h a l f b a k e r yNaturally, seismology provides the answer.
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A regular tennis court, 78 feet (23.77m.) long and 27 feet (8.23m.) wide.
Complete with base-lines and the side-lines and net.
The only difference being that the serving base end is actually a sunken tough mattress water-bed with a grass covering which is engineered to a irrigated underground
tube system connected to the opposite serving base of the court.
As play ensues "it gets interesting" (commentator)
When a player attempts a volley within the water-bed area, the pressure when he /she lands upon the water-bed sends a wave of water to the opponent causing a ripple within their water-bed box area.
Two tennis players are now bouncing about performing rebounding under/over arm volleys in pursuit of the match.
[link]
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Jump to hit the ball and give your opponent a funny bounce. [+] |
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Commentator:He dives! ...
Player: SPLAT! *Slosh* |
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Should work great for a football field too. They don't have to catch up with each other anymore and pile up, just generate big waves to make each other stumble and fall down. |
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will we hear more grunting or less! drives me mad - the anticipation of waiting for the next grunt! |
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More grunting in the waterbed. |
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A game of doubles could be interesting. |
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Its about time someone came up with a tennis surface that was more interesting than grass and clay. Water, yes, thats good. Ice might be good too, with the ball occasionally freezing to the surface. Or...hey--how about hot coals? |
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