Kısaca
The same ball ‘dies’ on grass, pops on hardwood, slides on clay. Bounce is set by the ball+surface pair—elasticity and friction—and that sets the speed of the game.
Saying “the ball is bouncing weird today” is actually a scientific observation. Bounce isn’t only the ball’s property—it’s the sum of the surface’s response too.\n\nWhen the ball hits, it compresses, stores energy, and returns it. The surface can compress and rebound as well; higher elasticity increases bounce, higher losses make the ball ‘die.’\n\nSurprising detail: friction changes the sport’s language. Even with similar bounce, different grip reshapes direction changes, sliding, and spin behavior.\n\nThat’s why sport is a physical negotiation, not only athleticism. As the player tries to control the ball, the surface imposes its own terms—and much of the spectacle comes from that invisible contract.