Started playing tennis again. Hadn't played in over 10 years. My one racquet says it was last strung in 2001 (wilson prostaff.) Joined a league. Played my matches with a ripstick extender 800 (great name).
First played Daniel B (slightly catty effeminate sociology professor in 30's) and lost 6-2 6-2. Hit a ton of errors playing indoors on a super fast court. Understandable to lose when first playing in over ten years. He was a dinker though. Pretty sure I'd destroy him now.
Then played Art R (nice guy, environmental scientist in 20's). Overweight fellow who hit a lot of unforced errors. We played with brand new balls that were pretty dead straight out of the can, I guess because the can had been left in a hot car for a week or so. (Penn's). That helped me on the unforced errors. Think I won maybe 6-4 6-2.
Then Chi C. (Asian FBI guy in his 50's). Very much a dinker who very rarely hit unforced errors except he couldn't handle my serve. I forfeited 6-4 6-5 as I pulled a leg muscle. I was up 5-3 in the second set when injured. Played impressive at times but hit too many unforced errors. If I had just hit easy slices and ran him, think could have easily won as he wasn't really very mobile. Played at local college courts. Saw Kenny K who I played with a bit 25 years ago. He's been constantly playing ever since. Still only average.
Took a week off and bought a ball machine. Then played Travis S (early 20's engineer). Liked this guy's game, the least dinky of the bunch. We played indoors and I basically blew him off the court. 2-6, 6-2, 6-2. He did strain a neck muscle and that hurt his serve. But when his serve was good it wasn't any big deal anyway. My serve was bad the first set and then awesome the last two. Virtually no double faults. I'd guess hitting 120's... 130's ?? Maybe ten aces. Though my placement needs work. I was hitting huge forehands. I used the ball machine once or twice before this. I think it very quickly is helping me.
Then Buddy M (athletic guy in his 50's). This guy had not much of a game (dinker). Also showed up with one tennis ball in pants and no shirt, lol. But he could run. And actually his serve was really good in the second set (had a weird backwards spin (not an american twist)). I won 6-1 7-5. Had a weird meltdown in the second set where I lost 5 games in a row. Then won like the last 16 points straight almost. Except for those 5 games, just destroyed this guy.
Then Yang S (an athletic PE major). This guy really took a rip at the ball. Tried to put a lot of top spin on it. Kind of a nice serve. Good movement, spin, consistent, although actually quite easy to return. And his ground strokes came nice and slow also really. I had tennis elbow this time. Started to feel the beginnings of it against Buddy, was pretty bad this time. Could barely lift a water bottle to drink in between games with my right hand. So I did a lot of dinking. Lots of slicing. Though not really an issue on the backhand side. Also the balls were incredibly fast (wilson titaniums) so was trying to be careful. He actually hit to my two handed backhand a lot. Which normally would be smart as my forehand is huge. Don't think he realized I was having trouble even lifting my arm. And I did hit the topspin forehand hard here and there. Ultimately he hit a lot of unforced errors. I blasted too many winners to say I dinked him to death, but I was kind of dinky. Prefer to think I mixed things up and he couldn't get a rhythm. 6-4 6-1.
Should take a rest now cause of my arm. Actually it's both my shoulder and my elbow. Trying to dampen vibrations by adding weight in the neck area via duct tape. Against Yang S was the first time I tried it. Not sure if it didn't work or my arm was already so softened up from hitting 200 serves plus the ball machine the day before with the new racquet I bought (Prince Graphite Classic Longbody). Read a lot about racquets/tennis elbow. I guess I need a heavy racket where all the weight isn't just out in the head. So attempted to modify racquets as they're all made too light. Really want a 14 ounce racket. Added about 3 ounces of tape to the ripstick in the neck against Yang (bringing it up to 12 ounces). Previously had only added weight in the head where it wasn't really dampening. Just putting in in the neck really gives me all the power I need. Added a bit more tape just above the two hand grip. And added cotton balls and nails inside the handle (about 2 ounces) worth. This brings it up to about 14 ounces. Now will rest up a bit. And see if I can get past this....