Sunday, May 30, 2010
Week Post Five: Comparing Badminton
Friday, May 21, 2010
Week Post Four: Top Badminton Players
Friday, May 14, 2010
Week Post Three: Badminton Raquet Review
Honestly, a badminton racquet does not make you a better player when you’re a beginner. The racquet does not decide what shot to do, what direction the shuttle goes in, or how high or low the shuttle goes. A racquet is just an extension of a player’s arm, but I guess to an advanced player, it’s more than that. When it comes to purchasing racquets online, it’s tough because every badminton player is different, this means that not every racquet is going to feel the same for every player. A racquet is an extension of YOUR body, nobody else’s, so you have to basically play with it, before you buy it. When reading online reviews on racquets, the reviews are all personal, so you don’t know that it will do the same for you. The solution to this problem is to know how you play and to know the kind of player you are. For example, many reviews will provide the string tension and the racquet flexibility. If you don’t know your game, you don’t know how this relates to the racquet. So when deciding to either buy a ArcSaber Z-Slash or a Yonex Nanospeed 9000X, you either need to try it out first to see the compatibility between you and the racquet or really know the badminton vocabulary and how it relates to your game.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Week Post Two: How to Play
Friday, April 30, 2010
Badminton History: Week Post One
Badminton had originally come from the games “battledore” and “shuttlecock” that children had played. It had started with a paddle, instead of a racquet, and with a cork stuffed with feathers, instead of feathers attached to a cork. But badminton as its own game had started in the mid-18th century by British military officers stationed in British India. Around that time, the name of the sport was Poona. Eventually, the game was brought back to England by retired British military officers and that’s when the official rules were made. The new sport began in 1873 at the Badminton House, Gloucestershire, which was owned by the Duke of Beaufort. For the period of that time, it was called “The Game of Badminton,” and eventually its official name became Badminton. Until 1887, the rules were very contradictory and confusing so finally a group of badminton players made a Bath Badminton Club and had standardized the rules that still stand to this day.