Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Shotspot


Shotspot schematic

ESPN uses Shotspot to determine a particular ball landed in or out. For one, i have my reservations about how well they can even predict the trajectory of the ball - accurate enough to make a judgement on the line call? I dont think so.

But all that aside, when a ball lands like this (right of the line being "OUT", they claim that it has actually landed on the line, simply becuase in the top view, it overlaps with the line. Yet, considering that the ball contacts the court only at a tiny area, id say they are wrong and grossly misleading the public about close line calls. I am not a professional, but i have played enough USTA sanctioned tennis games to say that in a game, this ball would most likely be called out simply because you can clearly see daylight between the line and the contact area of the ball with the court (which is really tiny) ... Espn should offer an explanation about their shotspot technology - its really misleading I think!

Shotspot is actually a version of Hawkeye - the one used in cricket, where really the accuracy needed is a lot lesser. maybe some of the cricket gurus can throw light on this one ...

2 comments:

Parag said...

The tennis balls are so soft. I remember seeing high-speed photos that showed tennis balls getting totally deformed and flattened on contact with ground. So, the shotspot may not be completely wrong.

Aditya said...

im sure tennis balls get deformed - esp considering that they are being bashed around at about a 100 mph. and yet i play enough competitive tennis to believe a line judge who makes a call when he sees "daylight" through the crack ... i am not saying shotspot is wrong, i merely think its probably not as almighty as espn makes it out to be either.