventor of Hawk-Eye, said Monday the takeover by Sony would create “immense opportunities for the sports industry.”

SPEEDING

image Ivo Karlovic fired a 251 kmph (156mph) serve to break the fastest serve record during his country's Davis Cup tie against Germany in Zagreb on Saturday.

The record was previously held by American Andy Roddick who served at 249.4 kmph (155mph) in another Davis Cup match against Vladmir Voltchkov of Belarus in 2004. The new record has been ratified by the International Tennis Federation.

Karlovic, the tallest player on the tennis circuit at 6ft 10in sent down the serve while partnering Ivan Dodig in the doubles match against Philipp Petzschner and Christopher Kas of Germany. Karlovic and Dodig however, lost the game 6-3, 3-6, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4 and Croatia eventually crashed to a 3-2 defeat to Germany.

Karlovic also shares the record for the third fastest serve - 153mph (246kph) - with Roddick and another American, Roscoe Tanner.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

KINESIOLOGY TAPE

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It may not win any fashion awards, but eye-catching kinesiology tape continues to grow in popularity with pro tennis players. Invented in the 1970s by Japanese chiropractor Dr. Kenzo Kase, the tape has many benefits, including management of a variety of injuries afflicting players, including shoulder, knee and even back complaints.

Novak Djokovic wore very conspicuous kinesiology tape around his left knee during his title run at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships last week, saying it was a ‘precaution’ only. Anyone who witnessed Djokovic’s outstanding play and exceptional court coverage could see one of the key benefits of the tape: Unlike regular tape, it does not impede movement - good movement, that is.

“The tape is very helpful to players, assisting with posture, decreasing pain, and improving range of motion," says ATP physiotherapist Clay Sniteman.

Kinesiology tape is ideal to use to support a knee which may not be tracking properly, because you can apply it to allow movement in one direction, but not the other. Other forms of tape, typically wrapped tight for compression, are more rigid and overly restrict a player’s movement. On the ATP World Tour, good movement is fundamental to success. How important is movement? As tennis fans know, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and Djokovic aren’t just three of the best shotmakers in the game; they are three of the best movers. 

Kinesiology tape, which is tensioned and applied in a variety of patterns, is also well suited for shoulders. The tape can allow for movement in the direction the shoulder should move, but avoid improper movements that can cause or exacerbate injuries.

Applied firmly to clean, sweat-free and hair-free skin, the breathable and stretchable tape can stay in place for up to five days. It can also be used to treat swelling and for proprioception, to keep acute or chronic knee and shoulder problems in a pain-free range. The tape can be used on virtually all joints, although it is rarely applied to the hands and wrist, where players do not want to restrict motion.

The tape can be used to lift the skin, allowing fluid to drain. Following operations the tape can be used to decrease acute swelling and inflammation by improving circulation, and to reduce pain.

Kinesiology tape is widely available for purchase in sports stores and on the internet, with a 16 foot roll retailing for around $11.

ATP

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

MAIN DRAW, QUALIES, PRE-QUALIES, WILD CARDS - IT AIN'T EASY

Milos Raonic, Kei Nishikori, Ryan Harrison, Bernard Tomic, Coco Vandeweghe, and Christina McHale were granted wild cards into the main draws, tournament director Steve Simon said. Veterans James Blake, Vania King, Jill Craybas and Sania Mirza were also given wild cards into the main draws.

Joining Vandeweghe and McHale on the women's side will be young Americans Lauren Davis, and Sloane Stephens. There is one remaining women's wild card to be granted.

Qualifying draw wild cards were given to four men, including 1999 BNP Paribas Open champion Mark Philippoussis, who is attempting a comeback; American Ryan Sweeting; Steve Johnson, the No. 1 singles and doubles player at USC; and Greg Ouellette, a former SEC player of the year at Florida with three titles on the ITF circuit.

Former top 30 German star Sabine Lisicki, three young Americans, Madison Keys, Madison Brengle and Maria Sanchez, and rising Puerto Rican junior Monica Puig, were granted wild cards into the women's qualifying draw.

There are two more qualifying draw wild cards to be distributed and will be given to the men's and women's winner of the BNP Paribas Open Pre-Qualifier, which begins tomorrow in Indian Wells and runs through March 6. Between the men and women, the Pre-Qualifier had a record 145 entries.

USA TODAY

Friday, February 25, 2011

ROGER'S BLACKLIST OF SPORTS

Roger Federer loves a variety of sports, but it seems that ping pong is the only one he allows himself to play due to risk of injury. Speaking after his quarter-final win at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, Federer said that skiing, soccer and squash were all on his banned list. Even the more pedestrian sport of golf is blacklisted.

“To be quite honest, I do miss [skiing]. I used to do it up until a few years ago," Federer said. "Last time I skied was in 2008 when I had mono. Came back after the Australian Open, went skiing, and next day I got ill again. So I was like, Okay, it's a sign for me. No more skiing. That's a pity, but okay, we'll do that.

“Soccer I haven't played much either. I remember when I had the groin issue in Wimbledon. Then I went to Gstaad and I really couldn't move well. I mean, I won the doubles with Safin and stuff. But I went to play soccer that whole week as well and couldn't move at the end. So it was just so silly of me. I did the same with squash as well.”

Federer said that he recently played a round of golf, but even that took its toll on his body. “I played a round of golf with my parents. It was my mom's birthday the other week here, and I went to play on the Emirates Golf Course. It was nice to do, but the same thing again. Next thing you know, your back hurts just a little bit.

“You just don't want to do it, because my body is accustomed to play tennis right now. Honestly, I can wait for many more years until I can do all those sports really well. I actually do miss it to do all those things a bit more often.  I can play ping pong. I can do that.  It's a pity [I can’t play the other sports] but, look, I'll be able to enjoy them much more when I'm done.”

ATP