Tennis is a wonderful sport but there is one ugly side of it which is getting kids to run after professional tennis players with their towels. It makes tennis players look like spoilt ego driven people. It's also demeaning for the ball boys and girls.
One simple solution is for the ATP and WTA to ban towel service and install a simple towel rail or chair at the back of the court for the players to use.
Think about it no more pointing fingers and waving hands and throwing sweaty towels at kids that don't even get paid.
Yes, when I went with "old fashioned nonsense", indeed it's over prevalence seems relatively recent. I could have gone with either of the first two options, but it is not needed.
Seems more habit than anything with the "here, minor dogsbody person, towel !"
I didn't notice the 10K players take too long at all towelling themselves, with some taking a towel to the back of the court and some not even bothering.
Is this part of a study/dissertation or something?
I've voted 'it's OK, I don't mind'. I don't really care but I definitely don't see it as an 'ugly side' to tennis (lots of more important ones than that!).
I think it's probably quicker having the ball kids run the towel over than the player having to go and pick it up from the back of the court each time. At football, there are people to throw a new ball (or the old ball) to the guy for the throw-in when the other ball goes off too far.
And I know lots of kids who've been selected to be ball kids at the French Open and have enjoyed the 'towel part', I don't see it as demeaning - yes, the players could get their own towels, but they could get their own balls, and keep their own score. and string their own rackets . . . I know the kids don't get paid but they don't get paid for doing the balls either - voluntary work is not a sin, I don't see them as being exploited.
So, fine,, change it if you want, I wouldn't cry over 'lost traditions', but I don't really see any problem.
CD, your post sums up my views entirely. Know quite a number of youngsters who have been ball kids in this country. Towel-duty is seen as a privileged position - gets them up close and personal with their heroes. However, it seems there are different approaches by the players to obtaining the towel. Some point and gesture extravagantly as and when they want the towel, others speak to the towel monitor at the start of the match and ask them to approach with the towel after every point and say what gesture (raised hand, shake of head or such like) if they do not require it. Apparently method 2 goes down best with the kids!!
For me personally as I watch tennis every day it's annoying seeing a player ask for their towel after every point.
It's like Indie and Wolf said just get on and play the game.
Also there are some really grumpy players on the tour that throw towels and gesture in an annoying way like pointing a finger.
I would just like to see the game flow more and see less toweling, 25 sec pauses between each serve, bouncing balls, pulling shorts and ruffling hair.
Pat Cash sums it up
Former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash said he sees a need to speed up matches if players are deliberately delaying play, and that the tennis-watching public either in the stands on TV have the most to gain.
John Llloyd wore his towel down his pants and had it literally to hand. I blame Rusedski for starting all the towel nonsense. Now it's an excuse for breaking a server's rhythm. If you tape a two hour match then edit it down to active play, the match only lasts like fifteen minutes. Towels and other tricks like changeover drinks during tiebreaks slow it all down and worse, it all gets copied lower down the reaches of the game. Trouble is, a toothless ITF couldn't do anything about it even if they were minded to. The power in pro tennis largely lies with the player unions these days.