Regina Leader-Post

Nadal’s new racket tracks aces with app

- JOCELYN GECKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MELBOURNE, Australia — Rafael Nadal’s new hightech tennis racket looks and feels like his old one. Except for the on-off switch.

Call it a “smart racket,” as the latest advance in tennis technology tells you where you hit the ball — with the help of an app.

Sensors embedded in the handle of the racket, made by Babolat, record technical data on every ball struck. At the end of a match or training session, the data can be downloaded to a smartphone or computer and used to help analyze a player’s strengths and mistakes.

Aside from the sensors, the racket is just a racket. It’s the same size and weight as Nadal’s old-fashioned former racket.

“I know to play well I need to play 70 per cent of forehands, 30 per cent of backhands,” the 14-time Grand Slam winner said after racing through his first-round Australian Open match over Mikhail Youzhny, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 Monday. “If I’m not doing that, I know I’m not doing the right thing on court.”

“This (racket) is a way you can check these kinds of things.”

The Internatio­nal Tennis Federation had previously outlawed what it calls “player-analysis technology” during competitio­n, but adopted a new rule last January that allows players to wear or use “smart” equipment, like Nadal’s new racket and devices like heart-rate monitors that record data about player performanc­e in real time.

Babolat initially fitted the technology into its Pure Drive rackets, which are used by Karolina Pliskova, Julia Goerges and Yanina Wickmayer, and then incorporat­ed the sensors into a newly released racket used by Nadal, Caroline Wozniacki and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.

Don’t expect to see players on their iPhones analyzing their game mid-match. An ITF ban on coaching during matches prevents players from consulting the data on court.

The way it works is simple, says Thomas Otton, the company’s director of global communicat­ions.

There are two buttons on the bottom of the racket’s handle.

“You press the ‘on’ button, a blue LED light appears and you play,” Otton said. When finished, a second button is pressed, activating Bluetooth, which syncs the informatio­n with a smartphone or other device.

Otton called up Nadal’s data from his practice session on Friday that lasted one hour, 31 minutes. In that time, he hit 572 shots or 22 per minute, which broke down to 156 backhands, 222 forehands, 118 serves and 76 smashes.

The data also gets more detailed and analyzes, for example, how Nadal hit his forehands — 133 had topspin, 49 had slice and 40 were flat.

Swipe to the next screen and an image of a tennis racket appears that shows where the ball is making impact. For Nadal’s practice, he hit 42 per cent of his shots in the centre and 20 per cent on top of the racket — the rest on the bottom and sides.

At a demonstrat­ion of the racket before the tournament started, Wozniacki and Nadal joked about the pros and cons of knowing too much.

“Sometimes it’s not a good thing,” said Wozniacki. “Because you think you’re hitting it in the middle of the racket, but really it shows you you’re not. And there’s no going around that.”

Nadal’s uncle and coach, Toni, joked that the racket would give him an edge.

“Sometimes when I correct Rafa on how he’s hitting the ball, he doesn’t agree.” said Toni. “Now I have the data.”

Nadal retorted, without missing a beat, “Now he has the data to know that he was wrong.”

 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE/The Associated Press ?? Sensors embedded in the handle of Spaniard Rafael Nadal’s racket, made by Babolat,
record technical data on every ball struck.
BERNAT ARMANGUE/The Associated Press Sensors embedded in the handle of Spaniard Rafael Nadal’s racket, made by Babolat, record technical data on every ball struck.

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