Tennis elbow Essays

  • Tennis Elbow: A Case Study

    569 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tennis Elbow Occupational Therapists around the world have as a common goal to help their clients with the performance of their everyday activities. According with the Occupational Therapy Practice Framework: Domain and Process 3rd ed (AOTA, 2014), personal hygiene and grooming is part of the Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) of each individual. The activity of applying deodorant would be consider very simple for a healthy person; without even thinking in the specifics movements involved on it. When

  • Lateral Epicondylitis Essay

    1994 Words  | 4 Pages

    Introduction Lateral epicondylitis, better known as “Tennis elbow” is a form of tendonitis. It causes the tendons within the bony structure to swell; it can also cause pain in the elbow which radiates to the arm. The article from WebMD states “These tendons are tough tissues that connect the muscles of your lower arm to the bone”1. Commonly referred to tennis elbow, someone can get this form of tendonitis without playing tennis a day in their lives. It is usually a result of overworking or repetitive

  • Hitting A Baseball: The Physics Of Baseball

    2517 Words  | 6 Pages

    Baseball is considered America’s past time. Legends like Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jackie Robinson, and many more have come and gone. Throughout baseball’s history certain players have excelled more than others, and like any sport they were successful by exploiting their strengths. It isn’t the rules, uniforms, stadiums, and fan base that make baseball a beautiful sport; it’s the players. Anyone competing, whether it is at a professional level or not, has their own unique mechanics that allows them

  • Major Bones Used In Tennis

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tennis serve Introduction to tennis Tennis is a sport that can be played individually against a single opponent (singles) or between two teams of two players each (doubles). Each player uses a tennis racket that is strung with cord to strike a hollow rubber ball covered with felt over or around a net and into the opponent's court. The object of the game is to play the ball in such a way that the opponent is not able to play a valid return. The player who is unable to return the ball will not gain

  • Essay On Tennis

    587 Words  | 2 Pages

    To: Aspiring Tennis Players From: Boris Ntembe Subject: How to serve a tennis ball Date: April 9, 2014 Introduction Quite a lot of people have witnessed a tennis game, whether in person or on TV. Although often depicted by foreigners of the game as being “an easy sport”, Tennis on the contrary, requires quite a bit of technique and skill to even begin the game. Every point in this game begins with a serve, so if anyone was to hold their own on the court, they would at least be required to begin

  • Process Essay: How To Become A Professional Tennis Player

    1494 Words  | 3 Pages

    wished you could be a professional tennis player? Now you can. With a fast and powerful serve you can easily become a great player. Wouldn’t you love to serve the ball so hard that no one can hit it? With a few steps you will be able too achieve an ace. An ace is a term in tennis that is saying the opponent was not able to touch the ball when it was served over the net and then the person serving the ball receives an easy point. Every point in the game of tennis starts with a serve so wouldn’t you

  • Coaching Tennis

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    Coaching Tennis Some people may think that tennis is just a blow off sport, that it doesn’t take any talent, and anyone can do it. I started playing tennis about 4 years ago and I remember how hard it was to learn. One of my best friends and I started playing together and his dad had taught him how to play, when he first started teaching me I got really frustrated because I would keep hitting the ball out and I found out that playing and coaching tennis was much harder than it seemed. The

  • Strong Tennis Player

    1686 Words  | 4 Pages

    experiencing tennis, a sport of a lifetime. Ranging from young children to senior citizens, there is no age barrier for this popular sport. Playing tennis is a very healthy hobby for some, but for others, tennis is a lifestyle. Tennis professionals spend years developing their own tennis games so they can improve their skills and enhance the strengths of their students. Although numerous abilities and talents are needed to be a tennis director, helping people develop their tennis skills is a rewarding

  • Tennis Serve Essay

    3143 Words  | 7 Pages

    Movement Skills: Tennis Serve 1a. The tennis serve is broken up into eight specific phases, these include : the starting stance/ preparation, ball toss and backswing, the knee bend, trophy position, racquet drop, leg push, swing and pronate and finally the follow through. o Starting Stance /Preparation This is the physiological stage for tennis players. It is where the athlete determines location and type of serve and takes into consideration the positioning of the opponent and former knowledge of

  • Well Being Essay

    2085 Words  | 5 Pages

    Well-being is a combination of physical, mental, emotional and social factors. It is seen, as a stable state of being satisfied with one’s self and their life that doesn’t fluctuate due to a single even, person, or feeling (Begley and Begun, 2000). Well-being consists of eight dimensions, emotional, environmental, financial, intellectual, occupational, physical, social and spiritual (Begley and Begun, 2000). For the purpose of this study we are going to be looking at the emotional and occupational

  • Comparing Canadian Amateur Tennis to Pro Tennis

    556 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing Canadian Amateur Tennis to Pro Tennis Comparing Canadian amateur sport to a professional Canadian sport, which in my case is tennis. When high school is over, its time for me to choose what career path that I will be looking to go into. The choices that are out there for me is to become a full-time professional tennis player, or go into a coaching career and just be an

  • Arthur Ashe

    1131 Words  | 3 Pages

    in His Own Time A young African-American boy walks onto some rundown tennis courts at a local park with his father in Richmond, VA. Armed with an old wooden racket and a can of white tennis balls, his father begins to feed him some different shots and tells his son everything he knows about tennis. Being an African-American, this young boy did not have many friends that were as interested in tennis as he was. Since tennis is a predominantly white sport, Arthur Ashe’s desire to play was not encouraged

  • Althea Gibson

    875 Words  | 2 Pages

    the everyday hardships of school and home life. This is where she discovered tennis. It all began at local recreation programs where she took up table tennis, or ping pong. Althea had talent right from the beginning. She realized that she, a girl who’s life had been nothing but rough roads and abrupt turns, could be good at something. As she continued to gain interest as well as perfect her table tennis skills, Althea began to compete, and win several local tournaments. Because of

  • History Of Racquetball

    620 Words  | 2 Pages

    factory in Bridgeport, CT when he decided to start a new sport. He lived in Greenwich, CT and was professional tennis player and a pro squash and handball player. It is said that in 1949, Sobek and a partner began playing with a paddle and combined the rules of handball and squash to play what they called “paddle racquets.” He then decided to change from a paddle to a racquet itself using a tennis racquet as a model. He made 25 to sell to his friends to start the sport. There was one problem though; there

  • An Analysis of Advertising Focusing on the Teenage Market

    1135 Words  | 3 Pages

    traditional looking tennis player standing behind the net to emphasise something boring and dull. The scene was contrasted with full colour, action-packed match with McEnroe and Agassi. The man in the black and white scene is standing still and talking, whereas McEnroe and Agassi are running around the tennis court, showing their skills and doing the opposite to what the man is saying in the black and white scene. This shows that they are champion but “bad boy” of tennis.

  • biography of Arthur Ashe jr.

    1037 Words  | 3 Pages

    Arthur Robert Ashe Jr. is a man of trust, courage, grace and honor. Although many of these attriobutes I share with Arthur, his high level of moral values and self reliance I aspire to achieve. Arthur was of African American decent and being born on July 10, 1943 in Richmond, Virginia he had to face many racial struggles and hardships. On the contrary, I was born and raised in somerset, New Jersey, in the 1990’s so my racial struggles were close to non-existent. Being of Italian- American decent

  • My Two Favorite Sports: Tennis vs. Basketball

    526 Words  | 2 Pages

    enjoyed playing were baseball and tennis. Although Baseball and tennis are both sports that involve using a club to hit an airborne ball, they differ because of the equipment used to play them, the rules for each game and the way points are scored. First of all to play a baseball game you need to have a baseball, a baseball bat, baseball mitts, helmets and uniforms but to play a tennis game you only need two tennis rackets, tennis shoes and a tennis ball. As a result tennis is much less expensive to play

  • Comparing Hart Rate After Playing Tennis and After Playing Virtual Tennis Using the Wii Game

    740 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing Hart Rate After Playing Tennis and After Playing Virtual Tennis Using the Wii Game Abstract The purpose of my experiment is to compare the heart rate change results between playing a sport in real life and playing a video game based off of that sport. I will use a procedure that involves multiple people playing tennis in real life, taking and recording their heart rate pulse, then having them play a video game that is based off tennis with a motion-sensor controller that acts as if

  • The story of Summer

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    to a loss of control to his sensual appetite. The next case of Homer's decreasing ability to control himself takes place on a tennis court. Throughout the game, the reader gets the impression that Homer was trying to get Sandra's attention through talented athletics, "On the tennis court she was strangely indifferent to his heroics." (293) Towards the end of the tennis match, Homer's eyes, once again, follow her as she is leaving, which leads him to double fault. This is the first time his decreasing

  • Alfred Hitchcock's Strangers on a Train

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    assignment, I decided to write about Strangers on a Train, which is a film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and released in 1951. The story is about two strangers that meet on a train. Those men’s names were Guy Haines and Bruno Anthony. Guy is a professional tennis player and he is married. His wife’s name is Mariam, but he wants a divorce with Mariam because he loves another woman. Bruno Anthony is the other stranger, slightly psychotic, hating his father and wanting to kill him. The movie runs for 1 hour and