I would love to try this blind tennis.
I absolutely love tennis.
By the way I will now listen the semifinnals of Rolandgarros in Radio Rolandgarros.
Cheers,


Jorge Gonçalves
[email protected]
Skype: joport3
Twitter: www.twitter.com/goncalvesjorge
Webpage: www.jorgegoncalves.com

On 6/8/2012 4:23 AM, Steady Goh wrote:
Blind tennis or also called soundball tennis, a blind person can play
with a fully sighted person but with different rules. we are allowed up
to 3 bounces before we return the ball. A fully sighted has to return on
the 1st bounce and parcially sighted allow up to 2 bounces. Yes, is not
an equal playing field to make up for our disadvantages. A sighted
person can tell exactly where the direction the ball is heading, it's
hight and speed very early and react accordingly. whereas we are like
having an unstable connection with the ball because the sound is not
constantly ringing so we need more time to process then react. Given
that, I still do miss the ball after training for 2 months and no where
near being able to play a match yet, but i do see my progress.

锦发/Steady Goh
----- Original Message ----- From: "Ryan Strunk" <[email protected]>
To: "'Gamers Discussion list'" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, June 08, 2012 10:21 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] tennis, anyone?


After reading the article and seeing your feedback, I can't help but
nod my
head in agreement. It got me to thinking about a perennial problem with
so-called "blind sports," and I wonder what the solution is.
If this strays too far from the realm of accessible gaming, please
feel free
to steer the topic back in a more suitable direction.
In all blind sports I have seen--goal ball, beep baseball, accessible
cricket, power showdown, and now this--the common trend seems to be that
blind players are forced to play only with other blind players. In
some of
these sports totally blind people even get a different set of rules than
those with partial sight. Nuts to that, and I have some residual vision.
The article talks about how tennis teaches blind people that they can
do the
same things as their sighted peers, but I'm having trouble seeing how
modified tennis makes that case. Certainly I believe that blindness
can be
relegated to the level of an inconvenience, and I believe that given the
proper training and opportunity, blind people can compete on an equal
playing field with the sighted--no pun intended--but I don't know if
that's
often the case when it comes to sports.
I know that certain forms of martial arts lend themselves to equal
competition between blind and sighted people; one of my co-workers this
Summer takes part in UFC fights. I myself wrestled for 8 years while
going
to school. But when it comes to other sports, especially team sports, I
wonder how we could go about participating on an equal level. Is the
answer
to create a new sport that blind and sighted people can play together?
Do we
develop a new set of techniques so that we, too, can play pickup
basketball?
I don't know, but I'd sure like to find out. My days of training to be a
star athlete are certainly behind me, but it's not too late for the
younger
guys.
All the best,
Ryan

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Scott Chesworth
Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2012 10:46 AM
To: Gamers Discussion list
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] tennis, anyone?

I gave this a shot, but was pretty underwhelmed TBH. Has to be said
that I'm
no athlete, but my spacial awareness, coordination and confidence when
moving aren't too shabby. I found the adaptions felt clunky, and that
there
was little satisfaction to be gained. Sitting in on a few games between
people who'd been training casually but consistently for a couple of
years
didn't inspire me any further, it didn't have anywhere near the breakneck
pace and fluidity of play that unmodified tennis does, and that was kinda
the appeal here.

One person's take of course, it's all subjective. Not posting this to
discourage, just to make sure people will turn up for their first session
prepared for a long slog. It's certainly not something that you can just
dive into and let off some steam with like Goalball for example.

Scott


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