Examples of use of kinesthetic
1. For promising junior players, refining the kinesthetic sense is the main goal of the extreme daily practice regimens we often hear about.
2. Extraordinary kinesthetic ability must be present (and measurable) in a kid just to make the years of practice and training worthwhile.
3. Kinesthetic virtuoso or no, Roger Federer is now dominating the largest, strongest, fittest, best–trained and –coached field of male pros that has ever existed, with everyone using a kind of nuclear racket that‘s said to have made the finer calibrations of kinesthetic sense irrelevant, like trying to whistle Mozart during a Metallica concert.
4. Successfully returning a hard–served tennis ball requires what‘s sometimes called "the kinesthetic sense", meaning the ability to control the body and its artificial extensions through complex and very quick systems of tasks.
5. There‘s also his intelligence, his occult anticipation, his court sense, his ability to read and manipulate opponents, to mix spins and speeds, to misdirect and disguise, to use tactical foresight and peripheral vision and kinesthetic range instead of just rote pace – all this has exposed the limits, and possibilities, of men‘s tennis as it is now played.