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The most recent version of this article was published on 1 August 2007

Br J Sports Med. Published Online First: 1 May 2007. doi:10.1136/bjsm.2006.031351
Copyright © 2007 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine.

Paper

An integrated physiological and performance profile of professional tennis

Daniel J Hornery 1*, Damian Farrow 1, Inigo Mujika 2 and Warren Young 3

1 AIS, Australia
2 Athletic Club Bilbao, Spain
3 University of Ballarat, Australia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: daniel.hornery{at}ausport.gov.au.

Accepted 6 March 2007


Abstract

Objective: Describe the physiological responses to tournament tennis in relation with prevailing environmental conditions, match notation and skills that underpin performance.

Design: Fourteen male professional tennis players (mean (SD) age: 21.4 (2.6) yr; height: 183.0 (6.9) cm; body mass: 79.2 (6.4) kg) were studied whilst contesting international tennis tournaments. Environmental conditions, match notation, physiological (core temperature, hydration status, heart rate, blood variables) and performance parameters (serve kinematics, serve velocity, error rates) were recorded.

Results: Hard and clay court tournaments elicited similar peak core temperature (38.9 (0.3) vs. 38.5 (0.6) °C) and average heart rate (152 (15) vs. 146 (19) bpm) but different body mass deficit (1.05 (0.49) vs. 0.32 (0.56) %, p < 0.05). Average pre-match urine specific gravity was 1.022 (0.004). Time between points was longer during hard court matches (25.1 (4.3) vs. 17.2 (3.3) s, p < 0.05). Qualitative analysis of first and second serves, respectively, revealed inverse relationships between the position of the tossing arm at ball release and the position of the ball toss and progressive match time (r = -0.74 and r = -0.73, p < 0.05) and incurred body mass deficit (r = 0.73 and r = 0.73, p < 0.05).

Conclusions: Participants commenced matches in a poor state of hydration, experienced moderate thermoregulatory strain and dehydration during competition. These adverse physiological conditions may compromise performance and influence notational analyses.

Key Words: Tennis match play, kinematics, notation, performance, physiology


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