What are the selection skills of squash rackets?
Introduce a few simple selection principles to help you choose a good one to your heart’s content.
When most golfers choose to shoot, they just randomly wave a few times to see if the style and paint are beautiful. Then decide whether to buy. After a few weeks of enthusiastic practice, you may feel pain in your elbow, wrist or even palm because of the racket.
When choosing a racket, prevention of squash elbow and squash wrist is an important consideration. Squash elbows and squash wrists may have troubled half of squash enthusiasts over the age of 30. However, the current light, hard, and head-heavy new rackets may promote the occurrence of squash elbows and squash wrist elbows when returning high-speed and strong balls. Nowadays, male squash professional players rarely use ultra-light rackets, so don’t just look at the appearance of the racket.
The squash racket material determines the performance and feel of the squash racket, not a certain brand. With a racket with a heavy head, you will feel that the racket is moving slowly for a ball that needs to react quickly to a volley. Rackets are getting lighter and lighter. Under this trend, remakes are rare. Fortunately, a modified light racket is also a solution. The inertia of the heavy head shot will make it difficult for you to finish and the serve lacks spin. It is also easy to get injured after a long time.