Jack Kramer Pro Staff vs. Prince Graphite...
It seems that wood racquets used to measure between 60 to 65 square inches in area...the Prince Graphite originally came out in two sizes. 110 square inches and 90 square inches. Chris Lewis of New Zealand made the finals of Wimbledon using the behemoth in 1983 where McEnroe gave him a good thrashing.
Let's say for instance that a wood racquet was 70 square inches and the Prince was 110 square inches...that is a whopping 57% bigger area to use. Anyone that thinks that the modern game is so much superior might want to ponder those numbers. Throw in the string technology and you have different games by definition. You cannot compare the two.
Federer on the other hand is currently using a frame that measures 90 square inches and his top three rivals use frames that are 100 square inches. That is over 11% smaller than his rivals. Somebody should give Roger a math lesson and convince him to play with more area...surely there will be fewer mishits. Does anyone think in a game that the lines are being called by electronic eyes to millimeters with balls traveling at zillions of mph it is prudent to give away over 11% playing surface to their opponents?
Originally posted by stroke
View Post
Let's say for instance that a wood racquet was 70 square inches and the Prince was 110 square inches...that is a whopping 57% bigger area to use. Anyone that thinks that the modern game is so much superior might want to ponder those numbers. Throw in the string technology and you have different games by definition. You cannot compare the two.
Federer on the other hand is currently using a frame that measures 90 square inches and his top three rivals use frames that are 100 square inches. That is over 11% smaller than his rivals. Somebody should give Roger a math lesson and convince him to play with more area...surely there will be fewer mishits. Does anyone think in a game that the lines are being called by electronic eyes to millimeters with balls traveling at zillions of mph it is prudent to give away over 11% playing surface to their opponents?
Comment