More recently, researchers in the U.S. have narrowed their focus to the effects of tennis on players who participate in leagues. At the start of the pandemic, the Journal of Medicine and Science in Tennis published a paper entitled “Improved General Health Outcomes in U.S. Recreational Tennis Players.”
While longevity wasn’t part of the project, the results echoed and expanded on the encouraging findings of the earlier studies. Researchers surveyed 10,000 USTA league players from around the country, and asked respondents to rate themselves in eight quality-of-life categories: physical functioning; bodily pain; limitations due to physical health problems; limitations due to personal or emotional problems; general mental health; social functioning; vitality; and general health perceptions. Collecting data from league players of various ages and NTRP levels offered researchers a chance to look at a wider cross-section of people than is normal for sports-related studies.
“There is strong evidence to support the health-related quality of life benefits conferred to athletes in comparison to non-athletes,” the authors wrote. “However, the majority of athletes in these studies have focused primarily on elite groups in comparison to the general population….There is [also] little known about the health benefits of playing a specific sport.”
The study translated into numbers what long-time league players know from experience: The more you play tennis—and in particular league-oriented tennis—the healthier you’re likely to be.
“USTA league players have higher general, physical, social, and mental health scores than the general population median,” the authors wrote in their summary.
This conclusion probably won’t surprise anyone; it’s well-established that regular exercise is good for you. But drill a little deeper and some informative details reveal themselves. Taken together, the details at right reveal the real value of leagues: Not only do they get us on the court more, they get us talking to people more.
Leagues emphasize the aspect of the sport that is uniquely good for our long-term health, and which a solo activity like running or cycling can’t offer: a built-in social component. In tennis, players work out strategies with doubles partners. They form new social groups where the stakes are lower and less stress-inducing than they are in their work and home lives. The circumscribed, leave-it-on-the-court competition we get from tennis allows us to escape from the real competition we face each day.
“For both mental and physical wellbeing and longevity, we’re understanding that our social connections are probably the single most important feature of living a long, healthy, happy life,” Dr. James O’Keefe, a cardiologist at St. Luke’s Mid America Hospital in St. Louis, and one of the Denmark study’s co-authors, told Time magazine. “If you’re interested in exercising for health and longevity and well-being, perhaps the most important feature of your exercise regimen is that it should involve a play date.”
For Snell, who has 10 teams to keep track of, this is just one more advantage of the league system: It schedules his tennis dates for him.
“As long as I’m not the captain,” Snell says. “I can just show up when they tell me to.”
After that, the only thing you have to do is play tennis. As we’re finding out, that’s one of the best things anyone can do for their health.