What are the three sports that produce the fastest projectiles?
No tricks, though the answers may be a bit surprising. This includes all sports with batted, thrown, hit, etc. objects but excludes those sports invloving motor driven cars, boats, etc.
I strongly suspect that Badminton is way up there.
If Jai Alai is that sport which features those curvy throwing things, it doesn’t surprise me that the speed would be way up there, as you get a slingshot effect.
Bill Tilden is credited with a 168 MPH tennis serve.
This link from the same site makes an interesting comparison with relation to the 188 MPH velocity. “A jai alai ball going this speed in 1927 would have beaten Lindberg across the Atlantic by 14.25 hours.”
It amazes me that the fastest tennis serve would have been in 1931 considering the athletic ability of so may male tennis players over the last decade.
If we’re excluding only the motorized sports, I’d cast my vote for some form of target shooting. I find it hard to believe that you could serve a ball of any type faster than the muzzle velocity of a rifle.
The professional tennis tour has had to change the balls to slow down serves, actually, since otherwise the game would essentially be a serving contest. The tennis players of 1931 were playing with tennis balls that could be hit much faster.
I played competitive badminton in high school and can testify that it is extremely fast. Table tennis (ping-pong) is also one of the faster racket sports, I can’t find the cite in my old GBoR but shots have been timed at well over 100mph.
However for non-mechanical sports I think that skydiving is tops; Joe Kittinger was falling over 600mph at one point during his 1960 jump from 102,800 feet, and that was with a small drogue chute out.
At normal altitudes skydivers can go more than 200mph in a head-down (“no lift”) dive.
I was trying to include only those sports that involve hitting, kicking, batting (you get the idea) a ball or similar object. BTW (and I don’t mean to get into a long discussion here) but shooting guns or bows or arrows doesn’t, in my mind, constitute a sport.
Terminal veloscity depends on the position of the body and the density of the air he’s in. That 76 m/s is probably for a guy not to far up falling belly first, the most typical way you’d see a skydiver falling. I assume because it’s the position that slows you down the most and prolongs the fun. Point forward like a dart and you’d take off even faster. Jump from over 100,000 feet where the air is very thin and you’d really be booking.
No tricks, though the answers may be a bit surprising. This includes all sports with batted, thrown, hit, etc. objects but excludes those sports invloving motor driven cars, boats, etc.
Gee, can you still get this kind of tennis ball? In the black market perhaps? eBay? Yes, I know that a tennis ball made in 1931 would be pretty flat by now.
While I see your point regarding the tennis balls it is still surprising since I would think racquet technology back then would have been pretty primitive by today’s standards?
I vaguely remember an experiment (perhaps during Wimbledon?) with Greg Rusedski, or another big server. Using wooden racquets made hardly any difference to the speed of the serve.
Sorry Waterman, it just seemed like you didn’t believe Valgard’s point about Joe Kitterman Acutally reading your first link I see it does mention him and his speed well in excess of what you said was a top speed. I just thought that needed correcting.
But to get on topic, how about golf? This site says “The ball will leave a long hitter’s clubface at 200 mph, which easily exceeds the fastest recorded tennis serve of 153 mph (by Roscoe Tanner), and is on a par with jai-alai, often called the fastest game in the world.” Not sure how accurate that is though.