Wednesday, July 17, 2024. (Court Day #689)

Late afternoon yesterday, René invited me to go play as a group with her, Connor McNicholas, and Dave Ryan—whom I haven’t formally met or played with—at Brommer Park. We have full staffing today at work, and though the day wouldn’t be not busy for me, I figured I could spare a few hours.

I left my house at 8:50 a.m. It was sunny and 63°F. I figured it was probably going to be a warm day. My body was a little stiff and sore from play last night, so I took a couple of ibuprofen before applying sunscreen.

Brommer

When I got to Brommer Park at 9:08 a.m., there was plenty of parking. Some of the courts were still empty and on the far side, I could see René with Connor and Dave. When I introduced myself to Dave, he said we had met before. Drat, I hate it when that happens. I had totally forgotten, though he was very familiar to me . . . I had seen him around Brommer a few times before, we just generally play at different times and places.

Sean Lynch was there doing a private coaching lesson with a woman on one permanent court.

Games

The first few games would be René and Dave against Conner and me. René and Dave are doing a tournament together and are preparing. Conner set up his iPhone on the court dividing fence and was recording those initial games.


Game #1

Conner and I went up 5-0 on a lot of initial errors by René and Dave. But then things turned completely around and Conner and I slipped more and more behind.

We ended up losing badly. Great start, horrible finish.

Analytics for Game #1:
https://share.pb.vision/video/share/mdn6opyri9we

The analytics by Pickleball Vision AI Inc. aren’t perfect (yet), but still provide interesting insight. Just in case the link goes away, I’m going to copy some screenshots here. This doesn’t include all the stats, but gives a good taste.

I can take some solace in my serve depth being really, really good. That was balanced by my returns depth being about as horrible as my serves were good. Assuming that the analytics are correct in this regard!


Game #2

Conner and I took the second game, winning by a few points.

Analytics for Game #2:
https://share.pb.vision/video/share/nejg7k5ojmv6

And a snapshot of stats for posterity:

The “average serve speed” percentiles are interesting:
Andrew – 32MPH, 42nd percentile
Conner 33MPH, 27th percentile
René 29MPH, 50th percentile
Dave 35MPH, 16th percentile

Aside from the percentiles being backward from convention, based on our performances in this second game, if you put 100 people in the room, Dave would be in the top 16 for fastest serves. I’d be in the top 42, Conner the top 27, and René would be completely in the middle at 50.

But, in the first game, if we look back, we’ll see:
Andrew 31MPH, 27th percentile
Conner 25MPH, 72rd percentile
René 33MPH, 27th percentile
Dave 32MPH, 42nd percentile

What weird is how can 33MPH and 31MPH both be in the 27th percentile when 32MPH is in the 42nd percentile. And my 32MPH serves in the second game were 42nd percentile and my slower 31MPH serves were in the 27th percentile.

That really doesn’t make sense to me and must be a bug. It’s currently free to use the system… they are almost certainly in “beta” phase and working through kinks in their program before they release it officially and start charging for their service.


Game #3

Conner and I lost the third game, even though the analytics say that we won. Attention programmers: obviously if the last shot of the game is Dave hitting a winner, we can’t be the winning team!

Analytics for Game #3:
https://share.pb.vision/video/share/is3smlt1rjac

Analytics…


Thoughts

Just to be clear, there are more errors and/or situations than mentioned above that confuse the A.I. system. One screen showed that I had a failed serve that started about 3 feet outside of the right sideline, went straight ahead, and dropped about a foot in front of the plane of the net… this is completely erroneous!

Playing Dave, aside from the fact that he’s better than I am and has some great inside-out shots, it’s like playing a mirror image of myself at the net. He has very, very fast hands.

It took some adjusting in these games. I had to be much more patient and adjust my mindset a bit more “not to lose” versus “playing to win” and forcing speedups. I have work to do on that yet.

More Games

I played with Dave against René and Connor. We won 11-2. That was the most lopsided game of the morning.

For the last game, we went back to the original configuration of Dave and René against Connor and myself. Conner and I lost 7-11.

I left the courts at 11:45 a.m. and headed home for lunch, then work.

Dave was unquestionably the best player of the four of us today… not like a 5.0 or something, but he had some shots/consistency that made him better.

Dave is really good at driving the net forcing pop-ups and following up by crashing the net and driving the ball for winter. I told him it’s like a solo “shake and bake.” He smiled and corrected, “Auto bake!”

So?

I could really get into this private game circuit. The quality of the games was night and day compared to playing club play at Derby Park.

Tourny Invite

Dave Cox texted me tonight asking if I’d partner with him for a local tournament on Saturday, August 17. I was in the middle of an ad deadline for work and told him that I’d get back to him.


Thursday, July 18, 2024. (No Play)

I had a nonprofit board meeting tonight for the Santa Cruz Art League that ran from 6 p.m. until 8:41 p.m. That’s 11 minutes after the lights already went off at Skypark. No pickleball for me today. It’ll probably be Sunday before I touch a pickleball again.


Friday, July 19, 2024. (No Play)

Two days ago, there was an article appearing at 3DPrinting.com:
Accel Digital Solutions, a 3D printing startup in Walker, Michigan, has developed a quieter pickleball to address noise complaints from neighbors near public courts. The co-founders, Brandon Teets and Tyler Marvin, designed the ball to emit a soft, low-decibel “click” instead of the typical loud “pop.”
https://3dprinting.com/news/3d-printed-quiet-pickleball-unveiled

The new 3D printed pickleballs from Accel Digital Solutions.

What’s interesting is that Accel Digital Solutions has already received approval for their ball from USA Pickleball, so it has quietly been in the works for a while. (Hmmmm, inadvertent pun!)

USAP Membership

I renewed my USA Pickleball membership today. With the new website being kind of confusing and not entirely “visitor ready,” I let my membership lapse this week. I renewed it today. $60 for a year for the competitor level. A recreational membership is cheaper, $25.

Family Stuff

We’re having a memorial service tomorrow for my great-uncle John “Bud” Penniman. He had a long live, passing away at 102-years-old back in March. He was living in Oregon near his daughter (my mom’s cousin), but he was born here in Santa Cruz.


Saturday, July 20, 2024. (No Play)

“Uncle Bud”—as my mom called him—was a hysterical guy. I fancy myself to have a pretty quick wit—and have been told so by others—but Uncle Bud could easily give me a run for my money. He did substitute teaching into his 80s and students would request him as their sub when they found out their regular teacher would be out. He admitted he was not the best student in school himself, but he turned out to be an amazing teacher.

Family members gathered at Santa Cruz Memorial for the 10 a.m. service from Santa Cruz, Southern California, Oregon, Washington, Utah, Colorado, and Texas.

Uncle Bud had been a Navy pilot during WWII, flying domestic transport, so we had four Navy sailors there for a flag ceremony and the playing of Taps. (With too many veterans dying from old age, The Navy has to rely on bugles that play a recording instead utilizing actual musicians.)

After two of Bud’s children eulogized him and his wife Margaret, it was my opportunity to play “Amazing Grace.” I have an assortment of bagpipe competition medals—including a trophy—so it wasn’t difficult to pull off a strong performance, even being rusty. (About 10 years ago, I was the Executive Secretary for the Western United State Pipe Band Association.)

The bagpipes that I played today originally belonged to Bud’s older brother, Warren… who was my grandfather—my mom’s dad.

Deacon Mike and me after the ceremony.

Number of days on a court: 689
Number of total hours: 2,897
Number of paid coaching hours: 52.5

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