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A kinematic comparison of successful and unsuccessful tennis serves across the elite development pathway
Authors:David Whiteside  Bruce Elliott  Brendan Lay  Machar Reid
Affiliation:1. School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, The University of Western Australia, Crawley 6009, Australia;2. Sport Science and Medicine Unit, Tennis Australia, Private Bag 6060, Richmond South 3121, Australia
Abstract:While velocity generation is an obvious prerequisite to proficient tennis serve performance, it is also the only stroke where players are obliged to negotiate a unique target constraint. Therefore, the dearth of research attending to the accuracy component of the serve is surprising. This study compared the body, racquet and ball kinematics characterising successful serves and service faults, missed into the net, in two groups of elite junior female players and one professional female tennis player. Three-dimensional body, racquet and ball kinematics were recorded using a 22-camera VICON motion analysis system. There were no differences in body kinematics between successful serves and service faults, suggesting that service faults cannot be attributed to a single source of biomechanical error. However, service faults missing into the net are characterized by projection angles significantly further below the horizontal, implying that consistency in this end-point parameter is critical to successful performance. Regulation of this parameter appears dependent on compensatory adjustments in the distal elbow and wrist joints immediately prior to impact and also perceptual feedback. Accordingly, coordination of the distal degrees of freedom and a refined perception-action coupling appear more important to success than any isolated mechanical component of the service action.
Keywords:Biomechanics  Error  Compensatory  Variability  Perceptual feedback
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