Wheelchair tennis at the 2024 Paralympic Games is firmly under the spotlight this week.
The action is already underway at Roland-Garros – which hosts the French Open every year – and we are quickly approaching the latter stages of the six events.
There are plenty of medals up for grabs with the men’s singles, women’s singles, quad singles, quad doubles, men’s doubles and women’s doubles tournaments.
Alfie Hewett is competing in the men’s singles, as well as the men’s doubles with his partner Gordon Reid, with the ParalympicsGB pair facing Dutch duo Maarten Ter Hofte and Ruben Spaargaren in the last eight today (Tuesday, August 3).
Tennis fans are keen to know the rules and full world rankings with some questioning how many times can the ball bounce, so Metro.co.uk has explained it all for you here…
ParalympicsGB outlined the full rules of wheelchair tennis on their website, with players allowed to let the ball bounce twice – not once – before returning it.
‘Wheelchair tennis at the Paralympic Games follows Olympic tennis rules, with a few important differences,’ ParalympicsGB posted online.
‘The most significant difference is the ‘two-bounce rule’, which means a player can allow the ball to bounce twice and must return it before a third bounce. The second bounce can be inside or outside the court boundaries.
‘At the serve, the server must be in a stationary position before serving the ball, but is allowed one push of the wheelchair before striking the ball.
‘Each nation may enter a maximum of four men into men’s singles, four women into women’s singles and a maximum of three quad players in the quad singles.
‘A maximum of four men and four women may compete as teams in men’s and women’s doubles and a maximum of two players may compete as a team in the quad doubles.’
Wheelchair tennis matches at the Paralympics are the best of three sets, with a tie-break settling each set as required.
Men’s singles:
Women’s singles:
Quad singles:
Men’s doubles:
Women’s doubles:
Quad doubles:
Quad wheelchair tennis stars have impairment to both upper and lower limbs. It is different to the other events, because the players’ ability to apply control to the wheelchair and racket is much more limited.
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