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Tennis, Anyone?

A Fun, Fit Sport for Life

By Melissa Granberry

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Where can you get a great workout, improve your balance and coordination andgab with your friends, all while wearing a cute miniskirt? The tennis courts, of course!

On most weekdays, Ann Bastian, of Houston, Texas, works out at a local gym, lifting weights or running on the treadmill. When her friend, Rhett Ross, signed her up for a tennis class, Bastian was unsure about the amount of exercise she would receive from the lesson. "But I've found that it's a good workout," Bastian says. Add the social and competitive aspects of the game, and Bastian finds that tennis has become an important part of her weekly exercise routine.

Health Benefits
Bob Ingersole, a tennis pro at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, N.Y., agrees with Bastian that tennis is a great way to get a complete workout. "Tennis provides both aerobic (endurance) and anaerobic (strength and flexibility) exercise," he says. In other words, pursuing that bright yellow ball will keep your heart rate up while working the muscles throughout your body.

"Tennis is different from other types of workouts," says Ross, also from Houston, Texas. "It uses all of your muscles, your legs, arms and heart." If you are concentrating on your "six-pack" for swimsuit season, tennis can provide a great workout for your abs and waist.

Tennis also is a great way to improve your balance and reflexes, two important components of a healthy body as you age. "The workout in tennis is different in that it works my reflexes better than anything else I do," says Jennifer Green, who plays tennis three to four times a week in Dallas, Texas. "Tennis forces me to maneuver in quick spurts, and this helps build some leg muscles that allow me to react quicker."

Get Moving
If your goal this spring is to get off the couch and begin an exercise program, tennis is a great starting point. "I would recommend a beginner to take a group lesson with people of the same [ability level],"Ross says. "Private lessons are great, but it's more fun to be with other people."

But what if you are not in "tip-top" shape? "Someone who is just starting to workout can take up tennis by playing doubles," says Dr. Susan Lewis, co-director of the Center for Sports Medicine at Saint Francis Memorial Hospital in San Francisco, Calif. "Once your fitness level increases, you can advance to playing singles, which provides more of an aerobic workout."

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