Why?
Roger Federer, Wimbledon 2009Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
Until I wrote my recent ‘Grunt and Sigh’ post, I’d never thought about why people do it, particularly the former. Boud came nearest the explanation when she commented, ‘Grunting helps strengthen your core.’ It certainly does have something to do with the core.
Rising from sitting requires abdominal and hip muscles to work, and a degree of core engagement. With age, muscles weaken, the body strains more, and the effort is expressed in a grunt or groan. Sometimes, people involuntarily hold their breath when making a physical effort, like standing up, and the air released at the end of the action comes out as a grunt.
The grunt is an involuntary reflex, a minor form of Valsalva manoeuvre. The Valsalva manoeuvre is a breathing technique used to slow down heart rate, or clear blocked ears. Basically, it is performed by holding the nose and breathing out while keeping the mouth closed. Air is forced into the eustachian tubes and the ears ‘pop,’ equalising the pressure in them.
Grunting becomes habit.
Tennis players, champion grunters, have several reasons for making such a racket. (Note the pun on words!)
Sports scientists have shown that players who grunt serve faster, and complete their groundstrokes faster. Grunts also release tension and improve the timing of strokes. The noise ‘synchronises breathing precisely with hitting the ball.’
Other reasons for grunting probably come under the heading of gamesmanship. Grunts can be distracting to an opponent, and can affect how quickly they react to a shot. If they cannot hear the ball on the racquet, they cannot judge its speed and direction as effectively.
Grunting has spoilt my pleasure in watching tennis on television. If only there were a way to screen out the noise, just leaving the commentary, the crowd reaction, and the umpire’s calls . . .

Well after reading this I suppose the grunting is here to stay. I never watch sports anyway, only the bits I see on the news.
ReplyDeleteI think you're right.
DeleteGrunting doesn't bother me-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThat's fortunate.
DeleteI did a lot of grunting and groaning when I had my babies and that involved my core and a lot of exercise, so I can understand why some people grunt while playing sports.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
😟😄
DeleteWell I never knew that! But I am not sports minded so have missed the tennis and goodness knows what over the years of non grunting. Should I start now I wonder?
ReplyDeleteI don't think it's going to capture your interest now, Thelma!
DeleteAs I don‘t watch sports on TV, I am not bothered by grunting on the tennis courts. But I was quite annoyed by a man who went to the same gym where I regularly worked out for many years (only stopping when everything was shut under pandemic rules). He would accompany each and every movement on the exercise devices with a clearly audible „UGH“, as if he wanted everybody to know how serious he was taking his personal fitness.
ReplyDeleteSometimes it's not involuntary, it's true!
DeletePerhaps the final irony is that what began as a natural human reflex for effort and breath has evolved into an acoustic weapon on the tennis court, turning a graceful sport into something occasionally resembling a contested lumberyard.
ReplyDeleteSometimes it seems partial deafness can be a blessing!
ReplyDeleteI'm sure it can.
DeleteI don't mind the grunting so much, but some of the female players screaming makes me turn off.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I grunt when getting up, but I definitely walk across the room going....ouch, ouch ,ouch, as the bit in my knee settles back into a comfortable position !
'Ouch' definitely helps sometimes.
DeleteI remember my National Childbirth Trust teacher telling us to groan as we gave birth, she said it would assist the effort, and my midwife telling me not to make so much noise.
ReplyDeleteWe were encouraged not to be noisy - 'it's wasted effort,' she said!
DeleteTurning the audio off on the TV might help. Linda in Kansas
ReplyDelete. . . but then I wouldn't hear the crowd and the umpire . . . (never satisfied, me!)
DeleteThose tennis grunts disturb my viewing too. Monica Seles used to be one of the worst.
ReplyDeleteI rarely grunt but other-half does at every opportunity. He likes to make his presence known.
Ha ha ha!
DeleteA tennis match without grunting is so strange, the woman are very loud.
ReplyDeletePerhaps there should be a separate grunting contest . . .
DeleteIn football, when a player is pushed to the ground and may or may not have been damaged, he usually throws his arms in the air and screams. This calls the umpire to hold up the game and to examine a possible injury.
ReplyDeleteBut tennis is a non contact sport, and so grunting is almost never necessary.
Footballers are great actors!
DeleteYou could turn down the sound altogether and still watch the game. I assume that athletes other than tennis players grunt so is this a problem in all sports shown on TV? I have never seen a televised tennis match in my life (or a live one for that matter), and probably never will, so the grunts are not going to bother me.
ReplyDeleteA certain amount of grunting is to be expected in boxing and even rugby, but it's not excessive as in tennis.
DeleteI don’t think anyone grunted in tennis until Monica Seles came along. Perhaps I am wrong, but that is how I remember it. I don’t think many do it now, but I know Sabalenka does. I may have grunted yesterday when I exited the car after just a half hour drive. I stiffen up quickly these days.
ReplyDeleteThe joys of maturing, eh?
DeleteSometimes I think the grunting is used to make your opponent slip off their game.
ReplyDeleteI think so, too.
DeleteI never knew all of this about grunting. That's a noise that my husband always referred to as sound effects.
ReplyDeleteHa ha ha!
DeleteI can’t stand grunting either……..but I guess my time will come, I’m already aware of making a meal of getting up from the garden kneeler thingy………but in tennis, no, I’d have to have the sound off!
ReplyDeleteAlison in Devon x
I know I responded to this yesterday, but my answer disappeared. Well done on the garden kneeler! 😍
DeleteI've noticed myself doing this more and more, when I stand up from the couch, for example. I've wondered why, so it's interesting to read this post!
ReplyDelete. . . but will you continue to do it? 😎
DeleteI predicted that this would be the conclusion to this post. There are many comments about the grunting.
ReplyDeleteI shall be much more aware of it now.
DeleteVery interesting post and helps a lot of people who were wondering why. Have a nice day.
ReplyDeleteIf it serves a purpose, it must be good?! 😎
DeleteInteresting. My husband makes a grunting (or similar noise) when he has to turn a corner driving, like it takes a lot of effort lol.
ReplyDeleteNow that is different . . . 😂😄
DeleteI used to watch quite a lot of tennis and all the players that I watched were grunters. I never really gave it much thought and just accepted it as part of the game. Your explanation is interesting.
ReplyDeleteI think the grunts have become louder, or perhaps it's the courtside microphones picking them up more efficiently.
DeleteI think grunting in tennis is performative. Many years ago in my 20s I played tennis at a tennis club. No one grunted. I followed tennis. Admired players (this will tell you how old I am): Rod Laver, John Newcombe, Cliff Drysdale, Tom Okker, Arthur Ashe. None of these players grunted and they played hard. When the tantrum babies came into the sport John MacIntyre and that set, tennis was spoiled for me.
ReplyDeleteI think you're right. Roger Federer didn't grunt, as far as I remember - he was a real gentleman. Nor did Agassi. Now, I cannot watch players, ever since Rafael Nadar had problems with his underwear, and the grunters came on in force.
DeleteI love watching tennis, but screamers and grunters are so annoying, we mute the TV!
ReplyDeleteThe commentary is interesting, and the umpire and crowd, but it's all spoilt by the grunters. Still, my not watching is not going to change a thing. 😟
DeleteI rarely watch professional tennis.
ReplyDeleteI don't, now!
DeleteI think the most impressive form of the grunt of effort is a woman in labour. Glad there was no way of recording me, for sure.
ReplyDeleteThat's not competitive, and there's a prize for everyone at the end.
DeleteSometimes that noise can be heard when i am getting up off the couch. I have no idea where that noise comes from. Certainly not me.
ReplyDeleteHa ha ha.
DeleteLike you ... grunting has spoilt my pleasure in watching tennis on television, and if I do watch (not so often these days) and the grunting starts I turn the sound down/off.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Maybe it's a phase and will pass, when the tennis coaches and sports psychologists decide it's unnecessary, unhelpful . . . maybe even harmful??
DeleteI guess now I know why I not only gave up playing tennis, but watching it. (Well, truth be told, I never, ever, did watch it...and know I won't any time soon.)
ReplyDeleteIt's not the courteous game of yesteryear, that's certain.
ReplyDeleteAnother fun fact.
ReplyDeleteI'm full of useless information!
Delete