Title:   The Art of Lawn Tennis

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The Art of Lawn Tennis

William T. Tilden



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Table of Contents

The Art of Lawn Tennis.....................................................................................................................................1

William T. Tilden....................................................................................................................................1

INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................................................1

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION..............................................................................................................3

PART I: TENNIS TECHNIQUESTROKES AND FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GAME .............................4

CHAPTER I. FOR NOVICES ONLY .....................................................................................................4

CHAPTER II. THE DRIVE .....................................................................................................................9

CHAPTER III. SERVICE ......................................................................................................................11

CHAPTER IV. THE VOLLEY AND OVERHEAD SMASH ..............................................................13

CHAPTER V. CHOP, HALF VOLLEY, AND COURT POSITION ...................................................17

PART II: THE LAWS OF TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY.......................................................................................19

CHAPTER VI. GENERAL TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY........................................................................19

CHAPTER VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MATCH PLAY................................................................24

CHAPTER VIII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PHYSICAL FITNESS....................................................28

CHAPTER IX. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SINGLES AND DOUBLES ..............................................31

PART III: MODERN TENNIS AND ITS FUTURE.........................................................................................33

CHAPTER X. THE GROWTH OF THE MODERN GAME...............................................................33

CHAPTER XI. THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF THE GAME............................................................41

PART IV: SOME SIDELIGHTS ON FAMOUS PLAYERS .............................................................................53

INTRODUCTORY ................................................................................................................................53

CHAPTER XII. AMERICA..................................................................................................................55

CHAPTER XIII. BRITISH ISLES........................................................................................................60

CHAPTER XIV. FRANCE AND JAPAN............................................................................................62

CHAPTER XV. SPAIN AND THE CONTINENT ...............................................................................66

CHAPTER XVI. THE COLONIES .......................................................................................................68

CHAPTER XVII. FAMOUS WOMEN PLAYERS ..............................................................................71


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The Art of Lawn Tennis

William T. Tilden

INTRODUCTION 

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION 

PART I: TENNIS TECHNIQUESTROKES AND FUNDAMENTALS  OF THE GAME  

CHAPTER I. FOR NOVICES ONLY 

CHAPTER II. THE DRIVE 

CHAPTER III. SERVICE 

CHAPTER IV. THE VOLLEY AND OVERHEAD SMASH 

CHAPTER V. CHOP, HALF VOLLEY, AND COURT POSITION  

PART II: THE LAWS OF TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY  

CHAPTER VI. GENERAL TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY 

CHAPTER VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MATCH PLAY 

CHAPTER VIII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PHYSICAL FITNESS 

CHAPTER IX. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SINGLES AND DOUBLES  

PART III: MODERN TENNIS AND ITS FUTURE  

CHAPTER X. THE GROWTH OF THE MODERN GAME 

CHAPTER XI. THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF THE GAME  

PART IV: SOME SIDELIGHTS ON FAMOUS PLAYERS  

INTRODUCTORY 

CHAPTER XII. AMERICA 

CHAPTER XIII. BRITISH ISLES 

CHAPTER XIV. FRANCE AND JAPAN 

CHAPTER XV. SPAIN AND THE CONTINENT 

CHAPTER XVI. THE COLONIES 

CHAPTER XVII. FAMOUS WOMEN PLAYERS  

To

R. D. K.

AND

M. W. J.

MY "BUDDIES"

W. T. T. 2D

INTRODUCTION

Tennis is at once an art and a science. The game as played by  such  men as Norman E. Brookes, the late

Anthony Wilding, William  M.  Johnston, and R. N. Williams is art. Yet like all true art, it  has its  basis in

scientific methods that must be learned and  learned  thoroughly for a foundation before the artistic structure  of

a great  tennis game can be constructed. 

Every player who helps to attain a high degree of efficiency  should have a clearly defined method of

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development and adhere to  it.  He should be certain that it is based on sound principles  and, once  assured of

that, follow it, even though his progress  seems slow and  discouraging. 

I began tennis wrong. My strokes were wrong and my viewpoint  clouded. I had no early training such as

many of our American  boys  have at the present time. No one told me the importance of  the  fundamentals of

the game, such as keeping the eye on the ball  or  correct body position and footwork. I was given a racquet

and  allowed  to hit the ball. Naturally, like all beginners, I  acquired many very  serious faults. I worried along

with moderate  success until I had been  graduated from school, beating some  fairly good players, but losing

some matches to men below my  class. The year following my graduation  the new Captain of my  Alma

Mater's team asked me if I would aid him in  developing the  squad for next year. Well, "Fools rush in where

angels  fear to  tread," so I said Yes. 

At that point my tennis education began. 

The youngsters comprising our tennis squad all knew me well and  felt at perfect liberty to ask me as many

questions as they could  think up. I was besieged with requests to explain why Jones  missed a  forehand drive

down the sideline, or Smith couldn't  serve well, or  Brown failed to hit the ball at all. Frankly, I  did not

know, but I  answered them something at the moment and  said to myself it was time I  learned some

fundamentals of tennis.  So I began to study the reasons  why certain shots are missed and  others made. Why

certain balls are  hit so much faster though with  less effort than others, and why some  players are great while

most are only good. I am still studying, but  my results to date  have resulted in a definite system to be learned,

and it is this  which I hope to explain to you in my book. 

Tennis has a language all its own. The idioms of the game should  be learned, as all books on the game are

written in tennis  parlance.  The technical terms and their counterpart in slang need  to be  understood to

thoroughly grasp the idea in any written  tennis account. 

I do not believe in using a great deal of space carefully  defining  each blade of grass on a court, or each rule of

the  game. It gets  nowhere. I do advocate teaching the terms of the  game. 

1. THE COURT. 

The Baseline=The back line. 

The Serviceline=The back line of the service court, extending  from sideline to sideline at a point 21 feet

from the net. 

The Alleys=The space on each side of the court between the side  serviceline and the outside sideline of a

doubles court. They  are  used only when playing doubles and are not marked on a single  court. 

The Net=The barrier that stretches across the court in the exact  centre. It is 3 feet high at the centre and 3 feet

6 inches high  at  the posts which stand 3 feet outside the sidelines. 

2. STROKES (Two General Classes). 

A. Ground strokes=All shots hit from the baselines off the bounce  of the ball. 

B. Volleys=Shots hit while the ball is in flight through the air,  previous to its bound. 

The Service=The method of putting the ball in play. 


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The Drive=A ground stroke hit with a flat racquet face and  carrying top spin. 

The Chop=An undercut ground stroke is the general definition of a  chop. The slice and chop are so closely

related that, except in  stroke analysis, they may be called chop. 

Stop Volley=Blocking a hall short in its flight. 

Half Volley or Trap Shot=A pick up. 

The Smash=Hitting on the full any overhead ball. 

The Lob=Hitting the ball in a high parabola. 

3. TWIST ON THE BALL. 

Top Spin=The ball spins towards the ground and in the direction  of  its flight. 

Chop, Cut, or Drag=The ball spins upwards from the ground and  against the line of flight. This is slightly

deviated in the  slice,  but all these terms are used to designate the  understruck,  backspinning ball. 

Reverse Twist=A ball that carries a rotary spin that curves one  way and bounces the opposite. 

Break=A spin which causes the ball to bounce at an angle to its  line of flight. 

4. LET=A service that touches the net in its flight yet falls in  court, or any illegal or irregular point that does

not count. 

5. FAULT=An illegal service. 

6. OUT=Any shot hit outside legal boundaries of the court. 

7. GOOD=Any shot that strikes in a legal manner prescribed by  rules of the game. 

8. FOOTFAULT=An illegal service delivery due to incorrect  position  of the server's feet. 

9. SERVER=Player delivering service. 

10. RECEIVER or STRIKER=Player returning service. 

                     W. T. T. WIMBLEDON, July 1920

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION

The season of 1921 was so epochmaking in the game of tennis,  combining as it did the greatest number of

Davis Cup matches that  have ever been held in one year, the invasion of France and  England  by an American

team, the first appearance in America of  Mlle. Suzanne  Lenglen and her unfortunate collapse, and finally  the

rise to  prominence of Japan as a leading factor in the tennis  world that I  have incorporated a record of the

season's  outstanding features and  some sidelights and personality sketches  on the new stars in the new

addition of this book. 


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The importance of women's tennis has grown so tremendously in the  past few years that I have also added a

review of the game and  its  progress in America. Not only has Mlle. Lenglen placed her  mark  indelibly on the

pages of tennis history but 1921 served to  raise Mrs.  Molla Bjurstedt Mallory to the position in the world  that

she rightly  deserves, that of the greatest match winner of  all women. The past  season brought the return to

American courts  of Mrs. May Sutton Bundy  and Miss Mary Browne, in itself an event  of sufficient

importance to  set the year apart as one of highest  value. 

The outstanding performances of the two juniors, Vincent Richards  and Arnold Jones, must be regarded as

worthy of permanent  recognition  and among the outstanding features of a noteworthy  year. Thus it is  with a

sense of recording history making facts  that I turn to the  events of 1921. 

WILLIAM T. TILDEN 2D

GERMANTOWN,

      PHILADELPHIA

PART I: TENNIS TECHNIQUESTROKES AND

FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GAME

CHAPTER I. FOR NOVICES ONLY

I trust this initial effort of mine in the world of letters will  find a place among both novices and experts in the

tennis world.  I am  striving to interest the student of the game by a somewhat  prolonged  discussion of match

play, which I trust will shed a new  light on the  game. 

May I turn to the novice at my opening and speak of certain  matters which are second nature to the skilled

player? 

The best tennis equipment is not too good for the beginner who  seeks really to succeed. It is a saving in the

end, as good  quality  material so far outlasts poor. 

Always dress in tennis clothes when engaging in tennis. White is  the established colour. Soft shirt, white

flannel trousers, heavy  white socks, and rubbersoled shoes form the accepted dress for  tennis. Do not appear

on the courts in dark clothes, as they are  apt  to be heavy and hinder your speed of movement, and also they

are a  violation of the unwritten ethics of the game. 

The question of choosing a racquet is a much more serious matter.  I do not advocate forcing a certain racquet

upon any player. All  the  standard makes are excellent. It is in weight, balance, and  size of  handle that the real

value of a racquet frame depends,  while good  stringing is, essential to obtain the best results. 

The average player should use a racquet that weighs between 13  1/2  and 14 1/2 ounces inclusive. I think that

the best results  may be  obtained by a balance that is almost even or slightly  heavy on the  head. Decide your

handle from the individual choice.  Pick the one that  fits comfortably in the hand. Do not use too  small a

handle or too  light a racquet, as it is apt to turn in  the hand. I recommend a  handle of 5 1/4 to 5 3/8 inches at

the  grip. Do not use a racquet you  do not like merely because your  best friend advises it. It may suit  him

perfectly, but would not  do for you at all. Do not start children  playing tennis with an  undersized racquet. It

weakens the wrist and  does not aid the  child in learning strokes. Start a child, boy or  girl, with a  fullsized

racquet of at least 13 ounces. 

After you have acquired your racquet, make a firm resolve to use  good tennis balls, as a regular bounce is a

great aid to  advancement,  while a "dead" ball is no practice at all. 


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If you really desire to succeed at the game and advance rapidly,  I  strongly urge you to see all the good tennis

you can. Study the  play  of the leading players and strive to copy their strokes.  Read all the  tennis instruction

books you can find. They are a  great assistance. I  shall be accused of "press agitating" my own  book by this

statement,  but such was my belief long before I ever  thought of writing a book of  my own. 

More tennis can be learned off the court, in the study of theory,  and in watching the best players in action,

than can ever be  learned  in actual play. I do not mean miss opportunities to play.  Far from it.  Play whenever

possible, but strive when playing to  put in practice the  theories you have read or the strokes you  have

watched. 

Never be discouraged at slow progress. The trick over some stroke  you have worked over for weeks

unsuccessfully will suddenly come  to  you when least expected. Tennis players are the product of  hard work.

Very few are born geniuses at the game. 

Tennis is a game that pays you dividends all your life. A tennis  racquet is a letter of introduction in any town.

The brotherhood  of  the game is universal, for none but a good sportsman can  succeed in  the game for any

lengthy period. Tennis provides  relaxation,  excitement, exercise, and pure enjoyment to the man  who is tied

hard  and fast to his business until late afternoon.  Age is not a drawback.  Vincent Richards held the National

Doubles  Championship of America at  fifteen, while William A. Larned won  the singles at past forty. Men of

sixty are seen daily on the  clubs' courts of England and America  enjoying their game as  keenly as any boy. It

is to this game, in great  measure, that  they owe the physical fitness which enables them to play  at their

advanced age. 

The tennis players of the world wrote a magnificent page in the  history of the World War. No branch of sport

sent more men to the  colours from every country in the world than tennis, and these  men  returned with glory

or paid the supreme sacrifice on the  field of  honour. 

I transgressed from my opening to show you that tennis is a game  worth playing and playing well. It deserves

your best, and only  by  learning it correctly can you give that best. 

If in my book I help you on your way to fame, I feel amply repaid  for all the time spent in analysing the

strokes and tactics I set  before you in these pages. 

I am going to commence my explanation by talking to the players  whose games are not yet formed. At least

once every season I go  back  to first principles to pull myself out of some rut into  which  carelessness dropped

me. 

From a long and, many times, sad experience over a period of some  ten years of tournament tennis, I believe

the following order of  development produces the quickest and most lasting results: 

1. Concentration on the game. 

2. Keep the eye on the ball. 

3. Footwork and weightcontrol. 

4. Strokes. 

5. Court position. 

6. Court generalship or match play. 


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7. Tennis psychology. 

Tennis is a game of intimate personal relation. You constantly  find yourself meeting some definite idea of

your opponent. The  personal equation is the basis of tennis success. A great player  not  only knows himself, in

both strength and weakness, but he  must study  is opponent at all times. In order to be able to do  this a player

must  not be hampered by a glaring weakness in the  fundamentals of his own  game, or he will be so occupied

trying to  hide it that he will have no  time to worry his opponent. The  fundamental weakness of Gerald

Patterson's backhand stroke is so  apparent that any player within his  class dwarfs Patterson's  style by

continually pounding at it. The  Patterson overhead and  service are first class, yet both are rendered  impotent,

once a  man has solved the method of returning low to the  backhand, for  Patterson seldom succeeds in taking

the offensive again  in that  point. 

I am trying to make clear the importance of such first principles  as I will now explain. 

CONCENTRATION 

Tennis is played primarily with the mind. The most perfect  racquet  technique in the world will not suffice if

the directing  mind is  wandering. There are many causes of a wandering mind in a  tennis  match. The chief one

is lack of interest in the game. No  one should  play tennis with an idea of real success unless he  cares

sufficiently  about the game to be willing to do the  drudgery necessary in learning  the game correctly. Give it

up at  once unless you are willing to work.  Conditions of play or the  noises in the gallery often confuse and

bewilder experienced  matchplayers playing under new surroundings.  Complete  concentration on the matter

in hand is the only cure for a  wandering mind, and the sooner the lesson is learned the more  rapid  the

improvement of the player. An amusing example, to all  but the  player affected, occurred at the finals of the

Delaware  State Singles  Championship at Wilmington. I was playing Joseph J.  Armstrong. The  Championship

Court borders the No. 1 hole of the  famous golf course.  The score stood at one set all and 34 and  3040,

Armstrong serving.  He served a fault and started a second  delivery. Just as he commenced  his swing, a loud

and very lusty  "Fore!" rang out from the links.  Armstrong unconsciously looked  away and served his delivery

to the  backstop and the game to me.  The umpire refused to "let" call and the  incident closed. Yet a  wandering

mind in that case meant the loss of a  set. 

The surest way to hold a match in mind is to play for every set,  every game in the set, every point in the game

and, finally,  every  shot in the point. A set is merely a conglomeration of made  and missed  shots, and the man

who does not miss is the ultimate  victor. 

Please do not think I am advocating "patball." I am not. I  believe in playing for your shot every time you

have an opening.  I do  not believe in trying to win the point every time you hit  the ball.  Never allow your

concentration on any game to become so  great that you  do not at all times know the score and play to it.  I

mean both point  score and game score. In my explanation of  match play in a later  chapter I am going into a

detailed account  of playing to the score. It  is as vital in tennis as it is in  bridge, and all bridge players know

that the score is the  determining factor in your mode of bidding. Let  me urge again  concentration. Practise

seriously. Do not fool on the  court, as  it is the worst enemy to progress. Carelessness or laziness  only  results

in retrogression, never progress. 

Let me turn now to the first principle of all ball games, whether  tennis, golf, cricket, baseball, polo, or

football. 

KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE BALL! 

Just a few statistics to show you how vital it is that the eye  must be kept on the ball UNTIL THE MOMENT

OF STRIKING IT. 


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About 85 per cent of the points in tennis are errors, and the  remainder earned points. As the standard of play

rises the  percentage  of errors drops until, in the average highclass  tournament match, 60  per cent are errors

and 40 per cent aces.  Any average superior to this  is supertennis. 

Thus the importance of getting the ball in play cannot be too  greatly emphasized. Every time you put the ball

back to your  opponent  you give him another chance to miss. 

There are several causes for missing strokes. First, and by far  the largest class, is not looking at the ball up to

the moment of  striking it. Fully 80 per cent of all errors are caused by taking  the  eye from the ball in the last

onefifth of a second of its  flight. The  remaining 20 per cent of errors are about 15 per cent  bad footwork,

and the other 5 per cent poor racquet work and bad  bounces. 

The eye is a small camera. All of us enjoy dabbling in amateur  photography, and every amateur must take

"action" pictures with  his  first camera. It is a natural desire to attain to the hardest  before  understanding how

to reach it. The result is one of two  things: either  a blurred moving object and a clear background, or  a clear

moving  object and a blurred background. Both suggest  speed, but only one is a  good picture of the object one

attempted  to photograph. In the first  case the camera eye was focused on  the background and not on the

object, while in the second, which  produced the result desired, the  camera eye was firmly focused on  the

moving object itself. Just so  with the human eye. It will  give both effects, but never a clear  background and

moving object  at the same time, once that object  reaches a point 10 feet from  the eye. The perspective is

wrong, and  the eye cannot adjust  itself to the distance range speedily enough. 

Now the tennis ball is your moving object while the court,  gallery, net, and your opponent constitute your

background. You  desire to hit the ball cleanly, therefore do not look at the  other  factors concerned, but

concentrate solely on focusing the  eye firmly  on the ball, and watching it until the moment of  impact with

your  racquet face. 

"How do I know where my opponent is, or how much court I have to  hit in?" ask countless beginners. 

Remember this: that a tennis court is always the same size, with  the net the same height and in the same

relation to you at all  times,  so there is no need to look at it every moment or so to  see if it has  moved. Only an

earthquake can change its position.  As to your  opponent, it makes little difference about his  position, because

it is  determined by the shot you are striving  to return. Where he will be I  will strive to explain in my  chapter

on court position; but his  whereabouts are known without  looking at him. You are not trying to  hit him. You

strive to miss  him. Therefore, since you must watch what  you strive to hit and  not follow what you only wish

to miss, keep your  eye on the ball,  and let your opponent take care of himself. 

Science has proved that given a tennis ball passing from point A  to point B with the receiving player at B,

that if the player at  B  keeps his eye on the ball throughout its full flight his chance  of  making a good  A  1  2  3

4  B    return at B is five times as great as if he took his eye off the

ball  at a point 4, or 4/5 of a second of its flight. Likewise it  is ten  times as great at B as it is if the eye is

removed from  the ball at 3,  or 3/5 of a second of its flight. Why increase  your chances of error  by five times

or ten times when it is  unnecessary? 

The average player follows the ball to 4, and then he takes a  last  look at his opponent to see where he is, and

by so doing  increases his  chance of error five times. He judges the flight of  the ball some 10  feet away, and

never really sees it again until  he has hit it (if he  does). A slight deflection caused by the  wind or a small

misjudgment  of curve will certainly mean error.  Remembering the 85 percent errors  in tennis, I again ask you

if  it is worth while to take the risk? 


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There are many other reasons why keeping the eye on the ball is a  great aid to the player. It tends to hold his

attention so that  outside occurrences will not distract. Movements in the gallery  are  not seen, and stray dogs,

that seem to particularly enjoy  sleeping in  the middle of a tennis court during a hard match, are  not seen on

their way to their sleeping quarters. Having learned  the knack of  watching the ball at all times, I felt that

nothing  would worry me,  until three years ago at the American  Championships, when I was  playing T. R.

Pell. A press camera man  eluded the watchful eye of the  officials, and unobtrusively  seated himself close to

our sideline to  acquire some action  pictures. Pell angled sharply by to my backhand,  and I ran at my  hardest

for the shot, eyes fixed solely on the ball. I  hauled off  to hit it a mighty drive, which would have probably

gone  over the  backstop, when suddenly I heard a camera click just under me,  and  the next moment camera,

pressman, and tennis player were rolling  in a heap all over the court. The pressman got his action picture  and

a sore foot where I walked on him, and all I got was a sore  arm and a  ruffled temper. That's why I don't like

cameras right  under my nose  when I play matches, but for all that I still  advocate keeping your  eye on the

ball. 

GRIP, FOOTWORK, AND STROKES 

Footwork is weight control. It is correct body position for  strokes, and out of it all strokes should grow. In

explaining the  various forms of stroke and footwork I am writing as a righthand  player. Left handers

should simply reverse the feet. 

Racquet grip is a very essential part of stroke, because a faulty  grip will ruin the finest serving. There is the

socalled Western  or  Californian grip as typified by Maurice E. M'Loughlin, Willis,  E.  Davis, and, to a

slightly modified degree, W. M. Johnston, the  American champion. It is a natural grip for a top forehand

drive.  It  is inherently weak for the backhand, as the only natural shot  is a  chop stroke. 

The English grip, with the low wrist on all ground strokes, has  proved very successful in the past. Yet the

broken line of the  arm  and hand does not commend itself to me, as any broken line is  weak  under stress. 

The Eastern American grip, which I advocate, is the English grip  without the low wrist and broken line. To

acquire the forehand  grip,  hold the racquet with the edge of the frame towards the  ground and the  face

perpendicular, the handle towards the body,  and "shake hands"  with it, just as if you were greeting a friend.

The handle settled  comfortably and naturally into the hand, the  line of the arm, hand,  and racquet are one.

The swing brings the  racquet head on a line with  the arm, and the whole racquet is  merely an extension of it. 

The backhand grip is a quarter circle turn of hand on the handle,  bringing the hand on top of the handle and

the knuckles directly  up.  The shot travels ACROSS the wrist. 

This is the best basis for a grip. I do not advocate learning  this  grip exactly, but model your natural grip as

closely as  possible on  these lines without sacrificing your own comfort or  individuality. 

Having once settled the racquet in the hand, the next question is  the position of the body and the order of

developing strokes. 

In explaining footwork I am, in future, going to refer in all  forehand shots to the right foot as R or "back"

foot, and to the  left  as L or "front." For the backhand the L foot is "back" and R  is  "front." 

All tennis strokes, should be made with the body' at right angles  to the net, with the shoulders lined up

parallel to the line of  flight of the ball. The weight should always travel forward. It  should pass from the back

foot to the front foot at the moment of  striking the ball. Never allow the weight to be going away from  the

stroke. It is weight that determines the "pace" of a stroke;  swing  that, decides the "speed." 


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Let me explain the definitions of "speed" and "pace." "Speed" is  the actual rate with which a ball travels

through the air. "Pace"  is  the momentum with which it comes off the ground. Pace is  weight. It is  the "sting"

the ball carries when it comes off the  ground, giving the  inexperienced or unsuspecting player a shock  of

force which the stroke  in no way showed. 

Notable examples of "pace" are such men as W. A. Larned, A. W.  Gore, J. C. Parke, and among the younger

players, R. N. Williams,  Major A. R. F. Kingscote, W. M. Johnston, and, on his forehand  stroke, Charles S.

Garland. 

M. E. M'Loughlin, Willis E. Davis, Harold Throckmorton and  several  others are famous "speed" exponents. 

A great many players have both "speed" and "pace." Some shots may  carry both. 

The order of learning strokes should be: 

1. The Drive. Fore and backhand. This is the foundation of all  tennis, for you cannot build up a net attack

unless you have the  ground stroke to open the way. Nor can you meet a net attack  successfully unless you can

drive, as that is the only successful  passing shot. 

2. The Service. 

3. The Volley and Overhead Smash. 

4. The Chop or Half Volley and other incidental and ornamental  strokes. 

CHAPTER II. THE DRIVE

The forehand drive is the opening of every offensive in tennis,  and, as such, should be most carefully studied.

There are certain  rules of footwork that apply to all shots. To reach a ball that  is a  short distance away,

advance the foot that is away from the  shot and  thus swing into position to hit. If a ball is too close  to the

body,  retreat the foot closest to the shot and drop the  weight back on it,  thus, again, being in position for the

stroke.  When hurried, and it is  not possible to change the foot position,  throw the weight on the foot  closest to

the ball. 

The receiver should always await the service facing the net, but  once the serve is started on the way to court,

the receiver  should at  once attain the position to receive it with the body at  right angles  to the net. 

The forehand drive is made up of one continuous swing of the  racquet that, for the purpose of analysis, may

be divided into  three  parts: 

1. The portion of the swing behind the body, which determines the  speed of the stroke. 

2. That portion immediately in front of the body which determines  the direction and, in conjunction with

weight shift from one foot  to  the other, the pace of the shot. 

3. The portion beyond the body, comparable to the golfer's  "follow  through," determines spin, top or slice,

imparted to the  ball. 

All drives should be topped. The slice shot is a totally  different  stroke. 


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To drive straight down the sideline, construct in theory a  parallelogram with two sides made up of the

sideline and your  shoulders, and the two ends, the lines of your feet, which  should, if  extended, form the

right angles with the sidelines.  Meet the ball at  a point about 4 to 4 1/2 feet from the body  immediately in

front of  the belt buckle, and shift the weight  from the back to the front foot  at the MOMENT OF STRIKING

THE  BALL. The swing of the racquet should be  flat and straight  through. The racquet head should be on a

line with  the hand, or,  if anything, slightly in advance; the whole arm and the  racquet  should turn slightly

over the ball as it leaves the racquet  face  and the stroke continue to the limit of the swing, thus imparting  top

spin to the ball. 

The hitting plane for all ground strokes should be between the  knees and shoulders. The most favourable

plane is on a line with  the  waist. 

In driving across the court from the right (or No. 1) court,  advance the L or front foot slightly towards the

sideline and  shift  the weight a fraction of a second sooner. As the weight  shifts, pivot  slightly on the L foot

and drive flat, diagonally,  across the court.  Do not "pull" your crosscourt drive, unless  with the express

purpose  of passing the net man and using that  method to disguise your shot. 

NEVER STEP AWAY FROM THE BALL IN DRIVING CROSS COURT. ALWAYS  THROW  YOUR

WEIGHT IN THE SHOT. 

The forehand drive from the No. 2 (or left) court is identically  the same for the straight shot down your

opponent's forehand. For  the  cross drive to his backhand, you must conceive of a diagonal  line from  your

backhand corner to his, and thus make your stroke  with the  footwork as if this imaginary line were the

sideline.  In other words,  line up your body along your shot and make your  regular drive. Do not  try to

"spoon" the ball over with a delayed  wrist motion, as it tends  to slide the ball off your racquet. 

All drives should be made with a stiff, locked wrist. There is no  wrist movement in a true drive. Top spin is

imparted by the arm,  not  the wrist. 

The backhand drive follows closely the principles of the  forehand,  except that the weight shifts a moment

sooner, and the  R or front foot  should always be advanced a trifle closer to the  sideline than the L  so as to

bring the body clear of the swing.  The ball should be met in  front of the right leg, instead of the  belt buckle,

as the great  tendency in backhand shots is to slice  them out of the sideline, and  this will pull the ball cross

court, obviating this error. The racquet  head must be slightly in  advance of the hand to aid in bringing the  ball

in the court. Do  not strive for too much top spin on your  backhand. 

I strongly urge that no one should ever favour one department of  his game, in defence of a weakness.

Develop both forehand and  backhand, and do not "run around" your backhand, particularly in  return of

service. To do so merely opens your court. If you  should do  so, strive to ace your returns, because a weak

effort  would only  result in a kill by your opponent. 

Do not develop one favourite shot and play nothing but that. If  you have a fair crosscourt drive, do not use it

in practice, but  strive to develop an equally fine straight shot. 

Remember that the fast shot is the straight shot. The cross drive  must be slow, for it has not the room owing

to the increased  angle  and height of the net. Pass down the line with your drive,  but open  the court with your

crosscourt shot. 

Drives should have depth. The average drive should hit behind the  serviceline. A fine drive should hit

within 3 feet of the  baseline.  A crosscourt drive should be shorter than a straight  drive, so as to  increase the

possible angle. Do not always play  one length drive, but  learn to vary your distance according to  your man.


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You should drive  deep against a baseliner, but short  against a net player, striving to  drop them at his feet as,

he  comes in. 

Never allow your opponent to play a shot he likes if you can  possibly force him to one he dislikes. 

Again I urge that you play your drive: 

1. With the body sideways to the net. 

2. The swing flat, with long follow through. 

3. The weight shifting just as the ball is hit. 

Do not strive for terrific speed at first. The most essential  thing about a drive is to put the ball in play. I once

heard  William  A. Larned remark, when asked the most important thing in  tennis, "Put  the ball over the net

into the other man's court."  Accuracy first, and  then put on your speed, for if your shot is  correct you can

always  learn, to hit hard. 

CHAPTER III. SERVICE

Service is the opening gun of tennis. It is putting the ball in  play. The old idea was that service should never

be more than  merely  the beginning of a rally. With the rise of American tennis  and the  advent of Dwight

Davis and Holcombe Ward, service took on  a new  significance. These two men originated what is now

known as  the  American Twist delivery. 

From a mere formality, service became a point winner. Slowly it  gained in importance, until Maurice E.

M'Loughlin, the wonderful  "California Comet," burst across the tennis sky with the first of  those terrific

cannonball deliveries that revolutionized the  game,  and caused the oldschool players to send out hurry

calls  for a severe  footfault rule or some way of stopping the  threatened destruction of  all ground strokes.

M'Loughlin made  service a great factor in the  game. It remained for R. N.  Williams to supply the antidote

that has  again put service in the  normal position of mere importance, not  omnipotence. Williams  stood in on

the delivery and took it on the  rising bound. 

Service must be speedy. Yet speed is not the beall and endall.  Service must be accurate, reliable, and

varied. It must be used  with  discretion and served with brains. I believe perfect service  is about  40 per cent

placement, 40 per cent speed, and 20 per  cent twist. 

Any tall player has an advantage over a short one, in service.  Given a man about 6 feet and allow him the 3

feet added by his  reach,  it has been proved by tests that should he deliver a  service,  perfectly flat, with no

variation caused by twist or  wind, that just  cleared the net at its lowest point (3 feet in  the centre), there is

only a margin of 8 inches of the service  court in which the ball can  possibly fall; the remainder is below  the

net angle. Thus it is easy  to see how important it is to use  some form of twist to bring the ball  into court. Not

only must it  go into court, but it must be  sufficiently speedy that the  receiver does not have an opportunity of

an easy kill. It must  also be placed so as to allow the server an  advantage for his  next return, admitting the

receiver puts the ball in  play. 

Just as the first law of receiving is to, put the ball in play,  so  of service it is to cause the receiver to fall into

error. Do  not  strive unduly for clean aces, but use your service to upset  the ground  strokes of your opponent. 

There are several style services in vogue in all countries. The  American twist has become one of the most


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popular forms of  delivery  and as such deserves special treatment. The usual forms  of service are  (1) the slice

service, (2) the American twist, (3)  the reverse  delivery, (4) the "cannon ball" or flat serve. 

The slice service is the easiest and most natural form for all  beginners, and proves so effective that many

great players use  it. It  is the service of William M. Johnston, A. R. F. Kingscote,  Norman E.  Brookes, and

many others. 

Service should be hit from as high a point as the server can  COMFORTABLY reach. To stretch

unnecessarily is both wearing on  the  server and unproductive of results. 

The slice service should be hit from a point above the right  shoulder and as high as possible. The server

should stand at  about a  fortyfive degree angle to the baseline, with both feet  firmly planted  on the ground.

Drop the weight back on the right  foot and swing the  racquet freely and easily behind the back.  Toss the ball

high enough  into the air to ensure it passing  through the desired hitting plane,  and then start a slow shift of

the weight forward, at the same time  increasing the power of the  swing forward as the racquet commences its

upward flight to the  ball. Just as the ball meets the racquet face the  weight should  be thrown forward and the

full power of the swing  smashed into  the service. Let the ball strike the racquet INSIDE the  face of  the

strings, with the racquet travelling directly towards the  court. The angle of the racquet face will impart the

twist  necessary  to bring the ball in court. The wrist should be  somewhat flexible in  service. If necessary lift

the right foot  and swing the whole body  forward with the arm. Twist slightly to  the right, using the left foot

as a pivot. The general line of  the racquet swing is from RIGHT to  LEFT and always forward. 

At this point and before I take up the other branches of serving,  let me put in a warning against footfaulting. I

can only say that  a  footfault is crossing or touching the line with either foot  before the  ball is delivered, or it

is a jump or step. I am not  going into a  technical discussion of footfaults. It is  unnecessary, and by placing

your feet firmly before the service  there is no need to footfault. 

It is just as unfair to deliberately footfault as to miscall a  ball, and it is wholly unnecessary. The average

footfault is due  to  carelessness, overanxiety, or ignorance of the rule. All  players are  offenders at times, but

it can quickly be broken up. 

Following this outburst of warning let me return to the American  twist service. The stance for this is the same

as for the slice,  but  the ball is thrown slightly to the left of the head while the  racquet  passes up and over the

call, travelling from left to  right and  slightly forward. The result is a curve to the left and  the break of  the

bound to the right. This service is not fast,  but gives an  excellent chance to follow to the net, since it  travels

high and  slowly and its bound is deep. The American twist  service should be hit  with the muscles of the side.

The slice is  a shoulder swing. 

The reverse twist is of an absolutely distinct type. The stance  is  facing the net with both toes fronting the line.

The racquet  is  gripped as a club. The ball is thrown in front of the body and  not  high. The swing is a sharp

wrist twist from right to left,  the ball  carried for some distance on the face of the racquet.  The curve is  from

left to right while the bound is high and  breaks sharply to the  left. This delivery is slow, ineffective  and very

uncertain. There is  little opportunity to follow it to  the net. 

The "cannonball" service is nothing but a slice as regards swing  and stance, but it is hit with a flat racquet

face, thus  imparting no  spin to the ball. It is a case of speed alone. This  service is a point  winner when it goes

in; but its average must  necessarily be poor since  its margin of error is so small. It is  only useful to a tall man. 

Varied pace and varied speed is the keynote to a good service. I  spent hours in serving alone, striving to

disguise the twist and  pace  of the ball. I would take a box of a dozen balls out on the  court and  serve the

whole dozen to No. 1 court with one style of  delivery. Then,  crossing, I would serve them back with another


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type of service. Next,  I would try the left court from both  sides. My next move would be to  pick out a certain

section of the  service court, and serve for that  until I could put the ball  where I wanted it. Finally, I would

strive  to put it there with  speed. 

All the time spent in this practice has stood me in good stead,  for today it is my service that pulls me out of

many a deep  hole,  and causes many a player to wish he was delivering the  ball. William  M. Johnston, the

American Champion, has a  remarkable service for so  short a man. He times his stroke  perfectly, and hits it at

the top of  his reach, so that he gets  the full benefit of every inch of his  stature and every pound of  his weight.

He uses the slice delivery in  the majority of  matches. 

Do not try freak services. They are useless against highclass  players. Sharp breaking underhand cuts can be

easily angled off  for  points by a man who knows anything of the angles and effects  of twist.  These deliveries

are affectation if used more than once  or twice in a  long match. A sudden shift may surprise your  opponent;

but to continue  to serve these freaks is to destroy  their use. 

Mishu, the Rumanian star, has many very peculiar deliveries; but,  when playing against highclass tennis, he

has brains enough to  use a  straight service. The freak services delight and yet annoy  a gallery,  for once the

novelty has worn off, nothing but the  conceit remains. 

The object of service is to obtain the maximum return with the  minimum effort. This statement holds true for

all tennis strokes,  but  in none so strongly as in service. 

The average player hits, his first service so hard, and with so  little regard for direction, that about nine out of

ten first  deliveries are faults. Thus, one half your chances are thrown  away,  and the chance of double faulting

increased  proportionately. 

There is a wellknown tennis saying to the effect that one fault  is a mistake, but two faults are a crimethat

sums up the idea  of  service adequately. A player should always strive to put his  first  delivery in court. In the

first place it is apt to catch  your opponent  napping, as he half expects a fault. Secondly, it  conserves your

energy by removing the need of a second delivery,  which, in a long  fiveset match, is an item of such

importance  that it may mean victory  or defeat. 

I urge all players to put their service into court with just as  much speed as they can be sure of, but to serve

both deliveries  at  about the same speed. Do not slog the first ball and pat the  second,  but hit both with

average pace. 

Try for service aces whenever reasonable, but never do so at the  risk of double faulting. The first ball is the

ball to ace. The  second should never be risked. Your aces must at least equal your  double faults, or your

service is a handicap and not an  advantage. 

The importance of service in doubles is more pronounced than in  singles as regards holding it; but the need

for individual  brilliancy  is not so great, as you have a partner already at the  net to kill off  any weak returns. 

Service is an attack, and a successful attack should never break  down. 

CHAPTER IV. THE VOLLEY AND OVERHEAD SMASH

The net attack is the heavy artillery of tennis. It is supposed  to  crush all defence. As such it must be regarded

as a  pointwinning  stroke at all times, no matter whether the shot is  volley or smash. 


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Once at the net hit from the point at the first opportunity given  to get the racquet squarely on the ball. All the

laws of footwork  explained for the drive are theoretically the same in volleying.  In  practice you seldom have

time to change your feet to a set  position,  so you obviate trouble by throwing the weight on the  foot nearest to

the ball and pushing it in the shot. 

Volleys are of two classes: (1) the low volley, made from below  the waist; and (2) the high volley, from the

waist to the head.  In  contradistinction to the hitting plane classification are the  two  styles known as (1) the

deep volley and (2) the stop volley. 

All low volleys are blocked. High volleys may be either blocked  or  hit. Volleys should never be stroked.

There is no follow  through on a  low volley and very little on a high one. 

You will hear much talk of "chop" volleys. A chop stroke is one  where the racquet travels from above the line

of flight of the  ball,  down and through it, and the angle made behind the racquet  is greater  than 45 degrees,

and many approach 90 degrees.  Therefore I say that no  volleys should be chopped, for the  tendency is to pop

the ball up in  the air off any chop. Slice  volleys if you want to, or hit them flat,  for both these shots  are made

at a very small angle to the flightline  of the ball,  the racquet face travelling almost along its plane. 

In all volleys, high or low, the wrist should be locked and  absolutely stiff. It should always be below the

racquet head,  thus  bracing the racquet against the impact of the ball. Allow  the force of  the incoming shot,

plus your own weight, to return  the ball, and do  not strive to "wrist" it over. The tilted  racquet face will give

any  required angle to the return by  glancing the ball off the strings, so  no wrist turn is needed. 

Low volleys can never be hit hard, and owing to the height of the  net should usually be sharply angled, to

allow distance for the  rise.  Any ball met at a higher plane than the top of the net may  be hit  hard. The stroke

should be crisp, snappy, and decisive,  but it should  stop as it meets the ball. The follow through  should be

very small.  Most low volleys should be soft and short.  Most high volleys require  speed and length. 

The "stop" volley is nothing more than a shot blocked short.  There  is no force used. The racquet simply meets

the oncoming  ball and stops  it. The ball rebounds and falls of its own weight.  There is little  bounce to such a

shot, and that may be reduced by  allowing the racquet  to slide slightly under the ball at the  moment of

impact, thus  imparting back spin to the ball. 

Volleying is a science based on the old geometric axiom that a  straight line is the shortest distance between

two points. I mean  that a volleyer must always cover the straight passing shot since  it  is the shortest shot with

which to pass him, and he must  volley  straight to his opening and not waste time trying freakish  curving

volleys that give the base liner time to recover. It is  Johnston's  great straight volley that makes him such a

dangerous  net man. He is  always "punching" his volley straight and hard to  the opening in his  opponent's

court. 

A net player must have ground strokes in order to attain the net  position. Do not think that a service and

volley will suffice  against  firstclass tennis. 

I am not a believer in the "centre" theory. Briefly expressed the  centre theory is to hit down the middle of the

court and follow  to  the net, since the other player has the smallest angle to pass  you.  That is true, but

remember that he has an equal angle on  either side  and, given good ground strokes, an equal chance to  pass

with only your  guess or intention to tell you which side he  will choose. 

I advise hitting to the sideline with good length and following  up to the net, coming in just to the centre side

of the straight  returns down the line. Thus the natural shot is covered and your  opponent's court is opened for

an angle volley 'cross. Should  your  opponent try the cross drive, his chances of beating you  clean and  keeping


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the ball in court are much less than his  chances of error. 

Strive to kill your volleys at once, but should your shot not  win,  follow the ball 'cross and again cover the

straight shot.  Always force  the man striving to pass you to play the hardest  possible shot. 

Attack with your volleys. Never defend the ball when at the net.  The only defensive volley is one at your feet

as you come in. It  is a  midcourt shot. Volleys should win with placement more than  speed,  although speed

may be used on a high volley. 

Closely related to the volley, yet in no way a volley stroke, is  the overhead smash. It is the Big Bertha of

tennis. It is the  long  range terror that should always score. The rules of  footwork,  position, and direction that

govern the volley will  suffice for the  overhead. The swing alone is different. The swing  should be closely

allied to the slice service, the racquet and  arm swinging freely from  the shoulder, the wrist flexible and the

racquet imparting a slight  twist to the ball to hold it in court.  The overhead is mainly a point  winner through

speed, since its  bounce is so high that a slow  placement often allows time for a  recovery. 

The overhead is about 60 per cent speed, and 40 per cent combined  place and twist. Any overhead shot taken

on or within the  serviceline should be killed. Any overhead, behind the  serviceline,  and back to the

baseline, should be defended and  put back deep to,  allow you another advance to the net. 

The average overhead shot that is missed is netted. Therefore hit  deep. It is a peculiar fact that over 75 per

cent of all errors  are  nets with only 25 per cent outs. Let this be a constant  reminder to  you of the fact that all

ground strokes should have a  clear margin of  safety of some 8 inches to a foot above the net,  except when

attempting to pass a very active volleyer. In the  latter case the shot  must be low, and the attendant risk is

compensated by the increased  chances of winning the point with a  pass. 

Do not leap in the air unnecessarily to hit overhead balls. Keep  at least one foot, and when possible both feet,

on the ground in  smashing, as it aids in regulating the weight, and gives better  balance. Hit flat and decisively

to the point if desired. 

Most missed overhead shots are due to the eye leaving the ball;  but a second class of errors are due to lack of

confidence that  gives  a cramped, half hearted swing. Follow through your  overhead shot to  the limit of your

swing. 

The overhead is essentially a doubles shot, because in singles  the  chances of passing the net man are greater

than lobbing over  his head,  while in doubles two men cover the net so easily that  the best way to  open the

court is to lob one man back. 

In smashing, the longest distance is the safest shot since it  allows a greater margin of error. Therefore smash

'cross court  when  pressed, but pull your short lobs either side as determined  by the man  you are playing. 

Never drop a lob you can hit overhead, as it forces you back and  gives the attacking position to your

opponent. Never smash with a  reverse twist, always hit with a straight racquet face and direct  to  the opening. 

Closely connected to the overhead since it is the usual defence  to  any hard smash, is the lob. 

A lob is a high toss of the ball landing between the serviceline  and the baseline. An excellent lob should be

within 6 feet of the  baseline. 

Lobs are essentially defensive. The ideas in lobbing are: (1) to  give yourself time to recover position when

pulled out of court  by  your opponent's shot; (2) to drive back the net man and break  up his  attack; (3) to tire


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your opponent; (4) occasionally to,  win cleanly by  placement. This is usually a lob volley from a  close net

rally, and is  a slightly different stroke. 

There is (1) the chop lob, a heavily undercut spin that hangs in  the air. This, is the best defensive lob, as it

goes high and  gives  plenty of time to recover position. (2) The stroke lob or  flat lob,  hit with a slight top spin.

This is the pointwinning  lob since it  gives no time to, the player to run around it, as it  is lower and  faster

than the chop. In making this lob, start your  swing like a  drive, but allow the racquet to slow up and the face

to tilt upward  just as you meet the ball. This, shot should  seldom go above 10 feet  in the air, since it tends to

go out with  the float of the ball. 

The chop lob, which is a decided under cut, should rise from 20  to  30 feet, or more, high and must go deep. It

is better to lob  out and  run your opponent back, thus tiring him, than to lob  short and give  him confidence by

an easy kill. The value of a lob  is mainly one of  upsetting your opponent, and its effects are  very apparent if

you  unexpectedly bring off one at the crucial  period of a match. 

I owe one of my most notable victories to a very timely and  somewhat lucky lob. I was playing Norman E.

Brookes in the fifth  round of the American Championships at Forest Hills, in 1919. The  score stood one set

all, 32 and 3015, Brookes serving. In a  series  of driving returns from his forehand to my backhand, he

suddenly  switched and pounded the ball to my forehand corner and  rushed to the  net. I knew Brookes

crowded the net, and with 4015  or 30all at stake  on my shot, I took a chance and tossed the  ball up in the

air over  Brookes' head. It was not a great lob,  but it was a good one. For once  Brookes was caught napping,

expecting a drive down the line. He  hesitated, then turned and  chased the ball to the back stop, missing  it on

his return. I  heard him grunt as he turned, and knew that he was  badly winded.  He missed his volley off my

return of the next service,  and I led  at 3040. The final point of the game came when he again  threw me  far

out of court on my forehand, and, expecting the line  drive  again, crowded the net, only to have the ball rise in

the air  over his head. He made a desperate effort at recovery, but  failed,  and the game was mine: 3all. It

proved the turningpoint  in the  match, for it not only tired Brookes, but it forced him to  hang back a  little

from the net so as to protect his overhead, so  that his net  attack weakened opportunely, and I was able to nose

out the match in 4  sets. 

Another famous match won by a lob was the JohnstonKingscote  Davis  Cup Match at Wimbledon, in 1920.

The score stood 2 sets  all, and 53  Kingscote leading with Kingscote serving and the  score 30all.  Johnston

served and ran in. Kingscote drove sharply  down Johnston's  forehand sideline. Johnston made a remarkable

recovery with a half  volley, putting the ball high in the air and  seemingly outside. A  strong wind was blowing

down the court and  caught the ball and held  its flight. It fell on the baseline.  Kingscote made a remarkable

recovery with a fine lob that forced  Johnston back. Kingscote took the  net and volleyed decisively to

Johnston's backhand. Johnston again  lobbed, and by a freak of  coincidence the ball fell on the baseline  within

a foot of his  previous shot. Kingscote again lobbed in return,  but this time  short, and Johnston killed it.

Johnston ran out the game  in the  next two points. 

If a shot can win two such matches as these, it is a shot worth  learning to use, and knowing when to use. The

lob is one of the  most  useful and skilful shots in tennis. It is a great defence  and a fine  attack. 

The strokes already analysed, drive, service, volley, overhead  and  lob, are the orthodox strokes of tennis, and

should be at  every  player's command. These are the framework of your game. Yet  no house  is complete with

framework alone. There are certain  trimmings,  ornaments, and decorations necessary. There are the  luxuries

of modern  improvements, and tennis boasts of such  improvements in the modern  game. 

Among the luxuries, some say the eccentricities, of the modern  game one finds (1) the chop stroke, (2) the

slice stroke (a close  relative), (3) the drop shot, (4) the halfvolley or "trap" shot. 


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All these shots have their use. None should be considered a stock  shot. 

CHAPTER V. CHOP, HALF VOLLEY, AND COURT POSITION

I am called at times a chopstroke player. I SELDOM CHOP. My  stroke is a slice. 

A chop stroke is a shot where the angle towards the player and  behind the racquet, made by the line of flight

of the ball, and  the  racquet travelling down across it, is greater than 45 degrees  and may  be 90 degrees. The

racquet face passes slightly OUTSIDE  the ball and  down the side, chopping it, as a man chops wood. The

spin and curve is  from right to left. It is made with a stiff  wrist. Irving C. Wright,  brother of the famous

Beals, is a true  chop player, while Beals  himself, being a left hander, chopped  from the left court and sliced

from the right. 

The slice shot merely reduced the angle mentioned from 45 degrees  down to a very small one. The racquet

face passes either INSIDE  or  OUTSIDE the ball, according to direction desired, while the  stroke is  mainly a

wrist twist or slap. This slap imparts a  decided skidding  break to the ball, while a chop "drags" the ball  off the

ground  without break. Wallace F. Johnson is the greatest  slice exponent in  the world. 

The rules of footwork for both these shots should be the same as  the drive, but because both are made with a

short swing and more  wrist play, without the need of weight, the rules of footwork may  be  more safely

discarded and body position not so carefully  considered. 

Both these shots are essentially defensive, and are laboursaving  devices when your opponent is on the

baseline. A chop or slice is  very hard to drive, and will break up any driving game. 

It is not a shot to use against a volley, as it is too slow to  pass and too high to cause any worry. It should be

used to drop  short, soft shots at the feet of the net man as he comes in. Do  not  strive to pass a net man with a

chop or slice, except through  a big  opening. 

The dropshot is a very soft, sharplyangled chop stroke, played  wholly with the wrist. It should drop within

3 to 5 feet of the  net  to be of any use. The racquet face passes around the outside  of the  ball and under it with

a distinct "wrist turn." Do not  swing the  racquet from the shoulder in making a drop shot. The  drop shot has

no  relation to a stopvolley. The drop shot is all  wrist. The stopvolley  has no wrist at all. 

Use all your wrist shots, chop, slice, and drop, merely as an  auxilliary to your orthodox game. They are

intended to upset your  opponent's game through the varied spin on the ball. 

THE HALF VOLLEY 

I have now reached the climax of tennis skill: the half volley or  trap shot. In other words, the pickup. 

This shot requires more perfect timing, eyesight, and racquet  work  than any other, since its margin of safety

is smallest and  its  manifold chances of mishaps numberless. 

It is a pickup. The ball meets the ground and racquet face at  nearly the same moment, the ball bouncing off

the ground, on the  strings. This shot is a stiffwrist, short swing, like a volley  with  no follow through. The

racquet face travels along the ground  with a  slight tilt over the ball and towards the net, thus  holding the ball

low; the shot, like all others in tennis, should  travel across the  racquet face, along the short strings. The

racquet face should always  be slightly outside the ball. 


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The half volley is essentially a defensive stroke, since it  should  only be made as a last resort, when caught out

of position  by your  opponent's shot. It is a desperate attempt to extricate  yourself from  a dangerous position

without retreating. NEVER  DELIBERATELY HALF  VOLLEY. 

Notwithstanding these truths, there are certain players who have  turned the half volley into a point winner.

The greatest half  volleyer of the past decadein fact, one of the greatest tennis  geniuses of the

worldGeorge Caridia, used the stroke  successfully  as a point winner. R. N. Williams, the leading  exponent

of the stroke  in the present day, achieves remarkable  results with it. Major A. R.  F. Kingscote wins many a

point,  seemingly lost, by his phenomenal  halfvolley returns,  particularly from the baseline. These men turn

a  defence into an  attack, and it pays. 

So much for the actual strokes of the game. It is in the other  departments such as generalship and psychology

that matches are  won.  Just a few suggestions as to stroke technique, and I will  close this  section. 

Always play your shot with a fixed, definite idea of what you are  doing and where it is going. Never hit

haphazard. 

Play all shots across the short strings of the racquet, with the  racquet head and handle on the same hitting

plane for ground  strokes  and the head above the handle for volleys. The racquet  head should be  advanced

slightly beyond the wrist for ground  strokes. 

COURT POSITION 

A tennis court is 39 feet long from baseline to net. Most players  think all of that territory is a correct place to

stand. Nothing  could be farther from the truth. There are only two places in a  tennis court that a tennis player

should be to await the ball. 

1. About 3 feet behind the baseline near the middle of the court,  or 

2. About 6 to 8 feet back from the net and almost opposite the  ball. 

The first is the place for all baseline players. The second is  the  net position. 

If you are drawn out of these positions by a shot which you must  return, do not remain at the point where you

struck the ball, but  attain one of the two positions mentioned as rapidly as possible. 

The distance from the baseline to about 10, feet from the net may  be considered as "noman'sland" or "the

blank." Never linger  there,  since a deep shot will catch you at your feet. After  making your shot  from the

blank, as you must often do, retreat  behind the baseline to  await the return, so you may again come  forward to

meet the ball. If  you are drawn in short and cannot  retreat safely, continue all the way  to the net position. 

Never stand and watch your shot, for to do so simply means you  are  out of position for your next stroke.

Strive to attain a  position so  that you always arrive at the spot the ball is going  to before it  actually arrives.

Do your hard running while the  ball is in the air,  so you will not be hurried in your stroke  after it bounces. 

It is in learning to do this that natural anticipation plays a  big  role. Some players instinctively know where the

next return  is going  and take position accordingly, while others will never  sense it. It is  to the latter class that

I urge court position,  and recommend always  coming in from behind the baseline to meet  the ball, since it is

much  easier to run forward than back. 


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Should you be caught at the net, with a short shot to your  opponent, do not stand still and let him pass you at

will, as he  can  easily do. Pick out the side where you think he will hit, and  jump to,  it suddenly as he swings.

If you guess right, you win  the point. If  you are wrong, you are no worse off, since he would  have beaten you

anyway with his shot. 

A notable example of this method of anticipation is Norman E.  Brookes, who instinctively senses the stroke,

and suddenly bobs  up in  front of your best shot and kills it. Some may say it is  luck, but, to  my mind, it is the

reward of brain work. 

Your position should always strive to be such that you can cover  the greatest possible area of court without

sacrificing safety,  since  the straight shot is the surest, most dangerous, and must  be covered.  It is merely a

question of how much more court than  that immediately  in front of the ball may be guarded. 

A wellgrounded knowledge of court position saves many points, to  say nothing of much breath expended in

long runs after hopeless  shots. 

It is the phenomenal knowledge of court position that allows A.  R.  F. Kingscote, a very short man, to attack

so consistently from  the  net. Wallace F. Johnson is seldom caught out of position, so  his game  is one of

extreme ease. One seldom sees Johnson running  hard on a  tennis court. He is usually there awaiting the ball's

arrival. 

Save your steps by using your head. It pays in the end. Time  spent  in learning where to play on a tennis court

is well  expended, since it  returns to you in the form of matches won,  breath saved, and energy  conserved. 

It is seldom you need cover more than twothirds of a tennis  court, so why worry about the unnecessary

portions of it? 

PART II: THE LAWS OF TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY

CHAPTER VI. GENERAL TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY

Tennis psychology is nothing more than understanding the workings  of your opponent's mind, and gauging

the effect of your own game  on  his mental viewpoint, and understanding the mental effects  resulting  from the

various external causes on your own mind. You  cannot be a  successful psychologist of others without first

understanding your own  mental processes, you must study the  effect on yourself of the same  happening under

different  circumstances. You react differently in  different moods and under  different conditions. You must

realize the  effect on your game of  the resulting irritation, pleasure, confusion,  or whatever form  your reaction

takes. Does it increase your  efficiency? If so,  strive for it, but never give it to your opponent. 

Does it deprive you of concentration? If so, either remove the  cause, or if that is not possible strive to ignore

it. 

Once you have judged accurately your own reaction to conditions,  study your opponents, to decide their

temperaments. Like  temperaments  react similarly, and you may judge men of your own  type by yourself.

Opposite temperaments you must seek to compare  with people whose  reactions you know. 

A person who can control his own mental processes stands an  excellent chance of reading those of another,

for the human mind  works along definite lines of thought, and can be studied. One  can  only control one's,

mental processes after carefully studying  them. 


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A steady phlegmatic baseline player is seldom a keen thinker. If  he was he would not adhere to the baseline. 

The physical appearance of a man is usually a pretty clear index  to his type of mind. The stolid, easygoing

man, who usually  advocates the baseline game, does so because he hates to stir up  his  torpid mind to think

out a safe method of reaching the net.  There is  the other type of baseline player, who prefers to remain  on the

back  of the court while directing an attack intended to  break up your game.  He is a very dangerous player,

and a deep,  keen thinking antagonist.  He achieves his results by mixing up  his length and direction, and

worrying you with the variety of  his game. He is a good psychologist.  Such players include J. C.  Parke,

Wallace F. Johnson, and Charles S.  Garland. The first type  of player mentioned merely hits the ball with  little

idea of what  he is doing, while the latter always has a  definite plan and  adheres to it. The hardhitting,

erratic,  netrushing player is a  creature of impulse. There is no real system  to his attack, no  understanding of

your game. He will make brilliant  coups on the  spur of the moment, largely by instinct; but there is no,

mental  power of consistent thinking. It is an interesting, fascinating  type. Such men as Harold Throckmorton,

B. I. C. Norton, and at  times  R. N. Williams, are examples, although Williams is really a  better  psychologist

than this sounds. 

The dangerous man is the player who mixes his style from back to  fore court at the direction of an everalert

mind. This is the  man to  study and learn from. He is a player with a definite  purpose. A player  who has an

answer to every query you propound  him in your game. He is  the most subtle antagonist in the world.  He is

of the school of  Brookes. Second only to him is the man of  dogged determination that  sets his mind on one

plan and adheres  to it, bitterly, fiercely  fighting to the end, with never a  thought of change. He is the man

whose psychology is easy to  understand, but whose mental viewpoint is  hard to upset, for he  never allows

himself to think of anything except  the business at  hand. This man is your Johnston or your Wilding. I  respect

the  mental capacity of Brookes more, but I admire the tenacity  of  purpose of Johnston. 

Pick out your type from your own mental processes, and then work  out your game along the lines best suited

to you. Few of us have  the  mental brilliance of Brookes; but all can acquire the dogged  determination of

Johnston, even if we have not his tennis  ability. 

When two men are, in the same class, as regards stroke equipment,  the determining factor in any given match

is the mental  viewpoint.  Luck, socalled, is often grasping the psychological  value of a break  in the game,

and turning it to your own account. 

We hear a great deal about the "shots we have made." Few realize  the importance of the "shots we have

missed." The science of  missing  shots is as important as that of making them, and at  times a miss by  an inch

is of more value than a, return that is  killed by your  opponent. 

Let me explain. A player drives you far out of court with an  angleshot. You run hard to it, and reaching,

drive it hard and  fast  down the side line, missing it by an inch. Your opponent is  surprised  and shaken,

realizing that your shot might as well have  gone in as  out. He will expect you to try it again, and will not  take

the risk  next time. He will try to play the ball, and may  fall into error. You  have thus taken some of your

opponent's  confidence, and increased his  chance of error, all by a miss. 

If you had merely popped back that return, and it had been  killed,  your opponent would have felt increasingly

confident of  your inability  to get the ball out of his reach, while you would  merely have been  winded without

result. 

Let us suppose you made the shot down the sideline. It was a  seemingly impossible get. First it amounts to

TWO points in that  it  took one away from your opponent that should have been his and  gave  you one you

ought never to have had. It also worries your  opponent, as  he feels he has thrown away a big chance. 


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The psychology of a tennis match is very interesting, but easily  understandable. Both men start with equal

chances. Once one man  establishes a real lead, his confidence goes up, while his  opponent  worries, and his

mental viewpoint becomes poor. The sole  object of the  first man is to hold his lead, thus holding his

confidence. If the  second player pulls even or draws ahead, the  inevitable reaction  occurs with even a greater

contrast in  psychology. There is the  natural confidence of the leader now  with the second man as well as  that

great stimulus of having  turned seeming defeat into probable  victory. The reverse in the  case of the first

player is apt to  hopelessly destroy his game,  and collapse follows. 

It is this twist in tennis psychology that makes it possible to  win so many matches after they are seemingly

lost. This is also  the  reason that a man who has lost a substantial lead seldom  turns in the  ultimate victory. He

cannot rise above the  depression caused by his  temporary slump. The value of an early  lead cannot be

overestimated.  It is the ability to control your  mental processes, and not worry  unduly over early reverses,

that  makes a great match player. 

Playing to the score is the first requisite of a thinking match  player. The two crucial points in any game are

the third and  fourth.  If the first two points are divided for 15all, the third  means an  advantage gained. If won

by you, you should strive to  consolidate it  by taking the next for 4015 and two chances for  game, while if

lost,  you must draw even at 30all to have an even  chance for game. 

In order to do this, be sure to always put the ball in play  safely, and do not take unnecessary chances, at

15all or 3015.  Always make the server work to hold his delivery. It worries him  to  serve long games, and

increases the nervous strain of the  match. 

In the game score the sixth, seventh, and eighth games are the  crux of every close set. These games may

mean 42 or 3all, 52  or  43, the most vital advantage in the match, or 53 or 4all, a  matter  of extreme

moment to a tiring player. If ahead, you should  strive to  hold and increase your lead. If behind, your one hope

of victory rests  in cutting down the advantage of the other man  BEFORE one slip means  defeat. 52 is

usually too late to start a  rally, but 43 is a real  chance. 

Never throw away a set because a player has a lead of 41, or  even  51, unless you already have two sets in a

5set match, and  do not  wish to risk tiring by trying to pull it out, and possibly  failing at  64. The great

advantage Of 31 on your own service is  a  stumblingblock for many players, for they unconsciously let up

at the  fifth game, thinking they have a 2game lead. However, by  dropping  that game, the score will go 23

and 3all if your  opponent holds  service, instead of 14 and 42, thus retaining a  distinct advantage  and

discouraging your opponent in that set. 

The first set is vital in a 2 out of 3 match. Play for all of it.  The second and third sets are the turningpoint in

a best of  5set  match. Take the first where possible, but play to the limit  for the  next two. Never allow a 3 out

of 5set match to go to,  the fifth set  if it is possible to win in less; but never give up  a match until the  last

point is played, even if you are two sets  and five games down.  Some occurrence may turn the tide in your

favour. 

A notable example of such a match occurred at Newport, in 1916.  Wallace F. Johnson and Joseph J.

Armstrong were playing Ichija  Kumagae, the famous Japanese star, and Harold A. Throckmorton,  then  junior

Champion of America, in the second round of the  doubles. 

It was Kumagae's first year in America, and he did not understand  Americans and their customs well.

Kumagae and Throckmorton were  leading one set at 60, 51, and 4015, Kumagae serving.  Throckmorton

turned and spoke to him, and the Japanese star did  not understand what  he said. He served without knowing,

and  Armstrong passed him down the  centre. Johnson duplicated the feat  in the next court, and Kumagae  grew

flustered. Throckmorton, not  understanding, tried to steady him  without result, as Kumagae  doublefaulted to


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Armstrong, and he, too,  grew worried. Both men  began missing, and Johnson and Armstrong pulled  out the

set and  won the match in a runaway in the last stanza. Johnson  and  Armstrong met W. M. Johnston and C. J.

Griffin, the National  Champions, in the final and defeated them in five sets,  inflicting  the only reverse the

titleholders suffered during  their twoyear  reign as champions. 

Another much more regrettable incident occurred in the famous  match between R. L. Murray of California

and George M. Church of  New  York in the fourth round of the American National  Championship in  1916.

George Church, then at the crest of his  wonderful game, had won  the first two sets and was leading Murray  in

the third, when the  famous Californian started a sensational  rally. Murray, with his  terrific speed, merry

smile, and genial  personality, has always been a  popular figure with the public,  and when he began his

seemingly  hopeless fight, the crowd cheered  him wildly. He broke through  Church's service and drew even

amid  a terrific din. Church, always a  very highstrung, nervous  player, showed that the crowd's partiality  was

getting on his  nerves. The gallery noticed it, and became more  partisan than  ever. The spirit of mob rule took

hold, and for once  they lost  all sense of sportsmanship. They clapped errors as they  rained  from Church's

racquet; the great game collapsed under the  terrific strain, and Church's last chance was gone. Murray won

largely as he wanted, in the last two sets. No one regretted the  incident more than Murray himself, for no

finer sportsman steps  upon  the court than this player, yet there was nothing that could  be done.  It was a case

of external conditions influencing the  psychology of one  man so greatly that it cost him a victory that  was his

in justice. 

The primary object in match tennis is to break up the other man's  game. The first lesson to learn is to hold

your nerve under all  circumstances. If you can break a player's nerve by pounding at a  weakness, do it. I

remember winning a 5set doubles match many  years  ago, against a team far over the class of my partner and

myself, by  lobbing continually to one man until he cracked under  the strain and  threw the match away. He

became so afraid of a lob  that he would not  approach the net, and his whole game broke up  on account of his

lack  of confidence. Our psychology was good,  for we had the confidence to  continue our plan of attack even

while losing two of the first three  sets. His was bad, for he  lost his nerve, and let us know it. 

Sensational and unexpected shots at crucial moments have won many  a match. If your opponent makes a

marvellous recovery and wins by  it,  give him full credit for it, and then forget it, for by  worrying over  it you

not only lose that point but several others  as, well, while  your mind is still wandering. Never lose your  temper

over your  opponent's good shots. It is bad enough to lose  it at your own bad  ones. Remember that usually the

loser of a  match plays just as well as  the winner allows him. Never lose  your temper at a bad decision. It

never pays, and has cost many a  match. 

I remember a famous match in Philadelphia, between Wallace F.  Johnson, the fifth ranking player in

America, and Stanley W.  Pearson,  a local star, in the Interclub tennis league of that  city. Johnson,  who had

enjoyed a commanding lead of a set and  41, had slumped, and  Pearson had pulled even at a setall, and  was

leading at 51 and  4015, point set match. He pulled Johnson  far out to the forehand and  came to the net.

Johnson chopped  viciously down the sideline, but  Pearson volleyed to Johnson's  deep backhand corner.

Johnson had  started RUNNING in that  direction as he hit his return, and arrived  almost as Pearson's  volley

bounced. Unfortunately Johnson slipped and  went down on  both knees, but held his racquet. He reached the

ball and  chopped  it down the sideline for an earned point before Pearson  realized  he had even offered at it. 

Pearson was so surprised and angered that he doublefaulted for  deuce, and Johnson won the game. Johnson

pulled even at 5all,  before  Pearson recovered his equilibrium, and finally won the set  at 1715.  Truly

Pearson's lapse at Johnson's marvellous get was a  costly mental  break. 

Tennis psychology is far more than the effect of certain shots,  made or missed, on the player. One can sum up

such things by  saying  that every kill gives confidence, every error tends to  destroy it.  These things are

obvious. The branch of psychology  that is interesting  is the reaction on the various players of  different courts,


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different  crowds, and other players. 

There is a peculiar atmosphere about the centre court at  Wimbledon  that is unique in my knowledge of the

game. Certain  players revel in  it. The majority do not feel it, and since they  do not sense it, they  find only the

material disadvantages of  rather bad light, and much  noise from the stand, and dislike the  centre court.

Personally, I  enjoy playing on the centre court at  Wimbledon more than any court I  have ever stepped upon. 

The traditions of the great players of the past, the notable  personages that make up the parties in the Royal

Box and  Committee  Box, the honour of a visit from their Majesties the  King and Queen,  and, above all, the

generous, nonpartisan,  sportsmanlike attitude of  the British public, make it a unique  privilege to enter the

centre  court in championship competition.  These things inspire the mind to an  almost abnormal keenness. It

is this atmosphere that made N. E.  Brookes, Anthony F. Wilding,  A. W. Gore, R. F. and H. L. Doherty more

dangerous there than  anywhere else. It is this factor that spurs on J.  C. Parke and A.  R. F. Kingscote to their

greatest tennis today. 

The great championship turf at Forest Hills, where the American  Championship is held, offers a unique

contrast to Wimbledon. 

The age of Wimbledon is its great attraction. It is the spirit of  youth, of progress, of businesslike mechanical

perfection of  management, and the enormous crowds and attendant enthusiasm that  is  the chief attraction at

Forest Hills. Fully 15,000 were  present on the  closing day of the event in 1919. Orderly,  courteous,

enthusiastic,  but partisan, the American tennis public  comes out to cheer on its  favourite. No people in the

world  appreciate visiting players more  wholeheartedly and none do more  for their comfort than the

American  people. It is partisan,  personal, sporting friendliness, warmer yet  not so correct as the  manner of the

British public, that the Americans  give. We have  much to learn from our British friends. Yet I hope we  will

never  sacrifice the warmth of feeling that at times may run away  with  us, yet in the main is the chief

attraction of the American  people. It is this enthusiasm that spurs on the men to their  greatest  efforts in the

National Championship. 

The Australian team, Norman E. Brookes, Gerald Patterson,  Randolph  Lycett, and R. V. Thomas, who visited

the United States,  in 1919,  scored a unique personal triumph. The whole gallery  present at the  notable match

in the Championship, when Patterson  went down to defeat  in a terrific 5set struggle with W. M.  Johnston,

rose and cheered  Patterson as he walked off the court.  It was a real ovation; a tribute  to his sportsmanship,

and an  outburst of personal admiration. Brookes  was the recipient of an  equal demonstration on his final

appearance at  Forest Hills. The  stimulus of the surroundings produced the highest  tennis of which  these men

were capable. 

Yet in all championships it is the personal element that is the  moving factor. Personalities are the deciding

force in  popularity.  Patriotism is partially submerged in personality. 

The Davis Cup matches bring out the gamest struggles in the  history of tennis. It is in these unique series of

matches that  the  fame of Anthony F. Wilding, Norman E. Brookes, J. C. Parke,  B. C.  Wright, M. E.

M'Loughlin, and others reached its crest. It  was the  unselfish giving of one's best, under all conditions, for  the

honour  of the country that called out the finest tennis in  each man. Parke  reached his crest in his memorable

defeat of  Brookes. M'Loughlin has  never quite equalled his marvellous game  of 1914 against Brookes and

Wilding. 

It is the psychology of patriotism that brings out this tennis. 

Personality is submerged. Unity of purpose as a team, replaces  the  object of personal glory that is the keynote

of championship. 


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It is the friendly rivalry of sport, between such men as form the  backbone of tennis in each country, that does

more for  international  understanding than all the notes ever written from  the White House. 

I could go on writing tennis psychology as explained by external  conditions for hundreds of pages, but all I

want to do is to  bring to  mind a definite idea of the value of the mind in the  game. Stimulate  it how you will,

a successful tennis player must  admit the value of  quick mind. Do it by a desire for personal  glory, or team

success, or  by a love of competition in matching  your wits against the other  man's, but do it some way. 

Do, not think that tennis is merely a physical exercise. It is a  mental cocktail of a very high "kick." 

CHAPTER VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MATCH PLAY

The first and most important point in match play is to know how  to  lose. Lose cheerfully, generously, and

like a sportsman. This  is the  first great law of tennis, and the second is like unto  itto win  modestly,

cheerfully, generously, and like a  sportsman. 

The object of match play is to win, but no credit goes to a man  who does not win fairly and squarely. A

victory is a defeat if it  is  other than fair. Yet again I say to win is the object, and to  do so,  one should play to

the last ounce of his strength, the  last gasp of  his breath, and the last scrap of his nerve. If you  do so and lose,

the better man won. If you do not, you have  robbed your opponent of  his right of beating your best. Be fair  to

both him and yourself. 

"The Play's the thing," and in match play a good defeat is far  more creditable than a hollow victory. Play

tennis for the game's  sake. Play it for the men you meet, the friends you make, and the  pleasure you may give

to the public by the hard working yet  sporting  game that is owed them by their presence at the match. 

Many tennis players feel they owe the public nothing, and are  granting a favour by playing. It is my belief

that when the  public so  honours a player that they attend matches, that player  is in duty  bound to give of his

best, freely, willingly, and  cheerfully, for only  by so doing can he repay the honour paid  him. The tennis star

of  today owes his public as much as the  actor owes the audience, and  only by meeting his obligations can

tennis be retained in public  favour. The players get their reward  in the personal popularity they  gain by their

conscientious work. 

There is another factor that is even stronger than this, that  will  always produce fine tennis in championship

events. It is the  competitive spirit that is the breath of life to every true  sportsman: the desire to prove to

himself he can beat the best of  the  other man; the real regret that comes when he wins, and feels  the  loser was

not at his best. It is that which has made popular  idols of  Anthony F. Wilding, M. E. M'Loughlin, and other

famous  players. It is  the great attraction of J. C. Parke, A. R. F.  Kingscote, W. M.  Johnston, Andre Gobert,

W. Laurentz, and many  other stars. It is the  sign of a true sportsman. 

The keen competitive spirit that stimulates a match player also  increases the nervous strain. This should be

recognized by  tournament  committees, and the conditions of play should be as  nearly  standardized as weather

permits. 

A tournament committee should never keep a player waiting for an  important match to commence while they

scour through the crowd  for  linesmen. These necessary, and I trust useful, accessories to  every  match of

importance should be picked and on hand when the  players  appear. A good linesman is a great aid to match

tennis. A  poor one may  ruin a great battle. Not only will bad decisions  turn the tide by  putting a point in the

wrong columns, but slow  decisions will often  upset players, so they dare not play to the  line kept by

slumberous  linesmen. 


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A linesman should take his first judgment as the ball strikes. If  outside he should call "out" at once clearly,

decisively, but not  too  loudly; a yell is often a shock to the nerves. If the ball is  good he  should remain

discreetly silent. 

The umpire should announce the score after each point in a voice  sufficiently loud to be heard by the entire

gallery. His  decisions as  to "lets" or balls "not up" should be made only loud  enough to ensure  that they are

heard by the players. The gallery  has eyes. Following  each game, the game score should be called,  giving the

leading  player's name and the set being played. For  example, "Four games to  three, Parke leads. Second set."

About  every third game following the  completion of the first set, an  announcement as to the winner of the

first set is an excellent  idea. The umpire could add to the above  announcement, "First set,  Parke, 63." This

latter announcement is  unnecessary when there  is a score board that gives full details of the  match. 

Tournament committees should see that all courts have sufficient  room behind the baseline and at the sides to

insure a player  against  running into the stops. 

Galleries should strive to retain their appreciation and  enthusiasm until a point is completed, since noise is

very  disconcerting to a player. However, all players enjoy an  enthusiastic  gallery. 

The players themselves must now be considered in relation to the  reaction of the match. 

The first thing to fix firmly in your mind in playing a match, is  never to allow your opponent to play a shot he

likes if it is  possible to force him to make one he does not. Study your  opponent  both on and off the court.

Look for a weakness, and,  once finding it,  pound it without mercy. Remember that you do not  decide your

mode of  attack. It is decided for you by the weakness  of your opponent. If he  dislikes to meet a netman, go to

the net.  If he wants you at the net,  stay back and force him to come in.  If he attacks viciously, meet his  attack

with an equally strong  offensive. 

Remember that the strongest defence is to attack, for if the  other  man is occupied in meeting your attack, he

will have less  time to  formulate his own system. 

If you are playing a very steady man, do not strive to beat him  at  his own game. He is better at it than you in

many cases, so go  in and  hit to win. On the other hand, if you find that your  opponent is wild  and prone to

miss, play safe and reap the full  crop of his errors. It  saves you trouble and takes his  confidence. 

ABOVE ALL, NEVER CHANGE A WINNING GAME. 

ALWAYS CHANGE A LOSING GAME, since, as you are getting beaten  that  way, you are no worse off and

may be better with a new  style. 

The question of changing a losing game is a very serious thing.  It  is hard to say just when you are really

beaten. If you feel  you are  playing well yet have lost the first set about 63 or  64, with the  loss of only one

service, you should not change.  Your game is not  really a losing game. It is simply a case of one  break of

service, and  might well win the next set. If, however,  you have dropped the first  set in a 2 out of 3 match with

but one  or two games, now you are  outclassed and should try something  else. 

Take chances when you are behind, never when ahead. Risks are  only  worth while when you have everything

to win and nothing to  lose. It  may spell victory, and at least will not hasten defeat.  Above all,  never lose your

nerve or confidence in a match. By so  doing you have  handed your opponent about two points a gamea

rather hard handicap  to beat at your best.


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Never let your opponent know you are worried. Never show fatigue  or pain if it is possible to avoid, since it

will only give him  confidence. Remember that he feels just as bad as you, and any  sign  of weakening on your

part encourages him to go on. In other  words,  keep your teeth always in the match. 

Don't worry. Don't fuss. Luck evens up in the long run, and to  worry only upsets your own game without

affecting your opponent.  A  smile wins a lot of points because it gives the impression of  confidence on your

part that shakes that of the other man. Fight  all  the time. The harder the strain the harder you should fight,  but

do it  easily, happily, and enjoy it. 

Match play, where both men are in the same class as tennis  players, resolves itself into a battle of wits and

nerve. The man  who  uses the first and retains the second is the ultimate victor. 

I do not believe in a man who expects to go through a long  tournament, going "all out" for every match.

Conserve your  strength  and your finesse for the times you need them, and win  your other  matches decisively,

but not destructively. Why should  a great star  discourage and dishearten a player several classes  below him

by  crushing him, as he no doubt could? A few games a  set, well earned,  would be a big factor in encouraging

that  rising player to play in  tournaments, while it would in no way  injure the reputation of the  star. 

Never hurry your opponent by serving before he is fully set to  receive. This is a favourite trick of a few

unscrupulous players,  yet  is really an unfair advantage. Do your hurrying after the  ball is in  play, by running

him to unexpected places in the  court. Should anyone  attempt to work the hurried service on you,  after

several attempts,  proving it is intentional, let the ball  go by and say "not ready." The  server will shortly

realize that  you will take your time regardless of  him, and he will slow up. 

I do not advocate stallingnothing is worse. It is a breach of  ethics that is wholly uncalled for. Play the

game naturally, and  give  your opponent full courtesy in all matters. If you do, you  will  receive it in return. 

Take every advantage of any and every weakness in your opponent's  game; but never trespass on his rights as

regards external  advantages. 

Personally I do not believe in "defaulting" a match. To "scratch"  or "retire," as the term goes, is to cheat your

opponent of his  just  triumph, and you should never do this unless it is  absolutely  impossible to avoid.

Sickness or some equally  important reason should  be the sole cause of scratching, for you  owe the

tournament your  presence once your entry is in. 

Match play should stimulate a player. He should produce his best  under the excitement of competition. Learn

your shots in  practice,  but use them in matches. 

Practice is played with the racquet, matches are won by the mind.  J. C. Parke is a great match player, because

he is not only a  great  player but a great student of men. He sizes up his  opponent, and  seizes every opening

and turns it to his own  account. Norman E.  Brookes is the greatest match player the world  has ever known,

because  he is ever ready to change his plan to  meet the strategy of his  opponent, and has both the variety of

stroke and versatility of  intellect to outguess the other the  majority of times. Brookes is the  greatest court

general, and, in  my opinion, the finest tennis  intellect in the world. His mind is  never so keen and he is never

so  dangerous as when he is trailing  in an important match. He typifies  all that is great in mental  match tennis. 

A great star is always at his best in a match, as it stimulates  his mental and physical faculties to the utmost. 

Certain players are more effective against some men than others  who are not so good. It is the uncertainty of

match tennis that  is  its greatest charm. Two men may meet for tennis during a  season, and  be so closely

matched that each man will win two  matches and the score  seem almost onesided each time. It is a  case of


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getting the jump on  the other player. 

During 1919 Johnston and I met four times. Twice he defeated me,  once in four sets, and once in three, while

the two victories  that  were mine were scored in identically the same number of  sets. The most  remarkable

meeting of two stars was the series of  matches between R.  L. Murray and Ichija Kumagae during the  seasons

of 1918 and 1919. In  the early stages Murray had a  decided advantage, winning from Kumagae  consistently,

but by  close scores. Early in 1919 Kumagae unexpectedly  defeated Murray  at Buffalo in four sets. From that

moment Kumagae held  the whip  hand. He defeated Murray at NiagaraontheLake a week later.  Murray

barely nosed out the Japanese star at Cleveland in five  sets  after Kumagae had the match won, only to have

Kumagae again  defeat him  in a terrific match at Newport in August. 

Kumagae's game is very effective against Murray, because Murray,  essentially a volleyer, could not exchange

ground strokes with  the  Japanese star player successfully, and could not stand the  terrific  pace of rushing the

net at every opportunity. Kumagae  conclusively  proved his slight superiority over Murray last  season. 

Vincent Richards, who is not yet the equal of Murray, scored two  cleancut victories over Kumagae during

the same period. Why  should  Richards worry Kumagae, who is certainly Murray's  superior, and yet  not cause

Murray trouble? 

The answer lies in this style of game. Richards uses a peculiar  chop stroke from the baseline that is very

steady. He can meet  Kumagae at his own baseline game until he gets a chance to close  in  to the net, where his

volleying is remarkable. The result is,  against  Kumagae's driving he is perfectly at home. Murray is a  vicious

net  player who swept Richards off his feet. The boy has  not the speed on  his ground strokes to pass Murray,

who volleys  off his chop for  points, and cannot take the net away from him as  he cannot handle the  terrific

speed of Murray's game. Thus  Murray's speed beats Richards,  while Richards' steadiness  troubles Kumagae,

yet Kumagae's persistent  driving tires Murray  and beats him. What good are comparative scores? 

Charles S. Garland always defeats Howard Voshell, yet loses to  men  whom Voshell defeats. Williams proves

a stumblingblock to  Johnston,  yet seldom does well against me. 

The moral to be drawn from the everinteresting upsets that occur  every year, is that the style of your attack

should be determined  by  the man's weakness you are playing. Suit your style to his  weakness. A  chop is the

antidote for the drive. The volley is the  answer to a  chop, yet a drive is the only safe attack against a  volley.

The smash  will kill a lob, yet a lob is the surest  defence from a smash. Rather  a complicated condition, but

one  which it would do well to think over. 

The most dangerous enemy to R. N. Williams is a steady baseliner  of second class. Williams is apt to crush a

topflight player in  a  burst of superlative terms, yet fall a victim to the erratic  streak  that is in him when some

secondclass player plays patball  with him.  Such defeats were his portion at the hands of Ritchie  and

Mavrogordato  in England, yet on the same trip he scored  notable victories over  Parke and Johnston. 

Abnormal conditions for match play always tend to affect the  better player more than the poorer, and bring

play to a level. 

The reason for this is in the fact that the higher the standard  of  a player's game, the smaller his margin of

error, the more  perfect his  bound must be, and any variation from the normal is  apt to spell  error. The average

player allows himself more  leeway, and unknowingly  increases his chances on a bad court. His  shot is not

judged to the  fraction of an inch in swing as is the  topflight player, so a slight  variation does not affect him. 

Many a great match has been ruined by abnormal conditions. Rain  caused Williams' downfall to N. W. Niles

in the 1917 American  Championships. Rain and wind marred a great battle between Gobert  and  Johnston at


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Eastbourne in the Davis Cup in 1920. 

The clever match player must always be willing to change his game  to meet conditions. Failure to do so may

spell defeat. 

It is this uncertainty, due to external conditions, that makes  comparative records so useless in judging the

relative merits of  two  players you know nothing of. Rankings based on mathematical  calculations of scores

are absolutely useless and childish,  unless  tempered by common sense. 

The question of the fitness of conditions of play can never be  standardized. In America you play only if clear.

In England  sometimes  when clear but more often in rain, judging by the  events I swam  through in my recent

trip. A match player should  not only be able to  play tennis, but should combine the virtues  of an aeroplane

and a  submarine as well. 

CHAPTER VIII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PHYSICAL FITNESS

Physical fitness is one of the great essentials of match play.  Keenness can only be acquired if the physical,

mental, and  nervous  systems are in tune. Consistent and systematic training  is essential  to a tournament

player. 

Regular hours of sleep, and regular, hearty food at regular hours  are necessary to keep the body at its highest

efficiency. Food is  particularly important. Eat well, but do not overeat,  particularly  immediately before

playing. I believe in a large  hearty breakfast on  the day of a big match. This should be taken  by ninethirty. A

moderate lunch at about one o'clock if playing  at three. Do not eat  very rich food at luncheon as it tends to

slow you up on the court. Do  not run the risk of indigestion,  which is the worst enemy to dear  eyesight. Rich,

heavy food  immediately before retiring is bad, as it  is apt to make you  "loggy" on the court the next day. 

It is certain injury to touch alcoholic drink in any form during  tournament play. Alcohol is a poison that

affects the eye, the  mind,  and the windthree essentials in tennis. Tobacco in  moderation does  little harm,

although it, too, hits eye and wind.  A man who is facing  a long season of tournament play should  refrain from

either alcohol or  tobacco in any form. Excesses of  any kind are bad for physical  condition, and should not be

chanced. 

Late hours cause sluggishness of mind and body the next day. It  is  very dangerous to risk them before a hard

match. The moving  pictures  immediately before playing tennis are bad, owing to the  eye strain  caused by the

flicker of the film and the strong light  of the camera.  Lead a normal, healthy life, and conserve your  nervous

force wherever  possible, as you will need it in the hard  matches. 

"Staleness" is the great enemy of players who play long seasons.  It is a case of too much tennis. Staleness is

seldom physical  weariness. A player can always recover his strength by rest.  Staleness is a mental fatigue due

often to worry or too close  attention to tennis, and not enough variety of thought. Its  symptoms  are a dislike

for the tennis game and its surroundings,  and a lack of  interest in the match when you are on the court. I

advocate a break in  training at such a time. Go to the theatre or  a concert, and get your  mind completely off

tennis. Do your  worrying about tennis while you  are playing it, and forget the  unpleasantness of bad play

once you are  off the court. Always  have some outside interest you can turn to for  relaxation during  a

tournament; but never allow it to interfere with  your tennis  when you should be intent on your game. A nice

balance is  hard to  achieve, but, once attained is a great aid to a tournament  player. I find my relaxation in

auction bridge. I know many other  players who do likewise. Among them are Mrs. Franklin Mallory,  Wallace

F. Johnson, W. M. Johnston and Samuel Hardy. 


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The laws of training should be closely followed before and after  a  match. Do not get chilled before a match,

as it makes you stiff  and  slow. Above all else do not stand around without a wrap after  a match  when you are

hot or you will catch cold. 

Many a player has acquired a touch of rheumatism from wasting  time  at the close of his match instead of

getting his shower  while still  warm. That slight stiffness the next day may mean  defeat. A serious  chill may

mean severe illness. Do not take  chances. 

Change your wet clothes to dry ones between matches if you are to  play twice in a day. It will make you feel

better, and also avoid  the  risk of cold. 

Tournament players must sacrifice some pleasures for the sake of  success. Training will win many a match

for a man if he sticks to  it.  Spasmodic training is useless, and should never be attempted. 

The condition a player is, in is apt to decide his mental  viewpoint, and aid him in accustoming himself to the

external  conditions of play. 

All match players should know a little about the phenomenon of  crowdpsychology since, as in the case of

the ChurchMurray match  I  related some time back, the crowd may play an important part in  the  result. 

It seldom pays to get a crowd down on you. It always pays to win  its sympathy. I do not mean play to the

gallery, for that will  have  the opposite effect than the one desired. 

The gallery is always for the weaker player. It is a case of  helping the "underdog." If you are a consistent

winner you must  accustom yourself to having the gallery show partiality for your  opponent. It is no personal

dislike of you. It is merely a  natural  reaction in favour of the loser. Sometimes a bad decision  to one play  will

win the crowd's sympathy for him. Galleries are  eminently just in  their desires, even though at times their

emotions run away with them. 

Quite aside from the effect on the gallery, I wish to state here  that when you are the favoured one in a

decision that you know is  wrong, strive to equalize it if possible by unostentatiously  losing  the next point. Do

not hit the ball over the back stop or  into the  bottom of the net with a jaunty air of "Here you are."  Just hit it

slightly out or in the net, and go on about your  business in the  regular way. Your opponent always knows

when you  extend him this  justice, and he appreciates it, even though he  does not expect it.  Never do it for

effect. It is extremely bad  taste. Only do it when  your sense of justice tells you you  should. 

The crowd objects, and justly so, to a display of real temper on  the court. A player who loses his head must

expect a poor  reception  from the gallery. Questioned decisions by a player only  put him in a  bad light with

the crowd and cannot alter the point.  You may know the  call was wrong, but grin at it, and the crowd  will join

you. These  things are the essence of good  sportsmanship, and good sportsmanship  will win any gallery. The

most unattractive player in the world will  win the respect and  admiration of a crowd by a display of real

sportsmanship at the  time of test. 

Any player who really enjoys a match for the game's sake will  always be a fine sportsman, for there is no

amusement to a match  that  does not give your opponent his every right. A player who  plays for  the joy of the

game wins the crowd the first time he  steps on the  court. All the world loves an optimist. 

The more tennis I play, the more I appreciate my sense of humour.  I seldom play a match when I do not get a

smile out of some  remark  from the gallery, while I know that the gallery always  enjoys at least  one hearty

laugh at my expense. I do not begrudge  it them, for I know  how very peculiar tennis players in general,  and

myself in particular,  appear when struggling vainly to reach  a shot hopelessly out of reach. 


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Two delightful elderly ladies were witnessing Charles S. Garland  and myself struggle against Mavrogordato,

and Riseley at the  Edgbaston tournament in England in 1920. One turned to the other  and  said: "Those are the

Americans!" 

"Oh," said the second lady resignedly, "I thought so. The tall  one  [meaning me] looks rather queer." 

During the Davis Cup match against the French at Eastbourne, I  went on the court against Laurentz in my

blue "woolly" sweater.  The  day was cold, and I played the match 41 in Laurentz' favour,  still  wearing it. I

started to remove it at the beginning of the  sixth game,  when the gallery burst into loud applause, out of

which floated a  sweet feminine voice: "Good! Now maybe the poor  boy will be able to  play!" 

For the first time I realized just what the gallery thought of my  efforts to play tennis, and also of the handicap

of the famous  "bluebearskin" as they termed it. 

My favourite expression during my Davis Cup trip happened to be  "Peach" for any particularly good shot by

my opponent. The  gallery at  the Championship, quick to appreciate any mannerism of  a player, and  to, know

him by it, enjoyed the remark on many  occasions as the ball  went floating by me. In my match with

Kingscote in the final set, the  court was very slippery owing to  the heavy drizzle that had been  falling

throughout the match. At  32 in my favour, I essayed a journey  to the net, only to have  Kingscote pass me

'cross court to my  backhand. I turned and  started rapidly for the shot murmuring "Peach"  as I went.  Suddenly

my feet went out and I rolled over on the ground,  sliding some distance, mainly on my face. I arose, dripping,

just  in  time to hear, sotto voce, in the gallery at my side: "A little  bit  crushed, that Peach." The sense of

humour of the speaker was  delightful. The whole sideline howled with joy, and the joke was  on  me. 

I am always the goat for the gallery in these little jokes,  because it is seldom I can refrain from saying

something loud  enough  to be heard. 

I remember an incident that caused great joy to a large gallery  in  Philadelphia during a match between two

prominent local  players. One  of the men had been charging the net and volleying  consistently off  the frame of

his racquet, giving a wonderful  display of that  remarkable shot known the world over as "the  mahogany

volley." His  luck was phenomenal for all his mishit  volleys won him points.  Finally, at the end of a bitterly

contested deuce game in the last set  he again won the deciding  point with a volley off the wood, just as a

small insect flew in  his eye. 

He called to his opponent: "Just a moment, I have a fly in my  eye." 

The disgusted opponent looked up and muttered: "Fly? Huh! I'll  bet  it's a splinter!" 

There was a certain young player who was notoriously lax in his  eyesight on decisions. He could never see

one against himself. He  became noted in his own locality. He and another boy were playing  a  team of

brothers who were quite famous in the tennis world. One  of  these brothers had a very severe service that the

local  Captain Kidd  could not handle at all. So each time the visiting  player served close  to the line, the boy

would swing at it, miss  it, and call "Fault!"  There was no umpire available and there was  no question of the

older  team losing, so they let it go for some  time. Finally a service fully  3 feet in was casually called out  by

the youngster. This proved too  much for the server, who hailed  his brother at the net with the query:  "What

was wrong that  time?" 

"I don't know," came the reply; "unless he called a footfault on  you!" 

The assurance of some young players is remarkable. They know far  more about the game of other men than

the men themselves. I once  travelled to a tournament with a boy who casually seated himself  beside me in the


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train and, seeing my tennis bag, opened the  conversation on tennis and tennis players. He finally turned his

attention to various people I knew well, and suddenly burst out  with:  "Tilden is a chopstroke player. I know

him well." I let  him talk for  about ten minutes, learning things about my game  that I never knew  before.

Finally I asked his name, which he told  me. In reply he asked  mine. The last view I had of him for some  time

was a hasty retreat  through the door of the car for air. 

I played my first match against J. C. Parke at Wimbledon in 1920.  The time before that I had been on the

court with him was at  Germantown Cricket Club in 1911, when I acted as ballboy in the  Davis Cup between

him and W. A. Larned. The Junior members of the  club, sons of the members, used to consider it a great

honour to  act  as ballboy in these matches, and worked every means to be  picked. I  picked up much tennis in

those days, for I have worked  at the ballboy  position for Parke, Crawley, Dixon, Larned,  Wright, and Ward. 

CHAPTER IX. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SINGLES AND DOUBLES

Singles, the greatest strain in tennis, is the game for two  players. It is in this phase of the game that the

personal  equation  reaches its crest of importance. This is the game of  individual  effort, mental and physical. 

A hard 5set singles match is the greatest strain on the body and  nervous system of any form of sport.

Richard Harte and L. C.  Wister,  the former a famous Harvard University football and  baseball player,  the

latter a football star at Princeton, both of  whom are famous  tennis players, have told me that a close 5set

tennis match was far  more wearing on them than the biggest  football game they had ever  played. 

Singles is a game of daring, dash, speed of foot and stroke. It  is  a game of chance far more than doubles.

Since you have no  partner  dependent upon you, you can afford to risk error for the  possibility  of speedy

victory. Much of what I wrote under match  play is more for  singles than doubles, yet let me call your

attention to certain  peculiarities of singles from the standpoint  of the spectator. 

A gallery enjoys personalities far more than styles. Singles  brings two people into close and active relations

that show the  idiosyncrasies of each player far more acutely than doubles. The  spectator is in the position of a

man watching an insect under a  microscope. He can analyse the inner workings. 

The freedom of restraint felt on a single court is in marked  contrast to the need for team work in doubles. Go

out for your  shot  in singles whenever there is a reasonable chance of getting  it. Hit  harder at all times in

singles than in doubles, for you  have more  chance of scoring and can take more risk. 

Few great singles, players are famous in doubles. Notable  exceptions to the above statement come to mind at

once in the  persons  of the Dohertys, Norman E. Brookes, and F. B. Alexander.  Yet who could  accuse W. M.

Johnston, R. N. Williams  (notwithstanding his World's  Championship doubles title), Andre  Gobert, the late

Anthony F.  Wilding, M. E. M'Loughlin, or Gerald  Patterson of playing great  doubles? All these men are

wonderful  singles players, playing singles  on a double court alongside some  suffering partner. The daring that

makes for a great singles  player is an eternal appeal to a gallery.  None of the notable  doubles players, who

have little or no claim to  singles fame,  have enjoyed the heroworship accorded the famous  singles stars.  H.

RoperBarrett, Stanley Doust, Harold H. Hackett,  Samuel Hardy,  and Holcombe Ward, all doubles players of

the very  highest order,  were, and are, well liked and deservedly popular, but  are not  idolized as were

M'Loughlin or Wilding. 

Singles is a game of the imagination, doubles a science of exact  angles. 

Doubles is fourhanded tennis. Enough of this primary reader  definition. I only used that so as not to be

accused of trying to  write over the heads of the uninitiated. 


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It is just as vital to play to your partner in tennis as in  bridge. Every time you make a stroke you must do it

with a  definite  plan to avoid putting your partner in trouble. The  keynote of doubles  success is team work; not

individual  brilliancy. There is a certain  type of team work dependent wholly  upon individual brilliancy.

Where  both players are in the same  class, a team is as strong as its weakest  player at any given  time, for here

it is even team work with an equal  division of the  court that should be the method of play. In the case  of one

strong player and one weaker player, the team is as good as the  strong player can make it by protecting and

defending the weaker.  This pair should develop its team work on the individual  brilliancy  of the stronger

man. 

The first essential of doubles play is to PUT the ball in play. A  double fault is bad in singles, but it is

inexcusable in doubles.  The  return of service should be certain. After that it should be  low and  to the server

coming in. Do not strive for clean aces in  doubles until  you have the opening. Remember that to pass two

men  is a difficult  task. 

Always attack in doubles. The net is the only place in the court  to play the doubles game, and you should

always strive to attain  the  net position. There are two formations for the receiving  team: one is  the Australian

formation with the receiver's partner  standing in to  volley the server's return volley; the other is  the English

and  American style with both men back, thus giving  the net attack to the  server. This is safer, but less likely

to  produce a winning result  unless the team is a wonderful lobbing  combination. Lobbing is a sound  defence

in doubles, and is used  to open the court. 

I believe in always trying for the kill when you see a real  opening. "Poach" (go for a shot which is not really

on your side  of  the court) whenever you see a chance to score. Never poach  unless you  go for the kill. It is a

win or nothing shot since it  opens your whole  court. If you are missing badly do not poach, as  it is very

disconcerting to your partner. 

The question of covering a doubles court should not be a serious  one. With all men striving to attain the net

all the time every  shot  should be built up with that idea. Volley and smash whenever  possible,  and only

retreat when absolutely necessary. 

When the ball goes toward the sideline the net player on that  side goes in close and toward the line. His

partner falls  slightly  back and to the centre of the court, thus covering the  shot between  the men. If the next

return goes to the other side,  the two men  reverse positions. The theory of court covering is  two sides of a

triangle, with the angle in the centre and the two  sides running to  the sidelines and in the direction of the

net. 

Each man should cover overhead balls over his own head, and hit  them in the air whenever possible, since to

allow them to drop  gives  the net to the other team. The only time for the partner to  protect  the overhead is

when the net man "poaches," is  outguessed, and the  ball tossed over his head. Then the server  covers and

strives for a  kill at once. 

Always be ready to protect your partner, but do not take shots  over his head unless he calls for you to, or you

see a certain  kill.  Then say "Mine," step in and hit decisively. The matter of  overhead  balls, crossing under

them, and such incidentals of team  work are  matters of personal opinion, and should be arranged by  each

team  according to their joint views. I only offer general  rules that can be  modified to meet the wishes of the

individuals. 

Use the lob as a defence, and to give time to extricate yourself  and your partner from a bad position. The

value of service in  doubles  cannot be too strongly emphasized since it gives the net  to the  server. Service

should always be held. To lose service is  an  unpardonable sin in firstclass doubles. All shots in doubles

should  be low or very high. Do not hit shoulderhigh as it is too  easy to  kill. Volley down and hard if


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possible. Every shot you  make should be  made with a definite idea of opening the court. 

Hit down the centre to disrupt the team work of the opposing  team;  but hit to the sidelines for your aces. 

Pick one man, preferably the weaker of your opponents, and centre  your attack on him and keep it there.

Pound him unmercifully, and  in  time he should crack under the attack. It is very foolish to  alternate  attack,

since it simply puts both men on their game and  tires neither. 

If your partner starts badly play safely and surely until he  rounds to form. Never show annoyance with your

partner. Do not  scold  him. He is doing the best he can, and fighting with him  does no good.  Encourage him at

all times and don't worry. A team  that is fighting  among themselves has little time left to play  tennis, and

after all  tennis is the main object of doubles. 

Offer suggestions to your partner at any time during a match; but  do not insist on his following them, and do

not get peevish if he  doesn't. He simply does not agree with you, and he may be right.  Who  knows? 

Every doubles team should have a leader to direct its play; but  that leader must always be willing to drop

leadership for any  given  point when his partner has the superior position. It is  policy of  attack not type of

stroke that the leader should  determine. 

Pick a partner and stick to him. He should be a man you like and  want to play with, and he should want to

play with you. This will  do  away with much friction. His style should not be too nearly  your own,  since you

double the faults without greatly increasing  the virtues. 

I am a great believer in a brilliant man teaming up with a steady  player. Let your steady man keep the ball in

play, and allow your  brilliant man all the room he wants to "poach" and kill. Thus you  get  the best of both

men. 

Doubles is a game of finesse more than speed. The great doubles  players, the Dohertys, Norman E. Brookes,

the greatest in the  world  today, Roper Barrett, Beals Wright, and F. B. Alexander,  are all men  of subtle

finesse rather than terrific speed. 

It requires more than speed of shot to beat two men over a  barrier  3 to 3 1/2 feet high with a distance of some

32 feet. It  is angles,  pace, and accuracy that should be the aim in a great  doubles game.  Resource, versatility,

and subtlety, not speed, win  doubles matches. 

PART III: MODERN TENNIS AND ITS FUTURE

CHAPTER X. THE GROWTH OF THE MODERN GAME

Lawn tennis is the outgrowth of the old French game of the courts  of the early Louis. It spread to England,

where it gained a firm  hold  on public favour. The game divided; the original form being  closely  adhered to in

the game known in America as "Court  tennis," but which  is called "Tennis" in England. Lawn tennis  grew out

of it. 

The old style game was played over a net some 5 feet high, and  the  service was always from the same end,

the players changing  courts each  game. It was more on the style of the present game of  badminton or

battledore and shuttlecock. 


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Gradually the desire for active play had its effect, in a lowered  net and changed laws, and tennis, as we know

it, grew into being.  From its earliest period, which is deeply shrouded in mystery,  came  the terms of "love"

for "nothing" and "deuce" for "40all."  What they  meant originally, or how they gained their hold is

unknown, but the  terms are a tradition of the game and just as  much a part of the  scoring system as the

"game" or "set" call. 

In 1920 the Rules Committee of the American Tennis Association  advocated a change in scoring that

replaced love, 15, 30, 40 with  the  more comprehensive 1, 2, 3, 4. The real reason for the  proposed change

was the belief that the word "love" in tennis  made the uninitiated  consider the game effeminate and repelled

possible supporters. The  loyal adherents of the old customs of  the game proved too strong, and  defeated the

proposed change in  scoring by an overwhelming majority. 

Personally, I think there is some slight claim to consideration  for the removal of the word "love." It can do no

good, and there  are  many substitutes for it. It can easily be eliminated without  revolutionizing the whole

scoring system. It is far easier to  substitute the words "zero," "nothing," for "love" than cause  such an

upheaval as was proposed. In my opinion the best way to  obviate the  matter is to use the player's name in

conjunction  with the points won  by him, when his opponent has none. If the  first point is won by  Williams,

call the score "15, Williams"  and, with his opponent scoring  the next, the call would become  "15all." 

If tennis loses one adherent, it could otherwise gain, simply by  its retaining the word "love" in the score, I

heartily advocate  removing it. This removal was successfully accomplished in  Chicago in  1919, with no

confusion to players, umpires, or  public. 

However, returning from my little digression on the relative  value  of "love" and "nothing," let me continue

my short history  of the game.  The playing of tennis sprang into public favour so  quickly that in a

comparatively short space of time it was  universally played in England  and France. The game was brought to

America in the latter part of the  nineteenth century. Its growth  there in the past twentyfive years has  been

phenomenal. During  the last half century tennis gained a firm  foothold in all the  colonies of the British

Empire, and even found  favour in the  Orient, as is explained in another portion of this book. 

Tennis fills many needs of mankind. It provides an outlet for  physical energy, relaxation, mental stimulus,

and healthful  exercise.  The moral tone is aided by tennis because the first law  of tennis is  that every player

must be a good sportsman and  inherently a gentleman. 

Tennis was recognized by the Allied Governments as one of the  most  beneficial sports during the World War.

Not only were the  men in  service encouraged to play whenever possible, but the  Allied  Governments lent

official aid to the various service  tournaments held  in France following the signing of the  Armistice. The

importance of  tennis in the eyes of the American  Government may be gleaned from the  fact that great

numbers of  hard courts were erected at the various big  cantonments, and  organized play offered to the

soldiers. 

Many of the leading players who were in training in America at  the  time of the National Championship,

which was played solely to  raise  money for the Red Cross, were granted leave from their  various  stations to

take part in the competition. Among the most  notable were  Wallace F. Johnson, Conrad B. Doyle, Harold

Throckmorton, S. Howard  Voshell, and myself, all of whom were  granted leave of two weeks or a  month.

Captain R. N. Williams and  Ensigns William M. Johnston and  Maurice E. M'Loughlin, and many  other stars,

were overseas. Official  recognition at such a time  puts a stamp of approval on the game which  goes far to

justify  its worldwide popularity. 

The tennis world lost many of its best in that titanic struggle.  The passing of so many from its ranks left gaps

that will be hard  to  fill. 


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The gallant death of Anthony F. Wilding in Flanders cost the game  one of its greatest players, and finest men.

I had not the  pleasure  of knowing Wilding personally yet I, like all the tennis  world, felt a  sense of keen

personal loss at his heroic passing.  Wilding was a man  whose sterling qualities gave even more to the  game

than his play, and  tennis is better for his all too brief  career. 

America lost some of its finest manhood in the War, and tennis  paid its toll. No player was a more likeable

personality nor  popular  figure among the rising stars than John Plaffman, the  young Harvard  man who gave

his life in Flanders fields. I cannot  touch on the many  heroes who made everlasting fame in a bigger  game

than that which they  loved so well. Time is too short. It is  sufficient to know that the  tennis players of the

world dropped  their sport at the call of War,  and played as well with death as  ever they did on the tennis

court. 

The War is over, please God never to return, and the men are back  from their marvellous task. The game of

War is done, the games of  Peace are again being played. Tennis suffered the world over from  war's blight, but

everywhere the game sprang up in renewed life  at  the close of hostilities. The season of 1919 was one of

reconstruction  after the devastation. New figures were standing  in prominence where  old stars were

accustomed to be seen. The  question on the lips of all  the tennis players was whether the  stars of preWar

days would return  to their former greatness. 

The Championship of the World for 1919 at Wimbledon was anxiously  awaited. Who would stand forth as

the shining light of that  meeting?  Gerald Patterson, the "Australian Hurricane," as the  press called him,  came

through a notable field and successfully  challenged Norman  Brookes for the title. Gobert and Kingscote  fell

before him, and the  press hailed him as a player of  transcendent powers. 

The Australian team of Brookes, Patterson, R. V. Thomas, and  Randolph Lycett journeyed home to the

Antipodes by way of America  to  compete in the American Championship. Meanwhile R. N.  Williams, W. M.

Johnston, and Maurice E. M'Loughlin were  demobilized, and were again  on the courts. The American

Championships assumed an importance equal  to that of the  Wimbledon event. 

The Australian team of Brookes and Patterson successfully  challenged the American titleholders in doubles,

Vincent  Richards  and myself, after defeating the best teams in America,  including W. M.  Johnston and C. J.

Griffin, the former champions.  Speculation was rife  as to Patterson's ability to triumph in the  Singles

Championship, and  public interest ran high. 

The Singles Championship proved a notable triumph for W. M.  Johnston, who won a decisive, clearcut, and

deserved victory  from a  field never equalled in the history of tennis. Johnston  defeated  Patterson in a

marvellous 5set struggle, while Brookes  lost to me in  four sets. M'Loughlin went down to Williams in a

match that showed the  famous Comet but a faint shadow of his  former self. Williams was  defeated in

sequence sets by me. The  final round found Johnston in  miraculous form and complete master  of the match

from start to finish,  and he defeated me in three  sequence sets. 

Immediately following the championship, the AustralianAmerican  team match took place. In this Brookes

went down to defeat before  Johnston in four close sets, while I succeeded in scoring another  point by nosing

out Patterson by the same score. Thus 1919 gave  Johnston a clear claim to the title of the World's Premier

Tennis  Player. The whole season saw marked increase in tennis interest  throughout the entire world. 

I have gone into more detail concerning the season of 1919 than I  otherwise would, to attempt to show the

revival of the tennis  game in  the public interest, and why it is so. 

The evolution of the tennis game is a natural logical one. There  is a definite cycle of events that can be traced.

The picture is  clearest in America as the steps of advancements are more  definitely  defined. It is from


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America that I am going to analyse  the growth of  modern tennis. 

The old saying, "Three generations from shirt sleeves to shirt  sleeves," may well be parodied to "Three

decades from ground  strokes  to ground strokes." The game of tennis is one great  circle that never  quite

closes. Progress will not allow a  complete return to the old  style. Yet the style, without the  method of thirty

years ago, is  coming back in vogue. It is a  polished, decorated version of the old  type game. It is expanded

and developed. History tells us that the  civilization of the old  Greeks and Romans held many socalled

modern  luxuries, but not  the methods of acquiring them we have today. Just  so with  tennis; for the ground.

stroke game was the style of the past,  just as it will be the style of the future; but the modern method  of

making ground strokes is a very different thing from the one  used by  the oldtime stars. 

We are on the brink of the upheaval. The next few years will show  results in the tennis game that were not

thought of before the  War.  Tennis is becoming an organized sport, with skilled  management. Modern

methods, where efficiency is the watchword, is  the new idea in tennis  development. 

Tennis is on the verge of the greatest increase in its history.  Never before has tennis of all types been so

universally played,  nor  by such great multitudes. Its drawing power is phenomenal,  hundreds of  thousands of

people witnessing matches the world  over, and played  during the season of 1920. 

There are more players of fame now before the public than at any  previous time since tennis became

established. The standard of  play  of the masses and quality of game of the stars have risen  tremendously  in

the last decade. No less an authority than Norman  E. Brookes, whose  active playing days cover a period of

twenty  years, told me during the  American Championships, last year at  Forest Hills, that in his opinion  the

game in America had  advanced fully "15" in ten years. He stated  that he believed the  leading players of

today were the superior of  the Larneds,  Dohertys, and Pims of the past. 

The most remarkable advance has been along the lines of junior  play: the development of a large group of

boys ranging in age  from  thirteen to eighteen, who will in time replace the  Johnstons,  Williams, and

M'Loughlins of today. 

American tennis has passed through a series, of revolutionary  stages that have changed the complex of the

game. English tennis  has  merely followed its natural development, unaffected by  external  influences or

internal upheaval, so that the game today  is a refined  product of the game of twenty years ago. Refined but

not vitalized.  The World War alone placed its blight on the  English game, and changed  the even tenor of its

way. Naturally  the War had only a devastating  effect. No good sprang from it. It  is to the everlasting credit of

the  French and English that  during those horrible four years of privation,  suffering, and  death the sports of the

nations lived. 

The true type of English tennis, from which American tennis has  sprung, was the baseline driving game. It is

still the same.  Wellexecuted drives, hit leisurely and gracefully from the base  line, appealed to the

temperament of the English people. They  developed this style to a perfection wellnigh invincible to cope

with from the same position. The English gave the tennis world  its  traditions, its Dohertys, and its Smiths. 

Tennis development, just as tennis psychology, is largely a  matter  of geographical distribution. This is so

well recognized  now in  America that the country is divided in various geographic  districts by  the national

association, and sectional associations  carry on the  development of their locality under the supervision  of the

national  body. 

Naturally new countries, with different customs, would not  develop  along the same lines as England.

America, Australia, and  South Africa  took the English style, and began their tennis  career on the baseline

game. Each of these has since had a  distinct yet similar growtha  variance to the original style.  American


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tennis followed the English  baseline style through a  period that developed Dr. Dwight, R. D.  Sears, Henry

Slocum, and  other stars. Tennis, during this time, was  gaining a firm hold  among the boys and young men

who found the  deepdriving game  devoid of the excitement they desired. Americans  always enjoy

experiments, so the rising players tried coming to the  net at any  reasonable opening. Gradually this plan

became popular,  until  Dwight Davis and Holcombe Ward surprised the tennis world with  their new service,

now the American twist, and used it as an  opening  gun in a net attack. 

This new system gave us besides Davis and Ward, the Wrenn  brothers, George and Robert, Malcolm

Whitman, M. G. Chace, and  finally Beals C. Wright. The baseline game had its firm adherents  who  followed

it loyally, and it reached its crest in the person  of William  A. Larned. Previous to this time, speed, cyclonic

hitting and furious  smashing were unknown, although rumours of  some player named  M'Loughlin combining

these qualities were  floating East from the  Pacific Coast. Not much stock was taken in  this phenomenon until

1908,  when Maurice Evans M'Loughlin burst  upon the tennis world with a flash  of brilliancy that earned him

his popular nickname, "The California  Comet." 

M'Loughlin was the turningpoint in American tennis. He made a  lasting impression on the game that can

never be erased. His  personality gained him a following and fame, both in America and  England, that have

seldom been equalled in the sporting world. 

M'Loughlin was the disciple of speed. Cyclonic, dynamic energy,  embodied in a fieryheaded boy,

transformed tennis to a game of  brawn  as well as brains. America went crazy over "Red Mac," and  all the

rising young players sought to emulate his game. No man  has brought a  more striking personality, or more

generous  sportsmanship, into tennis  than M'Loughlin. The game owes him a  great personal debt; but this  very

personal charm that was his  made many players strive to copy his  style and methods, which  unfortunately

were not fundamentally of the  best. M'Loughlin was  a unique tennis player. His whole game was built  up on

service  and overhead. His ground strokes were very faulty. By  his  personal popularity M'Loughlin dwarfed

the importance of ground  strokes, and unduly emphasized the importance of service.  M'Loughlin  gave us

speed, dash, and verve in our tennis. It  remained for R. N.  Williams and W. M. Johnston to restore the

balance of the modern game  by solving the riddle of the  Californian's service. Brookes and  Wilding led the

way by first  meeting the ball as it came off the  ground. Yet neither of these  two wizards of the court

successfully  handled M'Loughlin's  service as did Williams and Johnston. 

M'Loughlin swept Brookes and Wilding into the discard on those  memorable days in 1914, when the

dynamic game of the fieryheaded  Californian rose to heights it had never attained previously, and  he

defeated both men in the Davis Cup. Less than one month later  Williams, playing as only Williams can,

annihilated that mighty  delivery and crushed M'Loughlin in the final of the National  Championship. It was

the beginning of the end for M'Loughlin, for  once his attack was repulsed he had no sound defence to fall

back  on. 

Williams and then Johnston triumphed by the wonderful ground  strokes that held back M'Loughlin's attack. 

Today we are still in the period of service and net attack, with  the cycle closing toward the ground stroke

game. Yet the circle  will  never close, for the net game is the final word in attack,  and only  attack will

succeed. The evolution means that the ground  stroke is  again established as the only modern defence against

the net player. 

Modern tennis should be an attacking service, not necessarily  epochmaking, as was M'Loughlin's, but

powerfully offensive, with  the  main portion of the play from the baseline in sparring for  openings to  advance

to the net. Once the opening is made the  advance should follow  quickly, and the point ended by a decisive

kill. That is the modern  American game. It is the game of  Australia as typified by Patterson  schooled under

the Brookes  tutelage. It is the game of France, played  by Gobert, Laurentz,  and Brugnon. It has spread to


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South Africa, and  is used by  Winslow, Norton, and Raymond. Japan sees its possibilities,  and  Kumagae and

Shimidzu are even now learning the net attack to  combine with the baseline game. England alone remains

obstinate  in  her loyalty to her old standby, and even there signs of the  joint  attack are found in the game of

Kingscote. 

Tennis has spread so rapidly that the old idea of class and class  game has passed away with so many other

ancient, yet snobbish,  traditions. Tennis is universally played. The need of proper  development of the game

became so great in America that the  American  Lawn Tennis Association organized, in 1917, a system of

developing the  boys under eighteen years of age all over the  United States. 

The fundamental idea in the system, which had its origin in the  able brain of Julian S. Myrick, President of

the United States  Lawn  Tennis Association, was to arouse and sustain interest in  the various  sections by

dealing with local conditions. This was  successfully done  through a system of local open tournaments,  that

qualified boys to a  sectional championship. These sectional  championships in turn  qualified the winners for

the National  junior Championship, which is  held annually in conjunction with  the men's event at Forest Hills. 

The success of the system has been stupendous. The growth of  tennis in certain localities has been

phenomenal. In Philadelphia  alone over 500 boys compete in sanctioned play annually, while  the  city ranking

for 1919 contained the names of 88 boys under  eighteen,  and 30 under fifteen, all of whom had competed in

at  least three  sanctioned events. The school leagues of the city  hold a schedule of  726 individual matches a

year. The success of  the Philadelphia junior  system is due to the many large clubs who  give the use of their

courts  and the balls for an open  tournament. Among these clubs are Germantown  Cricket Club, Cynwyd

Club, Philadelphia Cricket, Overbrook Golf Club,  Belfield Country  Club, Stenton A. C., Green Point Tennis

Clubs and at  times Merion  Cricket Club. The movement has been fostered and built up  by the  efforts of a

small group of men, the most important of whom is  Paul W. Gibbons, President of the Philadelphia Tennis

Association,  together with Wm. H. Connell of Germantown, the late  Hosmer W. Hanna  of Stenton, whose

untiring efforts aided greatly  in obtaining a real  start, Dr. Chuton A. Strong, President of the  Interscholastic

League,  Albert L. Hoskins, for years  VicePresident of the U.S.L.T.A., and  others. This plan brought  great

results. It developed such players as  Rodney M. Beck, H. F.  Domkin, G. B. Pfingst, Carl Fischer, the most

promising boy in  the city, who has graduated from the junior age  limit, and  Charles Watson (third), who, in

1920, is the Philadelphia  junior  Champion, and one of the most remarkable players for a boy of  sixteen I have

ever seen. 

New York City was fortunate in having F. B. Alexander, the famous  Internationalist, to handle the junior

tennis there. He, together  with Julian S. Myrick, and several other men, built up a series  of  tournaments

around New York that produced some remarkable  young  players. It is largely due to the junior system that

Vincent Richards  has become the marvellous player that he is, at  such an early age.  Second only to Richards,

and but a shade  behind, are Harold Taylor and  Cecil Donaldson, who have just  passed out of the junior age

limit.  Charles Wood, the Indoor Boys  Champion, is a remarkable youngster. 

In New England, particularly in Providence, through the efforts  of  J. D. E. Jones, junior tennis is rapidly

assuming an important  place,  and many young stars who will be heard of in the future  are coming to  the fore.

By a strange coincidence the list is  headed by the two sons  of Jones. They seem to have inherited  their

father's ability. Arnold  W. Jones, the National Boy  Champion, is a player of marked ability,  with a fine

allaround  game. Following closely on his heels come J. D.  E. Jones, Jr.,  and Wm. W. Ingraham. From the

South one finds John E.  Howard.  Around Chicago a group of men, led by Samuel Hardy, captain of  the 1920

Davis Cup team, and assisted by R. T. Van Arsdale, built  up  a magnificent system of tournaments and

coaching. Hardy left  Chicago  and came to New York in 1919; but the work which he so  ably organized  will

continue under the supervision of the Western  Association. The  leading juniors developed in Chicago were

Lucian  Williams and the  Weber brothers, James and Jerry. 


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From the Pacific Coast, the pioneer in junior development,  wonderful boys are continually coming East. A

boy's tennis game  matures early in California. M'Loughlin was about eighteen when  he  first came East;

Johnston less than twentyone when he won the  national title the first time; Marvin Griffin and Morgan

Fottrell  are  in 1920 the leading youngsters in California. 

The success of the Californians is due largely to the efforts of  Dr. Sumner Hardy, brother of Samuel Hardy,

and one of the most  remarkable figures in the tennis world. Dr. Hardy practically  carries  the California

Association single handed. He is a big  factor in  American tennis success. 

From up in Washington State, a fine young player, Marshall Allen,  has come to the fore. 

Charles S. Garland, the Davis Cup star, is a former junior  Champion of America, and a product of the junior

system in  Pittsburg,  which is so ably handled by his father, Charles  Garland. Other young  stars developing

include George Moreland and  Leonard Reed. 

Most of the foregoing is irrelevant, I suppose, but I have gone  into detail because I want to prove that

America has gone into  the  matter of junior developments, carefully, systematically, and  has  produced results. 

It has been proved conclusively that it is in the schools that  the  most favourable progress could be made.

Once tennis is placed  on the  basis of importance it deserves, the boys will take it up.  At present  there is a

tendency to discount tennis and golf in  school. This is a  big mistake, as these two games are the only  ones

that a man can play  regularly after he leaves college and  enters, into business. The  school can keep a sport

alive. It is  schools that kept cricket alive  in England, and lack of  scholastic support that killed it in America.

The future of  tennis in England, France, Australia, Japan, etc., rests  in the  hands of the boys. If the game is to

grow, tennis must be  encouraged among the youngsters and played in the schools. 

England is faced with a serious problem. Eton and Harrow, the two  big schools, are firm set against tennis.

The other institutions  naturally follow in the lead of these famous schools. The younger  generation is

growing up with little or no knowledge of tennis.  One  thing that forcibly bore in on my mind, during my trip

in  1920, was  the complete absence of boys of all ages at the various  tournaments.  In America youngsters

from ten years of age up swarm  all over the  grounds at big tennis events. I saw very few of  either at Queen's

Club, Wimbledon, Eastbourne, or Edgbaston where  I played. The boys do  not understand tennis in England,

and  naturally do not care to play  it. 

The English Lawn Tennis Association is very desirous of building  up tennis in the schools; but so far has not

yet succeeded in  breaking down the old prejudice. It is really a question of life  or  death with English tennis at

this time. Major A. R. F.  Kingscote, the  youngest of the leading players in England, is  older than any man in

the American First ten, with the single  exception of Walter T. Hayes.  J. C. Parke has stated definitely  that

1920 marked his retirement from  the game. He is just under  forty. Young players must be found to  replace

the waning stars.  The danger is not immediate, for all the  players who proved so  good in 1920 seemed certain

of several more  years of first class  play; but what of the next ten years? 

The future development of tennis is dependent largely upon the  type of court that will become the standard.

All big fixtures  today  are played on grass wherever possible. There is little  question but  that the grass game

is the best. In the first place,  it is the  oldestablished custom, and should be maintained if  possible.  Secondly,

the game is more skilful and more interesting  on turf.  Thirdly, grass is far easier on the eyes and feet of the

players than  any other surface. 

There are drawbacks to grass courts. Grass cannot grow in all  climates. The grass season opens late and

closes early. The  expense  of upkeep is very great, and skilled groundsmen are  required at all  clubs that have

grass courts. 


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The hard court of clay or dirt, cinder, entoutcas, or asphalt  allows more continuous play and uniform

conditions in more kinds  of  weather. The bound is truer and higher, but the light and  surface are  harder on the

player. The balls wear light very  rapidly, while  racquets wear through quite soon. 

The advantages are a much longer season on hard courts, with less  chance of weather interrupting important

meetings. The courts  require  far less care in upkeep than grass. 

What has been the actual tendency in the last decade? In America  the hard courts erected have been

approximately nine to one  grass.  America is rapidly become a hardcourt country. France is  entirely on  a

hardcourt basis; there are no grass courts at all.  Play in South  Africa is entirely on hard courts. Australia and

the British Isles  have successfully repelled the hardcourt  invasion thus far, although  during the past two

years the number  of hard courts put up in England  has exceeded grass. 

The entoutcas court of peculiar red surface is the most popular  composition in England and the Continent. 

There seems little doubt but that the hard court is the coming  surface in the next decade. Grass will continue

to be used for  the  most important events, but the great majority of the tennis  played,  exclusive of the

championships, will be on hard courts. 

The result on the game will be one of increasing the value of the  ground stroke and partially cutting down the

net attack, since  the  surface of a hard court is slippery and tends to make it hard  to reach  the net to volley.

Thus the natural attack will become a  drive and not  a volley. Hardcourt play speeds up the ground  strokes,

and makes the  game more orthodox. 

The installation of hard courts universally should spread tennis  rapidly, since it will afford more chance to

play over a longer  period. The growth of public courts in the parks and the  municipal  play grounds in

America has been a big factor in the  spread of the  game's popularity. Formerly a man or boy had to  belong to

a club in  order to have an opportunity to play tennis.  Now all he needs is a  racquet and balls, and he may play

on a  public court in his own city.  This movement will spread, not only  in America but throughout the  world.

England and France have some  public courts; but their systems  are not quite as well organized  as the

American. 

The branch of tennis which England and France foster, and in  which  America is woefully lax, is the indoor

game. Unfortunately  the  majority of the courts abroad have wood surfaces, true but  lightning  fast. The perfect

indoor court should retain its true  bound, but slow  up the skid of the ball. The most successful  surface I have

ever  played upon is battleship linoleumthe heavy  covering used on  menofwar. This gives a true, slightly

retarded  bound, not unlike a  very fast grass court. 

Indoor play in America is sadly crippled by reason of no adequate  facilities for play. The socalled National

Indoor Championship  is  held at the Seventh Regiment Armoury in New York City on a  wood floor,  with

such frightful lighting that it is impossible to  play real  tennis. The two covered courts at Longwood Club,

Boston, are very  fine, well lighted, with plenty of space. There  is a magnificent court  at Providence, and

another at Buffalo.  Utica boasts of another, while  there are several fine courts,  privately owned, on Long

Island. New  York City uses the big  armouries for indoor play; but the surface and  light in these are  not fit for

real tennis. The Brooklyn Heights  Casino has the only  adequate court in the Metropolitan district. 

Philadelphia and Chicago, cities of enormous populations and  great  tennis interest, have no courts or facilities

for indoor  play. This  condition must be rectified in America if we wish to  keep our  supremacy in the tennis

world. The French players are  remarkable on  wood. Gobert is said to be the superior of any  player in the

world,  when playing under good conditions indoors.  The game of tennis is  worthy of having all types of play

within  reach of its devotees. Why  should a player drop his sport in  October because the weather is cold?


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Indoor play during the  winter means an improvement from season to  season. Lack of it is  practically

stagnation or retrogression. 

The future will see a growth of hardcourt play the world over.  Grass must fight to hold its position. Indoor

play will come more  and  more into vogue. 

CHAPTER XI. THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF THE GAME

What will be the outcome of the worldwide boom in tennis? Will  the game change materially in the coming

years? Time, alone, can  answer; but with that rashness that seizes one when the  opportunity  to prophesy

arrives and no one is at hand to cry  "Hold, hold," I dare  to submit my views on the coming years in

international tennis. 

I do not look to see a material change in the playing rules. A  revival of the footfault fiend, who desires to

handicap the  server,  is international in character and, like the poor, "always  with us."  The International

Federation has practically adopted a  footfault rule  for 1921 that prohibits the server lifting one  foot unless

replaced  behind the baseline. It is believed this  will do away with the  terrific services. The only effect I can

see from it is to move the  server back a few inches, or possibly  a foot, while he delivers the  same service and

follows in with a  little more speed of foot. It will  not change the game at all.  Sir Oliver Lodge, the eminent

scientist,  has joined the advocates  of but one service per point. This seems so  radical and in all so  useless,

since it entirely kills service as  other than a mere  formality, and puts it back where it was twentyfive  years

ago,  that I doubt if even the weight of Sir Oliver Lodge's  eminent  opinion can put it over. To allow one

service is to hand the  game  more fully into the receiver's hands than it now rests in the  server's. 

The playing rules are adequate in every way, and the perfect  accord with which representatives of the various

countries meet  and  play, happily, successfully, and what is more important,  annually, is  sufficient

endorsement of the fundamental  principles. The few slight  variations of the different countries  are easily

learned and work no  hardships on visiting players. Why  change a known successful quantity  for an unknown?

It seldom  pays. 

The style of play is now approaching a type which I believe will  prove to have a long life. Today we are

beginning to combine the  various styles in one man. The champion of the future will  necessarily need more

equipment than the champion of today. The  present shows us the forehand driving of Johnston, the service

of  Murray, the volleying of Richards, the chop of Wallace F.  Johnson,  the smash of Patterson, the half volley

of Williams, and  the back hand  of Pell. The future will find the greatest players  combining much of  these

games. It can be done if the player will  study. I believe that  every leading player in the world in 1950  will

have a drive and a  chop, fore and backhand from the  baseline. He will use at least two  styles of service,

since one  will not suffice against the stroke of  that period. He will be a  volleyer who can safely advance to

the net,  yet his attack will  be based on a ground game. He must smash well. In  short, I  believe that the key to

future tennis success lies in variety  of  stroke. The day of the onestroke player is passing. Each year  sees the

versatile game striding forward by leaps and bounds. 

The future champion of the world must be a man of keen intellect,  since psychology is assuming the

importance that is its due. He  must  train earnestly, carefully, and consistently. The day of  playing  successful

tennis and staying up till daybreak is over.  The game is  too fast and too severe for that. As competition

increases the price  of success goes up; but its worth increases  in a greater ratio, for  the man who triumphs in

the World's  Championship in 1950 will survive  a field of stars beyond our  wildest dreams in 1920. 

What of the various countries? America should retain her place at  or near the top, for the boys we are now

developing should not  only  make great players themselves, but should carry on the work  of  training the


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coming generations. 

England has but to interest her youth in the game to hold her  place with the leaders. I believe it will be done. I

look to see  great advances made in tennis among the boys in England in the  next  few years. I believe the

game will change to conform more to  the  modern net attack. England will never be the advanced

tennisplaying  country that her colonies are, for her whole  atmosphere is one of  conservatism in sport. Still

her game will  change. Already a slight  modification is at work. The next decade  will see a big change coming

over the style of English tennis.  The wonderful sporting abilities of  the Englishman, his ability  to produce his

best when seemingly down  and out mean that, no  matter how low the ebb to which tennis might  fall, the

inherent  abilities of the English athlete would always bring  it up. I  sound pessimistic about the immediate

future. I am not,  provided  English boyhood is interested in the game. 

Japan is the country of the future. There is no more remarkable  race of students on the globe than the

Japanese. They like  tennis,  and are coming with increasing numbers to our  tournaments. They prove

themselves sterling sportsmen and  remarkable players. I look to see  Japan a power in tennis in the  next

twentyfive years. 

France, with her brilliant temperamental unstable people, will  always provide interesting players and

charming opponents. I do  not  look to see France materially change her present  positionwhich is  one of

extreme honour, of great friendliness,  and keen competition.  Her game will not greatly rise, nor will  she lose

in any way the  prestige that is hers. 

It will be many long years before the players of those enemy  countries, who plunged the world into the

horrible baptism of  blood  from which we have only just emerged, will ever be met by  the players  of the

Allies. Personally, I trust I may not see  their reentry into  the game. Not from the question of the  individuals,

but from the  feeling which will not down. There is  no need to deal at this time  with the future of Germany

and  Austria. 

Australasia and South Africa, the great colonies of the British  Empire, should be on the edge of a great tennis

wave. I look to  see  great players rise in Australasia to refill the gaps left by  the  passing of Wilding and the

retirement of Brookes. It takes  great  players to fill such gaps; but great players are bred from  the  traditions of

the former masters. 

The early season of 1921 saw a significant and to my way of  looking at it, wise move on the part of New

Zealand when the New  Zealand tennis association withdrew from the Australasian tennis  association and

decided to compete for the Davis Cup in future  years  as a separate nation. 

No one can deny the great help Australia has been to New Zealand  in tennis development, but the time has

come now for New Zealand  to  stand on her own. Since the regrettable death of Anthony F.  Wilding,  in whose

memory New Zealand has a tennis asset and  standard that will  always hold a place in world sport, the New

Zealand tennis players  have been unable to produce a player of  skill enough to make the Davis  Cup team of

Australasia. It has  fallen to Australia with Norman E.  Brookes, to whose unfailing  support and interest

Australasian tennis  owes its progress since  the war, G. L. Patterson, W. H. Anderson, R.  L. Heath, and Pat

O'Hara Wood to uphold the traditions of the game. 

The Davis Cup challenge round of 1921 was staged in New Zealand  in  accord with the agreement between

Australia and New Zealand  and also  in memory of A. F. Wilding. The tremendous interest in  the play

throughout the entire country showed the time was ripe  for a drastic  step forward if the step was ever to be

taken. So  after careful  consideration the split of Australia and New  Zealand has taken place.  What will this

mean to New Zealand?  First it means that it will be  years before another Davis Cup  match will be staged on

her shores, for  it takes time and plenty  of it to produce a winning team, but at the  time, the fact is  borne in on


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the tennis playing faction in New  Zealand that as  soon as they desire to challenge, their players will  gain the

opportunity of International competition. 

Experience matures players faster than anything else and I am  sure  that the move that will place a team of

New Zealand players  in the  field in the Davis Cup will be the first and biggest step  forward to  real world

power in tennis. New Zealand produced one  Wilding, why  should not another appear? 

I was tremendously impressed by the interest existing among the  New Zealand boys in tennis. I met a great

number during my few  weeks  in Auckland and seldom have seen such a magnificent  physical type  coupled

with mental keenness. These boys, given the  opportunity to  play under adequate supervision and coaching,

should produce tennis  players of the highest class. 

The New Zealand association has made a drastic move. I hope they  have the wisdom to see far enough ahead

to provide plenty of play  for  their young players and if possible to obtain adequate  coaches in the  clubs and

schools. 

Frankly I see no players of Davis Cup calibre now in New Zealand.  I did see many boys whom I felt if given

the chance would become  Davis Cup material. 

The break with New Zealand will have no effect on Australia,  except to relieve a slight friction that has

existed. Australia  has  plenty of material coming to insure a succession of fine  teams for the  Davis Cup in the

future. 

Both Australia and New Zealand handle their tennis in the country  in a most efficient manner and the game

seems to me to be  progressing  in a natural and healthy manner. The next ten years  will decide the  fate of New

Zealand tennis. If they organise a  systematic development  of their boys I feel convinced they will  gain a place

of equality with  Australia. If they do not seize  their opening now, tennis will not  revive until some genius of

the game such as Norman E. Brookes arises  in their midst from  only the Lord knows where. 

The future should see America and Australia fighting for  supremacy  in the tennis world, with England and

France close on  their heels, to  jump in the lead at the first faltering. 

It is only a matter of time before the last differences between  the International Federation and the America

Association are  patched  up. The fundamental desires of each, to spread the growth  of tennis,  are the same.

Sooner or later the bar will fall, and a  truly  International Federation, worldwide in scope, will follow. 

I look to see the Davis Cup matches gain in importance and public  interest as each year goes by. The growth

of the public interest  in  the game is seen at every hand. Wimbledon must seek new  quarters. The  new grounds

of the All England Club will provide  accommodation for  20,000 to witness the championships. This

enormous stadium is the  result of public pressure, owing to the  crowds that could not be  accommodated at the

old grounds. 

Westside Club, Forest Hills, where the American Championship was  held, is planning accommodation for

25,000, provided that they  are  awarded the championship for a long term of years. Davis Cup  matches  are

now drawing from 10,000 to 15,000 where the  accommodation is  available. What will the future hold? 

I believe that 1950 will find the game of tennis on a plane  undreamed of today. Tennis is still in its infancy.

May I have  the  pleasure to help in rocking the cradle. 

My task is completed. I have delved into the past, analysed the  present, and prophesied the future, with a

complete disregard of  conventions and traditions. 


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The old order changeth, and I trust that my book may aid slightly  in turning the tennis thought in the direction

of organized  developments. The day of self is past. The day of cooperation is  dawning. It is seen in the

junior tennis, the municipal tennis,  and  the spirit of international brotherhood in the game. 

Assistance is necessary to success in any venture. My book has  been made possible only by the aid afforded

me by several of my  companions on the Davis Cup team trip. The task of arranging the  material in coherent

order and proper style is one of the most  important points. I owe a debt of gratitude to Mrs. Samuel Hardy,

wife of our captain, for her neverfailing interest and keen  judgment  in the matter of style. 

Mr. Hardy, with his great knowledge of the game of tennis, as  player, official, and organizer, freely gave of

his store of  experience, and to him I owe much that is interesting in the  tactics  of the game. 

R. N. Williams, my teammate, was always a willing critic and  generous listener, and his playing abilities

and decided ideas on  the  game gave much material that found its way into these pages.  I wish to  express my

gratitude for his able assistance. 

Charles S. Garland, my doubles partner and close friend, gave  neverwavering faith and a willing ear to my

ravings over  strokes,  tactics, and theories, while his orthodox views on  tennis acted as a  stop on my rather

Bolshevik ideas. 

To all these people I express my thanks for their part in any  success I may attain with this book. I have a firm

belief in the  future of tennis. I recommend it to all. It gives firm friends, a  healthy body, a keen mind, and a

clean sport. It calls forth the  best  that is in you, and repays you in its own coin. 

THE 1921 SEASON 

The season of 1921 was the most remarkable year in tennis history  throughout the whole world. More tennis

was played and more  people  viewed it than ever before. 

The climax of famous Davis Cup competition was reached when  England, France, Japan, Australia, the

Philippines, Denmark,  Belgium,  Argentine, Spain, India, Canada and CzechoSlovakia  challenged for the

right to play America, the holding nation.  This wonderful  representation naturally produced not only many

new stars, but also  thousands of new enthusiasts in the various  countries where the  matches were played. 

The early rounds saw several brilliant matches and naturally some  defaults. Argentine and the Philippines

could not put a team in  the  field at the last moment. Belgium, after defeating  CzechoSlovakia,  was unable to

finance her team to America to  meet the winner of  England and Australasia. 

England scored a fine victory over Spain when Randolph Lycett, F.  Gordon Lowe and Max E. Woosnam

defeated Manuel Alonzo and Count  de  Gomar in a close meeting. Notwithstanding his defeat by  Lycett,

Manuel  Alonzo proved himself one of the great players of  the world and one of  the most attractive

personalities in tennis. 

India sprang a sensation by defeating France in their match in  Paris. Sleen, Jacob and Deane showed great

promise for the  future.  France was crippled owing to the loss of A. H. Gobert and  William  Laurentz, the

former through a seriously sprained ankle  sustained in  the World's Championship at Wimbledon, and the

latter through illness.  Samazieuhl, the new French champion, and  Brugnon could not cope with  the steadiness

of the Indian stars  and the team from the Orient won 3  matches to 2. Meanwhile the  Australian team of J. O.

Anderson, J. B.  Hawkes, C. V. Todd and  Norman Peach had arrived in America and  journeyed to Canada,

where they swamped their Colonial cousins easily.  Norman E.  Brookes, Gerald L. Patterson and Pat O'Hara

Wood were unable  to  accompany the team, so the greatest contender for the title was  weakened appreciably. 


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The Australians decisively defeated the Danish team of Tegner and  Van Ingersley at Cleveland, winning with

ease. They proceeded to  Pittsburgh to await the arrival of the English players. 

England sent her invading team, unfortunately without the  services  of Col. A. R. F. Kingscote and Randolph

Lycett, who were  unable to go  owing to business affairs. J. C. Parke, her famous  international star,  was also

out of the game, having retired from  active competition last  year. The English team was made up of  Gordon

Lowe, Max Woosnam, J. C.  Gilbert and O. E. H. Turnbull.  They were accompanied by that  delightful author

and critic A.  Wallis Meyers. 

The English met the Australians at Pittsburgh in July. The latter  won three matches to two with J. O.

Anderson, the outstanding  figure  of a well played meeting. The tall Australian defeated  both Lowe and

Woosnam in the singles and aided in the doubles  victory, thus scoring  all the points for his team. 

Meanwhile the Indian team had arrived in America and proceeded to  Chicago, where they met the Japanese

team of Kumagae and  Shimidzu.  The battle of the Orient resulted in a victory for the  Nipponese. 

The final round found Australia playing Japan in the famous old  tennis center of Newport, R. I., where the

National Singles so  long  held sway. It was a bitter struggle, with the Australians  within two  little points of

victory in two matches they  afterwards lost. Shimidzu  and Kumagae took all the singles, but  Kumagae was

two sets down to  Hawkes and one to two down to  Anderson. Thus Japan in its first year  in Davis Cup

competition  earned the right to challenge America for the  treasured trophy. 

It was a marvellous meeting of these two teams. Over 40,000  people  watched the players in three days.

Although America won  all five  matches, Shimidzu came within two points of defeating me  in straight  sets

and carried Johnston to a bitter four set  struggle. 

The Cup is safe for another year but the new blood infused into  the competition by such men as Shimidzu,

Alonzo, Woosnam,  Anderson  and Hawkes shows clearly that America must keep working  or we will  fall

from our present position. It is a healthy thing  for the game  that this is so. I hope we will see many more new

players of equal  promise next year. 

The United States Lawn Tennis Association, following its policy  of  cooperation with the Internation

Federation, decided to send  a team  to France and England for the championships. The personnel  of the team

was Mrs. Franklin 1. Mallory, Miss Edith Sigourney,  Arnold W. Jones  (boy champion of America, 1919),

and myself. J.  D. E. Jones, father of  Arnold, himself a tennis player of renown,  accompanied the team, as  did

Mr. Mallory. 

The invading tennis players sailed May 12th on the Mauretania to  Cherbourg and from there journeyed to

Paris, where they engaged  in  the Hard Court Championship of the world. 

The first week of the stay was devoted to practice on the courts  at the Stad Francais, St. Cloud, where the

championship was held.  The  team were the guests of the Racing Club at a most delightful  luncheon  and

shortly afterward dined as the guests of the Tennis  Club of Paris. 

The finals of the championship of France were held during our  stay  and, greatly to our surprise, A. H. Gobert,

the defending  title  holder, fell a victim to his old enemy, heat, and went down  to defeat  before Samazieuhl.

The Hard Court championships of the  world produced  a series of the most sensational upsets in the  history of

the game, a  series, I might add, that did much to  allow me to win the event.  Gobert lost to Nicholas Mishu in

the  first round. Alonzo, after  defeating Samazieuhl, went down to  defeat at hands of Laurentz, who in  turn

collapsed to Tegner.  Fate pursued the winners, for Tegner was  eliminated by Washer,  who came through to

the final against me. Either  Alonzo or  Laurentz should have been finalists if the unexpected had  not  occurred,


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and either would have been a hard proposition for me  particularly in my condition. I had been taken ill on my

arrival  in  Paris and was still far from well. However, Fortune smiled on  me and I  succeeded in defeating

Washer 63, 63, 63. 

Meanwhile the long awaited meeting between Mlle. Lenglen and Mrs.  Mallory was at hand. Mrs. Mallory

had come through one side of  the  tournament after a bitter battle with Mme. Billoutt (Mlle.  Brocadies)  in the

semi final. 

Mlle. Lenglen had proceeded in her usual leisurely fashion to the  finals with the loss of but two games. 

What a meeting these two great players, Mrs. Mallory and Mlle.  Lenglen, had! Every seat in the stands sold

and every inch of  standing room crowded! It was a marvellous match, both women  playing  great tennis. Mlle.

Lenglen had consistently better depth  and more  patience. She out manoeuvred the American champion and

won 62, 63.  The match was far closer than this onesided score  sounds. Every rally  was long drawn out

and bitterly contested,  but the French girl had a  slight superiority that brought her a  well deserved victory. 

A. H. Gobert and W. Laurentz retained their doubles title after  one of the most terrific struggles of their

careers in the  semifinal  round against Arnold Jones and me. The boy and I had  previously put  out

Samazieuhl and his partner in three sets and  just nosed out the  Spanish Davis Cup team, Manuel Alonzo and

Count de Gomar. 

The semi final between Gobert and Laurentz and the Americans  brought out a capacity audience that literally

jumped to its feet  and  cheered during the sparkling rallies of the five bitterly  contesting  sets. Just as Gobert

drove his terrific service ace  past me for the  match, Laurentz suddenly collapsed and fainted  dead away on

the court.  It was a dramatic end to a sensational  match. 

The scene then shifted to England, where the American team  journeyed across the Channel to prepare for the

Grass Court  championship of the world at Wimbledon. My preparation consisted  of a  hasty journey to a

hospital, where a minor operation put me  to bed  until the day Wimbledon started. 

The remainder of the team journeyed first to Beckenham and then  to  Roehampton for their first grass court

play of the season.  Mrs.  Mallory met defeat at the hands of Mrs. Beamish at Beckenham  while the  other

members fell by the wayside at sundry points.  Mrs. Mallory won  Roehampton, decisively defeating Miss

Phillis  Howkins in the final.  Francis T. Hunter, another American who  joined the team in England,  although

he was abroad on business,  scored a victory in the men's  event at Roehampton. 

The world's championship at Wimbledon was another series of  sensational matches and startling upsets. The

draw as usual was  topheavy, all the strength in the upper half with Frank Hunter  and B.  I. C. Norton in the

lower. Every day saw its feature  matches produce  the unexpected. Shimidzu and Lycett battled for  nearly

four hours in a  struggle that combined all the virtues and  vices of tennis and  pugilism. Col. A. R. F.

Kingscote, after  three sensational victories  over Fisher, Dixon and Lowe,  collapsed against Alonzo and was

decisively defeated. Shimidzu  looked a certain winner against Alonzo  when he led at 2 sets to 1  and 41, but

the Spaniard rose to great  heights and by  sensational play pulled out the match in five sets. 

Norton and Hunter, after several close calls, met in the semi  final. Norton took two sets and led 53 in the

third only to have  Hunter follow in Alonzo's footsteps and pull out the set and win  the  next. Here Norton

again took command and ran out the match. 

The NortonAlonzo match in the final round was a sensational  reversal. The Spaniard seemed assured of

victory when he took two  sets and led at 53 and 30all, but the lastminute jinx that  pursued  the tournament

fell upon him, for Norton came to life  and, playing  sensational tennis, pulled out the match and earned  the


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right to me in  the challenge round. 

Then the jinx arose again and this time Babe Norton was the  victim. Such a match as that challenge round

produced! I went on  the  court feeling far from well and very much run down. Babe was  on the  crest but very

nervous. He ran away with the first two  sets with great  ease. The third set I improved. Babe, after  dropping

three games,  decided to let it go. The fourth set found  the crowd excited and  rather noisy. Norton became

annoyed because  he felt I was bothered,  and he blew up. He simply threw away the  fourth set from sheer

nerves. 

The fifth set was terrible. Norton had come to earth and was  playing well while I for the first time in the

match had some  control  of the ball. Norton finally led at 45 and 3040 on my  service, with  the

championship one point away. 

We had a long rally. Desperately I hit down the line. I was so  certain my shot was going out I started for the

net to shake  hands.  The ball fell on the line and Babe in the excitement of  the moment put  his return out by

inches. It was a life and  fortunately for me I  seized my chance and succeeded in pulling  out the match and

retaining  the championship. Norton deserved to  win, for nothing but luck saved  me as I walked to the net,

thinking my shot was out. Norton is the  youngest man to have won  the All Comers Singles. He is just 21. 

The championships had two sad moments. One was the absence of J.  C. Parke, due to retirement from

singles. The other was the  retirement of A. W. Gore, the famous veteran, after 30 years a  participant in the

championships. 

The women's events found an even more unfortunate draw than the  men. All the strength was in one eight.

Miss Ryan defeated Miss  K.  McKane in the first round and Mrs. Beamish her old rival in  the  second. She met

Mrs. Mallory in the third. 

For one set Mrs. Mallory played the finest tennis of her career  to  that time and in fact equal even to her play

against Suzanne  Lenglen  in America. She ran off six games in ten minutes. Miss  Ryan, cleverly  changing her

game, finally broke up the perfection  of Mrs. Mallory's  stroking and just nosed her out in the next two  sets. It

was a well  deserved victory. 

Miss Ryan easily won the tournament and challenged Mlle. Lenglen,  but her old jinx in the form of Suzanne

again proved too much and  she  played far below her best. The French girl easily retained  her title,  winning

62, 60. 

The journey of the wandering tennis troupe abroad was far from  the  most important development of the year.

The American season  was  producing remarkable results. Every year produces its  outstanding  figure and the

early months of 1921 saw Vincent  Richards looming large  on the tennis horizon. 

The first sensation of the year was the decisive defeat inflicted  on Kumagae by young Richards at Amakassin

Club, New York. This  was  immediately followed by Kumagae's victory over Dick Williams,  avenging

Williams' win at Palm Beach some months before. Kumagae  scored in the  intercity match for the George

Myers Church Trophy  played in 1921 in  Philadelphia. The following day Wallace F.  Johnson defeated

Kumagae in  one of the most terrific battle of  the year. 

Vincent Richards went through the season to the middle of July  without sustaining a defeat. He won five

tournaments. 

I arrived home from France and England July 12th and journeyed at  once to Providence where I took charge

of the Rhode Island State  Championship at the Agawam Hunt Club. Zenzo Shimidzu had  accompanied  me to


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America on the Olympic and made his first  tournament appearance  two days after landing at Greenwich,

Conn.,  before coming to  Providence. He went down to unexpected defeat at  the hands of S. H.  Voshell. 

The Providence tournament held the greatest entry list of any  event except the National Singles itself. The

singles had  Shimidzu,  Williams, Richards, C. S. Garland, Watson Washburn, S.  H. Voshell,  Samuel Hardy,

N. W. Niles, many young Western  collegiate stars and  myself. Ichiya Kumagae arrived to play  doubles with

Shimidzu in  preparation for the Davis Cup. 

Then the fun began. Shimidzu again fell before the net attack of  Voshell, who was himself defeated by the

calm quiet steadiness of  Washburn. Garland went out at my hands. Williams faced certain  defeat  when Niles

led him 40 in the final set, but in one of his  supertennis streaks tore through to victory, only to collapse

against Vincent Richards and suffer a crushing defeat 62, 62 in  the  semifinal. Meanwhile Washburn had

dropped by the wayside to  me 62,  62 and young Richards and I took up our annual battle. 

Youth is cruel. The world is cruel. Life is hard. I know it, for  Vinnie, with care and discretion, quietly led me

along the Road  of  the HasBeens, where he deposited me to the tune of 61, 62,  16,  60. 

Richards, with the scalps of Kumagae, Williams, Voshell and  myself  dangling at his belt, seemed destined for

the championship  itself.  Alas, pride goeth before a fall. The fall came to Vinnie  suddenly. 

The following week was the Longwood Singles. "Little Bill"  Johnston arrived East, together with the rest of

his California  team,  the day the event started. Johnston was the holder of the  trophy and  was called on to

meet the winner of the tournament in  the challenge  round. 

The tournament was mainly Dick Williams. He defeated Shimidzu in  the final. Kumagae was his victim in an

earlier round. 

Willis E. Davis, second string of the California team, was  unexpectedly defeated by N. W. Niles, who himself

went the long  road  via Shimidzu. The little Japanese star scored another  important  victory when he defeated

W. F. Johnson. 

Williams met Johnston in the challenge round with chances bright.  Somehow Little Bill has Dick's number

these days and again  decisively  defeated him. Vincent Richards wisely rested the week  of Longwood,

preparing for the later events. I was off in the  woods at Camp  Winnipesaukee recuperating from the effects of

illness in England. 

Newport followed on the heels of Longwood. Newport should be  called Washburn Week. Here the judicial

Watty methodically placed  Johnston and Williams in the discard on successive days. It was a  notable

performance. 

Williams took an awful revenge on Vinnie Richards when the two  met  in the third round. It was Williams'

day and he blew the  little  Yonkers boy off the court in one of the finest displays of  the whole  year. Shimidzu,

who had again scored a victory over  Wallace Johnson,  was taken suddenly ill with ptomaine poisoning,  the

night before he  was to meet Williams in the semi final, and  compelled to default. It  robbed him of a chance to

gain revenge  for his defeat at Longwood.  Washburn played the best tennis of  his life, in defeating Johnston

and  Williams, which, coupled with  Richards' crushing defeat, placed  Washburn on the Davis Cup team. 

A sensational upset occurred in the first round when L. B. Rice  defeated W. E. Davis. Rice has made a great

improvement this year  and  bids fair to go far. 


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Seabright, the next week, found Little Bill Johnston playing the  stellar role. Washburn took a week off but

Williams and Richards  were  in the competition. 

Johnston crushed Richards when the two met, in a display of  aggressive tennis so remarkable that the boy

was helpless before  it.  Richards was stale and below form, but even if he had been at  his  best, he could not

have withstood Johnston's attack. Little  Bill  followed this up by sweeping Williams off the court by  another

marvellous streak of well nigh perfect tennis. 

Southampton and the Women's National Championship conflicted the  next week. The story of Mrs. Mallory's

sensational triumph and  successful defense of her title is told elsewhere in this book. 

Southampton, as always, proved the goat, for almost all the  leading players took a week's rest before the

National Doubles  Championship. 

The English Davis Cup team, Willis E. Davis, Vincent Richards and  the Kinsey brothers, Bob and Howard,

were the leading stars. The  event narrowed to Davis and Richards in the finals with no upsets  of  a startling

nature. Davis had had a very poor record all year,  while  Richards boasted of the finest list of victories of the

season. On the  other hand the boy was overtennised and stale and  it proved his  undoing, for after one set,

which he won easily,  the sting went out of  his game and Davis took the match in four  sets. 

The championships were just ahead. The Doubles held at Longwood  Club, Boston, found several teams

closely matched. Williams and  Washburn, with the Rhode Island State and Newport to their  credit,  were the

favorites for the title. "Little Bill" Johnston  and W. E.  Davis and Bob and Howard Kinsey of California had

both  pressed them  closely. Vincent Richards and I teamed together for  the first time  since N. E. Brookes and

G. L. Patterson had won  the title from us in  1919. Samuel Hardy and S. H. Voshell were a  pair of veterans

who  needed watching. 

Williams and Washburn had a close call in the third round when  Hardy and Voshell led 31 in the fifth set,

but an unfortunate  miss  of an easy volley by Hardy and a footfault on game point at  34 and  3040 by

Voshell turned the tide and the favorites were  safe. Johnston  and Davis had several chances in the semifinal

but Davis was too  uncertain and Bill too anxious and they tossed  away the opportunities. 

Vinnie and I met the Kinseys in the semifinal and after chasing  their lobs all over the court for hours and

smashing until our  backs  ached, we finally pulled out three sequence sets. I have  seldom seen a  team work

together more smoothly than the Kinseys. 

The final match between Williams and Washburn, Richards and I for  two sets was as sensational and closely

contested doubles as ever  featured a national championship. Our slight superiority in  returning  service gave

us just enough margin to pull out the  first two sets  1412, 1210. Then Richards went mad. There is no  other

way to  describe it. Every time he got his racquet on a ball  it went for a  clean placement. I stood around and

watched him.  Almost singlehanded  this remarkable boy won the last set 62. 

The Davis Cup challenge round stretched itself between the  Doubles  and Singles Championship. There was

no work except for us  poor  hardworking players who were on the team. The rest was a  blessing to  Richards,

who needed it badly, as he was tired and  drawn. 

Following the American victory in the Davis Cup, the scene  shifted  to Philadelphia and the eyes of the tennis

world were  centered on the  Germantown Cricket Club, where the greatest  tournament of all time was  to be

held. Players of seven nations  were to compete. The Davis Cup  stars of England, Australia and  Japan added

their brilliance to that  of all the leading American  players. Six American champions, W. A.  Larned, W. J.

Clothier, R.  N. Williams, R. L. Murray, W. M. Johnston,  and myself were  entered. 


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Fate took a hand in the draw and for once I think did so badly  that it settled the "blind draw" forever. In one

sixteen  Johnston,  Richards, Shimidzu, Murray and I were bunched. The howl  of protest  from tennis players

and public alike was so loud that  the blind draw  surely will go by the board at the coming annual  meeting.

Since the  foregoing was written, the prophecy has proved  true. The annual  meeting, Feb. 4th, 1922, adopted

the "Seeded  Draw" unanimously. 

Every day produced its thrills, but play ran singularly true to  form in most cases. Illness took a hand in the

game, compelling  the  defaults of R. L. Murray, Ichiya Kumagae and W. A. Larned. 

The early rounds saw but one upset. Norman Peach, Captain of the  Australasian Davis Cup team, was

eliminated by William W.  Ingraham,  of Providence, one of the best junior players in  America. It was a

splendid victory and shows the fruit our junior  development system is  already bearing. Peach had not been

well  but for all that he played a  splendid game and all credit is due  Ingraham for his victory. 

The second day's play saw a remarkable match when W. E. Davis  defeated C. V. Todd of Australia after the

latter led him by two  sets. Davis steadily improved and by rushing the net succeeded in  breaking up Todd's

driving game. Todd unfortunately pulled a  muscle  in his side that seriously hampered him in the fifth set. 

Wallace F. Johnson, playing magnificent tennis, eliminated Watson  Washburn in one of the brainiest, hardest

fought matches of the  whole  tournament. 

Johnson was very steady and outlasted Washburn in the first set,  which he won. Washburn then took to

storming the net and carried  off  two sets decisively. The strain took its toll and he was  perceptibly  slower

when the fourth set opened. Johnson ran him  from corner to  corner, or tossed high lobs when Washburn took

the  net. It proved too  much for even Washburn to stand, and the  Philadelphian won the next  two sets and with

it the match. Many  people considered it a great  upset. Personally I expected it, as  I know how dangerous

Johnson may  be. 

The JohnstonRichards match and my meeting with Shimidzu came on  the third day. Fully 15,000 people

jammed themselves around the  court  and yelled, clapped and howled their excitement through the  afternoon.

It was a splendidly behaved gallery but a very  enthusiastic one. 

Richards, eager to avenge his crushing defeat by Johnston at  Seabright, started with a rush. "Little Bill" was

uncertain and  rather nervous. Richards ran away with the first two sets almost  before Johnston realized what

was happening. The tennis Richards  played in these sets was almost unbeatable. Johnston nerved  himself  to

his task and held even to 3all in the third. Here he  broke through  and Richards, I think foolishly, made little

attempt to pull out the  set. The boy staked all on the fourth  set. Johnston led at 53 but  Richards, playing

desperately,  pulled up to 65 and was within two  points of the match at 30all  on Johnston's service. It was

his last  effort. Johnston took the  game and Richards faded away. His strength  failed him and the  match was

Johnston's. 

I hit a good streak against Shimidzu and ran away with three  straight sets more or less easily. 

Meantime one of the most sensational upsets of the whole  tournament was taking place on an outside court

where Stanley W.  Pearson of Philadelphia was running the legs off N. W. Niles of  Boston and beating him in

five sets. 

"Little Bill" Johnston and I met the next day in what was the  deciding match of the tournament, even though

it was only the  fourth  round. Every available inch of space was jammed by an  overflow gallery  when we took

the count. It was a bitter match  from the first point. We  were both playing well. In the early  stages Little Bill

had a slight  edge, but after one set the  balance shifted and I held the whip hand  to the end. 


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The same day Dick Williams went down to sudden and unexpected  defeat at the hands of J. O. Anderson of

Australia in five well  played sets. It was a typical Williams effort, glorious tennis  one  minute followed by

inexcusable lapses. The Australian was  steady and  clever throughout. 

The keen speculation as to the outcome of the tournament fell off  after the meeting of Johnston and I, and

with it a decrease in  attendance. This ran very high, however, again reaching capacity  on  the day of the finals. 

The round before the semi finals saw a terrific struggle between  two Californians, Bob Kinsey and Willis E.

Davis. Kinsey had  defeated  Davis in the Metropolitan Championship the week before  and was  expected to

repeat, but Davis managed to outlast his team  and nosed  out the match. Kinsey collapsed on the court from

exhaustion as the  last point was played. 

Gordon Lowe went down to me in a fine match while J. O. Anderson  and Wallace Johnson completed the

Quartet of semi finalists, 

I finally got my revenge on Davis for the many defeats he had  inflicted on me in years gone by. Wallace

Johnson scored a  magnificent victory over J. O. Anderson in four sets after the  Australian led at a set all, 52,

and 4015. Johnson ran the  visiting  Davis Cup star all over the court and finally pulled out  the match in  one

of the finest displays of court generalship I  have ever seen. 

The finals was more or less of a family party. It was an  allPhiladelphian affair, two Philadelphians

competing with  14,000  more cheering them on. 

Johnson was unfortunate. Saturday the match was started under a  dark sky on a soft court that just suited him.

I have seldom seen  Johnson play so well; as always, his judgment was faultless. We  divided games with

service with monotonous regularity. The score  was  5all when it began to drizzle. The court, soft at best that

day, grew  more treacherous and slippery by the minute. Johnson's  shots hardly  left the ground. He broke my

service at 7all when  the rain materially  increased. He reached 4015 but, with the  crowd moving to shelter

and  the rain falling harder every minute,  he made the fatal error of  hurrying and netted two easy shots for

deuce, A moment more and the  game was mine and the match called  at 8all. 

Play was resumed on Monday before a capacity gallery. By mutual  agreement the match was played over

from the beginning. I had  learned  my lesson the previous day and opened with a rush. The  hot sun and  strong

wind had hardened the court and Johnson's  shots rose quite  high. It was my day and fortunately for me I

made the most of it. 

I consider that match the best tennis of my life. I beat Johnson  61, 63, 61 in 45 minutes. Thus fell the

curtain on the  official  tennis season. 

The EastWest matches in Chicago proved more or less of an  anticlimax. Johnston was ill and unable to

compete, while  Wallace  Johnson, Williams, Washburn and Shimidzu could not play.  Several  remarkable

matches featured the three days' play in the  Windy City.  The most remarkable was the splendid victory of J.

O.  Anderson over me  in five sets, the final one of which hung up a  world's record for  tournament play by

going to 1917. Frank T.  Anderson defeated Robert  Kinsey in five sets, a splendid  performance, while S. H.

Voshell  scored over W. E. Davis. 

The Ranking Committee faces a hard task on the season's play. Let  us look at the records of some of the

American players, and a few  of  our visitors. 

1. W. M. Johnston Beat V. Richards 2, Williams (2), Kumagae,  Shimidzu, Roland Roberts, Davis and others.

Lost to Washburn,  Tilden,  Roberts. 


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2. R. N. Williams 2d. Beat Richards, Shimidzu, Kumagae (2),  Voshell and others. Lost to Johnston (2),

Richards, J. O.  Anderson,  Kumagae. 

3. Vincent Richards Beat Tilden, Richards, Kumagae (2), Shimidzu  (2), (in exhibition at Toronto), Voshell,

Hawkes, Lost to  Johnston  (2), Williams, Davis. 

4. Ishiya Kumagae Beat Williams, Voshell, Anderson, Hawkes. Lost  to Johnston, Tilden, Williams, Richards. 

5. Zenzo Shimidzu Beat Wallace Johnson (2), Anderson, Hawkes,  Niles. Lost to Johnston, Tilden (2),

Voshell (2). Richards (2)  (in  exhibitions). 

6. Wallace Johnson Beat Watson, Washburn, Anderson. Lost to  Tilden, Shimidzu (2). 

7. Watson Washburn Beat Williams, Johnston, Voshell. Lost to  Wallace Johnson, Tilden, Atherton Richards

(a most sensational  upset). 

8. J. O. Anderson of Australia Beat R. N. Williams, Tilden,  Hawkes, Lowe. Lost to Wallace Johnson,

Kumagae, Shimidzu. 

9. S. H. Voshell Beat Shimidzu (2) , Davis. Lost to Richards,  Williams, Washburn, Neer (an upset), Allen

Behr (a gift). 

10. W. E. Davis Beat Richards, R. Kinsey, Lowe. Lost to Niles, L.  B. Rice (an upset), R. Kinsey, Voshell and

Tilden. 

These few records show how useless comparative scores may be. If  another season like 1921 strikes

American tennis, the ranking  will  need either clairvoyance or a padded cell. 

These upsets are part of the zest of the game and it is due to  the  very uncertainty of tennis that the public is

daily becoming  more  enthusiastic about the game. I believe next year will see  even a  greater interest taken in

it than was shown this. 

Second in importance only to the big events themselves was the  season in junior tennis. 

Little Miss Helen Wills, in her first Eastern season, won the  junior championship for girls and brought to the

game one of the  most  delightful personalities that has appeared in many years.  Her success  at her early age

should prove a great boom to girls'  tennis all over  America. 

Vincent Richards passes from the junior ranks this year but  leaves  a successor who is worthy to wear his

mantle in the person  of Arnold  W. Jones of Providence. Jones should outclass the field  in 1922, by as  wide a

margin as did Richards this year. 

Arnold Jones has had a remarkable record. He won the boys'  championship of America in 1919. In 1920 he

carried Richards to a  close match in the National junior Singles, taking one set. He  was  ranked "two" for the

year. 

This year Arnold had his greatest year of his brief career. He  journeyed to France and England, as the official

junior  representative of America, recognized by the National Tennis  Association. He played splendidly in

France, defeating A. Cousin  in  the hard court championship of the world and forced Tegner,  the Danish

Davis Cup star, to a close battle before admitting  defeat. His  sensational play in the doubles was a great aid in

carrying him and me  to the semifinal ground, where we lost to  Gobert and Laurentz after  five terrific sets. In


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England young  Jones played Jacob, Captain of  the Indian Davis Cup team, a  splendid match. 

On his return to America he carved his niche in the Hall of  Junior  Tennis fame by defeating Harold Godshall

of California, W.  W. Ingraham  of Providence and Morgan Bernstein of New York on  successive days in  the

junior championship. He forced Richards to  a bitter fight in  final, and again proved beyond question that he  is

but a step behind  Richards today, although he is a full year  younger. 

Godshall, Ingraham, Charles Wood, Jr., Bernstein, Jerry Lang,  Charles Watson III, Fritz Mercur and many

other boys are but a  step  behind Jones. With this list of rising players, need we face  the  future with anything

but the most supreme confidence in our  ability to  hold our place in the tennis world! 

There were two other remarkable features to the tennis season of  1921, both of them in America. The first

was the appearance of  the  Davis Cup team on the court of the White House, Washington,  in  response to a

personal invitation from President and Mrs.  Harding. The  President, who is a keen sportsman, placed official

approval on tennis  by this act. On May 8th and 9th, Captain  Samuel Hardy, R. N. Williams,  Watson

Washburn and I, together  with Wallace F. Johnson, who  understudied for William M.  Johnston, met in a

series of matches  before a brilliant assembly  of Diplomatic, Military and Political  personages. C. S. Garland

was unable to accompany the team owing to  illness. Julian S.  Myrick, President of the U. S. L. T. A., and A.

Y.  Leech  completed the party. 

Rain, that hoodoo of tennis, attempted to ruin the event for it  fell steadily for the five days previous to the

match. The court  was  a sea of mud on the morning scheduled, but the President  desired play  and the word

went on "to play." Mr. Leech and Mr.  Myrick, ever ready  for emergencies in tennis, called for  gasolene,

which was forthcoming  speedily, and, while the Chief  Executive of the United States  interviewed men on the

destiny of  nations, the people of Washington  watched nearly 200 barrels of  gasolene flare up over the surface

of  the court. The desired  result was attained and at 2 o'clock President  Harding personally  called play. Singles

between Williams and me opened  the matches.  Then Williams and Washburn decisively defeated Johnson

and me,  following which Williams and I nosed out Washburn and Johnson  to  close the program. 

The second outstanding feature was the tour for the benefit of  the  American Committee for Devastated

France. The appearance in  America of  Mlle. Suzanne Lenglen was due primarily to the efforts  of Miss Anne

Morgan, who secured the services of the famous  French champion for a  tour of the States, the proceeds to go

to  Devastated France. Mlle.  Lenglen's regrettable collapse and  forced departure left the Committee  in a

serious position. The  American Tennis Association, which had co  operated with Miss  Morgan in the

Lenglen tour, found its clubs eager  for a chance to  stage matches for France but no matches available.

Finally, in  October, in response to the voluntary offer of several of  the  leading players, a team was organized

that toured the East for  the benefit of Devastated France. It included Mrs. Franklin I.  Mallory, American

champion, Miss Eleanor Goss, Miss Leslie  Bancroft,  Mrs. B. F. Cole, Mrs. F. H. Godfrey, Vincent Richards,

Watson  Washburn, N. W. Niles, R. N. Williams, W. F. Johnson and  myself.  Matches were staged at Orange,

Short Hills, Morristown  and Elizabeth,  New Jersey, Green Meadow Club, Jackson Heights  Club,

ArdsleyontheHudson, New Rochelle, Yonkers, New York, New  Haven, and  Hartford, Connecticut. They

proved a tremendous  success financially,  and France netted a sum in excess of  $10,000. 

PART IV: SOME SIDELIGHTS ON FAMOUS PLAYERS

INTRODUCTORY

P. T. BARNUM immortalised Lincoln's language by often quoting him  with: "You can fool some of the

people all of the time, and all  of  the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the  people all  of the

time." P. T. was an able judge of the public,  and it is just  this inability to fool all of the people all of  the time


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that accounts  for the sudden disappearance from the  public eye of some one who only  fooled all of the people

for a  little while. That person was a sham, a  bluff, a gamester. He, or  she, as the case may be, had no

personality. 

Personality needs no disguise with which to fool the people. It  is  not hidden in a longhair eccentric being.

That type is merely  one of  those who are "born every minute," as the saying goes.  Personality is  a dynamic,

compelling force. It is a positive  thing that will not be  obliterated. 

Personality is a sexless thing. It transcends sex. Theodore  Roosevelt was a compelling personality, and his

force and ability  were recognized by his friends and enemies alike while the  public,  the masses, adored him

without knowing why. Sarah  Bernhardt, Eleanor  Duse, and Mary Garden carry with them a force  far more

potent in its  appeal to the public than their mere  feminine charm. They hold their  public by personality. It is

not  trickery, but art, plus this  intangible force. 

The great figures in the tennis world that have held their public  in their hands, all have been men of marked

personality. Not all  great tennis players have personality. Few of the many stars of  the  game can lay claim to

it justly. The most powerful  personality in the  tennis world during my time is Norman E.  Brookes, with his

peculiar  sphinxlike repression, mysterious,  quiet, and ominous calm. Brookes  repels many by his peculiar

personality. He never was the popular hero  that other men,  notably M'Loughlin and Wilding, have been. Yet

Brookes  always  held a gallery enthralled, not only by the sheer wizardry of  his  play, but by the power of his

magnetic force. 

Maurice E. M'Loughlin is the most remarkable example of a  wonderful dynamic personality, literally

carrying a public off  its  feet. America and England fell before the dazzling smile and  vibrant  force of the

redhaired Californian. His whole game  glittered in its  radiance. His was a triumph of a popular hero. 

Anthony F. Wilding, quiet, charming, and magnetic, carried his  public away with him by his dynamic game.

It was not the  whirlwind  flash of the Comet M'Loughlin that swept crowds off  their feet, it was  more the

power of repression that compelled. 

I know no other tennis players that sweep their public away with  them to quite the same degree as these three

men I have  mentioned. R.  L. Murray has much of M'Loughlin's fire, but not  the spontaneity that  won the

hearts of the crowd. Tennis needs  big personalities to give  the public that glow of personal  interest that helps

to keep the game  alive. A great personality  is the property of the public. It is the  price he must pay for  his

gift. 

It is the personal equation, the star, who appeals to the  public's  imagination. 

I do not think it is the star who keeps the game alive. It is  that  great class of players who play at clubs the

world over, who  can never  rise above the dead level of mediocrity, the mass of  tennis  enthusiasts who play

with dead racquets and old balls, and  who attend  all big events to witness the giants of the court, in  short,

"The  Dubs" (with a capital D), who make tennis what it is,  and to whom  tennis owes its life, since they are its

support and  out from them  have come our champions. 

Champions are not born. They are made. They emerge from a long,  hard school of defeat, dis

encouragement, and mediocrity, not  because they are born tennis players, but because they are  endowed  with

a force that transcends discouragement and cries "I  will  succeed." 

There must be something that carries them up from the mass. It is  that something which appeals in some form

to the public. The  public  may like it, or they may dislike it, but they recognize  it. It may be  personality,

dogged determination, or sheer genius  of tennis, for all  three succeed; but be it what it may, it  brings out a


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famous player.  The quality that turns out a great  player, individualizes his game so  that it bears a mark

peculiar  to himself. I hope to be able to call to  mind the outstanding  qualities of some of the leading tennis

players  of the world. 

Where to start, in a field so great, representing as it does  America, the British Isles, Australia, France, Japan,

South  Africa,  Rumania, Holland, and Greece, is not an easy task; but it  is with a  sense of pride and a

knowledge that there is no game  better fitted to  end this section of my book, and no man more  worthy to lead

the great  players of the world, that I turn to  William M. Johnston, the champion  of the United States of

America, and my teammate in the Davis Cup  team of 1920. 

CHAPTER XII. AMERICA

WILLIAM M. JOHNSTON 

The American champion is one of the really great orthodox players  in the world. There is nothing eccentric,

nothing freakish about  his  game. 

Johnston is a small man, short and light; but by perfect  weightcontrol, footwork, and timing he hits with

terrific speed. 

His service is a slice. Hit from the top of his reach Johnston  gets power and twist on the ball with little effort.

He has a  wonderful forehand drive, of a topspin variety. This shot is  world  famous, for never in the history

of the game has so small a  man hit  with such terrific speed and accuracy. The racquet  travels flat and  then

over the ball, with a peculiar wristsnap  just as the ball meets  the racquet face. The shot travels deep  and fast

to the baseline. 

Johnston's backhand is a decided "drag" or chop. He hits it with  the same face of the racquet as his forehand,

and with very  little  change in grip. It is remarkably steady and accurate, and  allows  Johnston to follow to the

net behind it. 

Johnston's volleying is hard, deep, and usually very reliable. He  crouches behind his racquet and volleys

directly in to the flight  of  the ball, hitting down. His low volleys are made with a  peculiar  wristflick that

gives the rise and speed. His overhead  is accurate,  reliable, but not startling in its power. Johnston's  game has

no real  weakness, while his forehand and volleying are  superlative. 

Johnston is a remarkable match player. He reaches his greatest  game when behind. He is one of the hardest

men to beat in the  game  owing to his utter lack of fear and the dogged determination  with  which he hangs on

when seemingly beaten. He is quiet,  modest, and a  sterling sportsman. He gets a maximum result with a

minimum effort. 

R. N. WILLIAMS 

R. N. Williams, American Champion 1914 and 1916, another of my  Davis Cup teammates, is a unique

personality in the tennis  world.  Personally, I believe that Williams at his best is the  greatest tennis  player in

the world, past or present.  Unfortunately, that best is  seldom seen, and then not for a  consistent performance.

He is always  dangerous, and his range of  variation is the greatest among any of the  leading players. 

Williams' service is generally a fast slice, although he at times  uses an American twist. He is erratic in his

delivery, scoring  many  aces, but piling up enormous numbers of doublefaults. His  ground  strokes are made

off the rising bound of the ball. They  are flat or  slightly sliced. Never topped, But sometimes pulled.


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Williams' margin  of safety is so small that unless his shot is  perfectly hit it is  useless. He hits hard at all times

and makes  tremendous numbers of  earned points, yet his errors always exceed  them, except when he  strikes

one of his "super" days. 

His volleying is very hard, crisp, and decisive, coupled with an  occasional stop volley. His use of the half

volley is unequalled  in  modern tennis. His overhead is severe and ordinarily reliable,  although he will take

serious slumps overhead. He is a past  master of  his own style strokes, but it is an unorthodox game  that

should not be  copied by the average player. 

He is never willing to alter his game for safety's sake, and  defeats himself in sheer defiance by hitting

throughout a match  when  his strokes are not working. He is greatly praised for this  unwillingness to alter his

game in defeat. Personally, I think he  deserves condemnation rather than praise, for it seems  recklessness

rather than bravery to thus seek defeat that could  easily be avoided. 

Williams takes tennis almost too lightly. Cheery, modest, and  easygoing, he is very popular with all

galleries, as his  personality  deserves. He is a brilliant everinteresting light in  any tennis  gathering, and his

game will always show sheer genius  of execution  even while rousing irritation by his refusal to play  safe. He

would  rather have one supergreat day and bad defeats,  than no bad defeats  without his day of greatness.

Who shall say  he is not right? We may  not now agree, but Williams may yet prove  to us he is right and we

are  wrong. 

CHARLES S. GARLAND 

The last member of the Davis Cup team and youngest player of the  Americans is Charles S. Garland, the Yale

star. 

Garland is the perfect stylist, the orthodox model for ground  strokes. He is an example of what stroke

perfection can do. 

He uses a soft slice service, of no particular peculiarity, yet  places it so well that he turns it into an attack. His

forehand  is  hit with a full swing, flat racquet face, and a slight top  spin. It is  deadly accurate and of moderate

speed. He can put the  ball at will  anywhere in the court off his forehand. His backhand  is slightly  sliced down

the line and pulled flat across the  court. It is not a  point winner but is an excellent defence. His  overhead is

steady,  reliable, and accurate, but lacks  aggressiveness. His high volleying  is fine, deep, and fast. His  low

volleying is weak and uncertain. He  anticipates wonderfully,  and covers a tremendous amount of court. His

attack is rather  obvious in that he seldom plays the unusual shot, yet  his  accuracy is so great that he

frequently beats a man who guesses  his shot yet can't reach it. 

N. E. Brookes stated he considered Garland one of the greatest  groundstroke players in the world. This is

true of his forehand,  but  his backhand lacks punch. His whole game needs speed and  aggressiveness. 

He is quiet, modest, and extremely popular. His perfect court  manner and pleasant smile have made Garland

a universal favourite  in  America and England. His game is the result of hard,  conscientious  work. There is no

genius about it, and little  natural talent. It is  not an interesting game as it lacks  brilliancy, yet it is very sound,

and much better than it looks. 

VINCENT RICHARDS 

Vincent Richards, National junior Champion of America and the  most  remarkable boy playing tennis, is a

distinct personality.  Richards,  who is now only seventeen, won the Men's Doubles  Championship of  America

at the age of fifteen. Richards is a born  tennis player and a  great tennis genius. 


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Richards' service is a fast slice that he follows to the net. It  is speedy and very accurate. His ground strokes

are both slice  and  drive, although the basis of his game is slice. He meets the  ball on  the rise and "spoons" it

off his forehand. It is low,  fast, but none  too sure. His backhand shot is a fast twisting  slice that is  remarkably

effective and very excellent as a  defence. He is learning a  flat drive. 

His volleying is the great feature of his game. He is the  greatest  natural volleyer I have ever seen. Low and

high  volleying, fore and  backhand is perfect in execution. His half  volleying is phenomenal.  His overhead is

very severe for a boy,  and carries great speed for so  small a person, but it is inclined  to be slightly erratic. He

is  tremendously fast on his feet, but  it inclined to be lazy. 

Vincent Richards has the greatest natural aptitude and equipment  of any tennis player I have ever seen.

Against it he has a  temperament that is inclined to carelessness and laziness. He  tends  to sulkiness, which he

is rapidly outgrowing. He is a  delightful  personality on the court, with his slight figure,  tremendous speed,

and merry smile. He is a second "Gus" Touchard  in looks and style. I  hope to see him develop to be the

greatest  player the world has ever  seen. He gives that promise. The matter  rests in Richards' hands, as  his

worst enemy is his temperament. 

At his best he is today the equal of the top flight in the  world.  At his worst he is a child. His average is fine

but not  great. Travel,  work, sincere effort, and a few years, should turn  this astonishing  boy into a marvellous

player. 

R. L. MURRAY 

The new "California Comet," successor to M. E. M'Loughlin, is the  usual sobriquet for R. L. Murray, now of

Buffalo. Murray won the  National Crown in 19171918. 

His service is of the same cyclonic character as M'Loughlin.  Murray is lefthanded. He hits a fast

cannonball delivery of  great  speed and an American twist of extreme twist. His ground  strokes are  not good,

and he rushes the net at every opportunity.  His forehand  drive is very fast, excessively topped, and

exceedingly erratic. His  backhand is a "poke." His footwork is  very poor on both shots. He  volleys very well,

shooting deep to  the baseline and very accurately.  His shoulderhigh volleys are  marvellous. His overhead is

remarkable  for its severity and  accuracy. He seldom misses an overhead ball. 

Murray is a terrifically hard worker, and tires himself out very  rapidly by prodigious effort. He is a hard

fighter and a hard man  to  beat. He works at an enormous pace throughout the match. 

He is large, spare, rangy, with dynamic energy, and a wonderful  personality that holds the gallery. His smile

is famous, while  his  sense of humour never deserts him. A sportsman to his  fingertips,  there is no more

popular figure in American tennis  than Murray. His is  not a great game. It is a case of a great  athlete making

a  secondclass game first class, by sheer power of  personality and  fighting ability. He is really a second

M'Loughlin in his game, his  speed, and his personal charm. 

WATSON WASHBURN 

In contrast to Murray, Watson Washburn plays a cool,  neverhurried, neverflurried game that is unique in

American  tennis. 

There is little that is noteworthy of Washburn's game. His  service  is a wellplaced slice. His ground strokes

are a peculiar  "wristslap," almost a slice. His volleying fair, his overhead  steady  but not remarkable. Just a

good game, well rounded but not  unique. Why  is. Washburn great? Because, behind the big round  glasses

that are the  main feature of Washburn on the tennis  court, is a brain of the first  water, directing and


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developing  that allround game. There is no more  brilliant student of men in  games than Washburn, and his

persistence  of attack is second only  to Brookes'. 

Washburn, too, is a popular player, but not in the same sense as  Murray. Murray appeals to the imagination of

the crowd, Washburn  to  its academic instincts. Washburn is a strategist, working out  his  match with

mathematical exactness, and always checking up his  men as  he goes along. 

There is no tennis player whose psychology I admire more than  Washburn's. He is never beaten until the last

point is played,  and he  is always dangerous, no matter how great a lead you hold  over him. 

Another case of the secondclass game being made first class, but  this time it is done by mental brilliancy. 

WALLACE F. JOHNSON 

Here is another case of a secondclass game being used in a  firstclass manner, getting firstclass results

through the  direction  of a firstclass tennis brain. Johnson is not the  brilliant,  analytical mind of Washburn,

but for pure tennis  genius Johnson ranks  nearly the equal of Brookes. 

Johnson is a onestroke player. He uses a peculiar slice shot hit  from the wrist. He uses it in service, ground

strokes, volleying,  and  lobbing. It is a true onestroke game, yet by sheer audacity  of  enterprise and

wonderful speed of foot Wallace Johnson has for  years  been one of the leading players of America. 

SAMUEL HARDY 

The overwhelming success of the American Davis Cup team in 1920,  when we brought back the cup from

Australia was due in no small  measure to the wonderful generalship displayed by one man, our  Captain

Samuel Hardy. 

The hardest part of any such trip is the attention to training,  relaxation and accommodations for the team and

only perfect  judgment  can give the comfort so needed by a team. It is to  Captain Hardy that  the team owes its

perfect condition throughout  the entire 3,000 miles  we journeyed after the cup. Yet Captain  Hardy's success

was far bigger  than that, for by his tact,  charming personality and splendid  sportsmanship at all times he  won

a place for us in the hearts of  every country we visited.  Hardy, although a nonplaying member of the  team,

is a great  tennis player. He is one of the best doubles players  America has  produced. His clever generalship

and wonderful knowledge  of the  game proved of inestimable value to the team in laying out our  plan of

attack in the Davis Cup matches themselves. 

Clever, charming, just and always full of the most delightful  humour, Hardy was an ideal Captain who kept

his team in the best  of  spirits no matter how badly we might have been playing or how  depressing appeared

our outlook. 

CARL FISCHER 

I am including in my analysis of players a boy who is just  gaining  recognition but who I believe is to be one

of the great  stars of the  future, Carl Fischer of Philadelphia. 

Young Fischer, who is only 19, is a brilliant, hard hitting  lefthander. He has already won the Eastern

Pennsylvania  Championship, been runnerup to Wallace Johnson in the  Pennsylvania  State, Philadelphia

Championship and Middle States  event, besides  holding the junior Championship of Pennsylvania  for two

years. He won  the University of Pennsylvania Championship  in his freshman year. 


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His service is a flat delivery of good speed, at times, verging  on  the American twist. His ground game carries

top spin drives  forehand  and backhand. His volleying and overhead are severe and  powerful but  prone to be

erratic. Fischer is an all court player  of the most modern  type. He is aggressive, almost too much so at  times

as he wastes a  great deal of energy by useless rushing. He  needs steadiness and a  willingness to await his

opening but gives  promise of rounding into a  first class player, as his stroke  equipment is second to none. 

MARSHALL ALLEN 

Far out in the Pacific Northwest in Seattle, Washington, is a  young player who bids fair to some day be world

famous. It is  quite  possible he may never arrive at all. 

Marshall Allen is a typical Western player. Allen has a hurricane  service that is none too reliable. His

forehand drive is  reminiscent  of McLoughlin. It is a furious murderous attack when  it goes in and  quite

useless when it is off. Allen's backhand is  a flat drive played  to either side with equal ease. At present it  is

erratic but shows  great promise. Allen volleys at times  brilliantly, but is uncertain  and at times misses

unaccountably.  His overhead is remarkably  brilliant and severe, but also  erratic. He reaches great heights and

sinks to awful depths. If  Marshall Allen consolidates his game and  refines the material he  has at hand he

should be a marvellous player.  If he allows his  love of speed to run away with his judgment at the  expense of

accuracy and steadiness he will never rise above the second  class. Time will tell the story. I look to see him

world famous. 

OUR RISING JUNIORS 

For a moment I am going to pay tribute to some boys who I look to  see among the stars of the future. They

are all juniors less than  eighteen at the time of writing. 

First in importance comes Arnold W. Jones, of Providence, R. I.,  who accompanied me to France and

England in 1921, where he made a  fine record. Young Jones has a splendid allcourt game, with a

remarkable forehand drive but a tendency to weariness in his  backhand  and service. His volleying is

excellent. His overhead  erratic. 

Second to Jones I place Charles Watson III of Philadelphia. Here  is a boy with a most remarkable

resemblance to Chuck Garland in  style  of his game. Watson has a fine service, beautiful ground  strokes fore

and backhand and a more aggressive volley than  Garland. His overhead  lacks punch. He is the cleverest court

general among the juniors. 

Phillip Bettens of San Francisco is a possible successor to Billy  Johnston. Bettens has a terrific forehand

drive and a rushing net  attack. He needs to steady up his game, but he is a player of  great  promise. 

Armand Marion of Seattle, Washington, is another boy with a  finely  rounded game who, given experience

and seasoning, bids  fair to become  a great star. Marion does not have enough punch  yet and, needs to gain

decisiveness of attack. 

Charles Wood of New York, W. W. Ingraham of Providence, Milo  Miller and Eric Wood of Philadelphia,

John Howard of Baltimore,  and  others are of equal class and of nearly equal promise to the  boys I  have

mentioned. 

In the younger class of boys those under 15, one finds many  youngsters already forming real style. The boy

who shows the  greatest  promise and today the best allround game, equalling in  potential  power even

Vincent Richards at the same age, is  Alexander L. (Sandy)  Wiener of Philadelphia. At fourteen young  Weiner

is a stylist of the  highest allcourt type. 


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Among the other boys who may well develop into stars in the  future  are Meredith W. Jones, Arthur

Ingraham, Jr., Andrew Clarke  Ingraham,  Miles Valentine, Raymond Owen, Richard Chase, Neil  Sullivan,

Henry  Neer, and Edward Murphy. 

There are many other great players I would like to analyse, but  space forbids. Among our leaders are Roland

Roberts, John  Strachan,  C. J. Griffin, Davis, and Robert Kinsey in California;  Walter T.  Hayes, Ralph

Burdock, and Heath Byford in the Middle  West; Howard  Voshell, Harold Throckmorton, Conrad B. Doyle,

Craig  Biddle, Richard  Harte, Colket Caner, Nathaniel W. Niles, H. C.  Johnson, Dean Mathey,  and many

others of equal fame in the East. 

CHAPTER XIII. BRITISH ISLES

J. C. PARKE 

There is no name in tennis history of the past decade more famous  than that of J. C. Parke. In twelve months,

during 1912 and 1913,  he  defeated Brookes, Wilding, and M'Loughlina notable record;  and now  in 1920,

after his wonderful work in the World War, he  returns to  tennis and scores a decisive victory over W. M.

Johnston. 

Parke is essentially a baseline player. His service is soft,  flat,  but well placed. His ground strokes are hit with

an almost  flat  racquet face and a peculiar short swing. He uses a  pronounced snap of  the wrist. He slices his

straight backhand  shot, but pulls his drive  'cross court. It is Parke's famous  running drive down the line that is

the outstanding feature of  his game. Parke was a tensecond  hundredyard man in college, and  still retains

his remarkable speed of  foot. He hits his drive  while running at top speed and translates his  weight to the ball.

It shoots low and fast down the line. It is a  marvellous stroke. 

Parke's volleying is steady and well placed but not decisive. His  overhead is reliable and accurate, but lacks

"punch." The great  factor of Parke's game is his uncanny ability to produce his  greatest  game under the

greatest stress. I consider him one of  the finest match  players in the world. His tactical knowledge and  brainy

attack are all  the more dangerous, because he has  phenomenal power of defence and  fighting qualities of the

highest  order. There is no finer sportsman  in tennis than Parke.  Generous, quiet, and modest, Parke is

deservedly  a popular figure  with the tennis world. 

A. R. F. KINGSCOTE 

The most recent star to reach the heights of fame in English  tennis is Major A. R. F. Kingscote. Kingscote has

played good  tennis  for some years; but it was only in 1919, following his  excellent work  in the War, that he

showed his true worth. He  defeated Gobert in  sequence sets in the Davis Cup tie at  Deauville, and followed

by  defeating Anderson in Australia and  carrying Patterson to a hard  match. Since then he has steadily

improved and this season found him  the leading figure of the  British team. 

Kingscote played much of his early tennis with R. N. Williams in  Switzerland during 1910 and 1911. The

effect of this training is  easily seen on his game today for, without Williams' dash and  extreme brilliancy,

their strokes are executed in very much the  same  style. 

Kingscote's service is a fast slice, well placed and cleverly  disguised. It carries a great deal of pace and twist.

His ground  strokes are hit off the rising bound of the ball, with a flat  raquet  face or a slight slice. His

wonderful speed of foot  offsets his lack  of height, and he hits either side with equal  facility. There are no

gaps in Kingscote's game. It is perfectly  rounded. His favourite  forehand shot is 'cross court, yet he can  hit

equally well down the  line. His backhand is steady, very  accurate and deceptive, but rather  lacks speed. His


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volleying is  remarkable for his court covering and  angles, but is not the  decisive win of Williams or Johnston.

He is the  best volleyer in  the British Isles. His overhead is reliable and  accurate for so  short a man, but at

times is prone to lack speed. 

Kingscote is a sound tactician without the strategic brilliance  of  Parke. He is a fine match player and dogged

fighter. Witness  his 5set  battle with me in the Championships, after being match  point down in  the fourth

set, and his 5set struggle with  Johnston in the Davis Cup.  It is a slight lack of decisiveness  all round that

keeps Kingscote  just a shade below the first  flight. He is a very fine player, who may  easily become a

topnotch man. His pleasant, modest manner and  generous  sportsmanship make him an ideal opponent, and

endear him to  the  gallery. 

H. ROPER BARRETT 

One of the real tennis tacticians, a man who is today a veteran  of many a notable encounter, yet still

dangerous at all times, is  H.  Roper Barrett. 

A member of every Davis Cup team since the matches were  inaugurated, a doubles player of the highest

strategy, Roper  Barrett  needs no introduction or analysis. His, game is soft. His  service  looks a joke. In reality

it is hard to hit, for Barrett  pushes it to  the most unexpected places. His ground strokes,  soft, short, and low,

are ideal doubles shots. He angles off the  ball with a short shove in  the direction. He can drive hard when

pressed, but prefers to use the  slow poke. 

His volleying is the acme of finesse. He angles soft to the  sidelines, stop volleys the hardest drives

successfully. He  picks  openings with an unerring eye. His overhead lacks "punch,"  but is  steady and reliable. 

Barrett is a clever mixer of shots. He is playing the unexpected  shot to the unexpected place. His sense of

anticipation is  remarkable, and he retrieves the most unusual shots. It is his  great  tennis tactics that make him

noteworthy. His game is round  but not  wonderful. 

THE LOWES, A. H. AND F. G. 

The famous brothers, called indiscriminately the Lowes, are two  of  the best baseline players in the British

Isles. Both men play  almost  identical styles, and at a distance are very hard to tell  apart. 

Gordon Lowe uses a slice service, while Arthur serves with a  reverse spin. Neither man has a dangerous

delivery. Both are  adequate  and hard to win earned points from. 

The ground strokes of the Lowes are very orthodox. Full swing,  top  spin drives fore and backhand, straight

or 'cross court, are  hit with  equal facility. The Lowes volley defensively and only  come in to the  let when

pulled in by a short shot. Their overhead  work is average. 

Their games are not startling. There is nothing to require much  comment. Both men are excellent tennis

players of the true  English  school: fine base line drivers, but subject to defeat by  any  aggressive volleyer. It

is a lack of aggressiveness that  holds both  men down, for they are excellent court coverers, fine  racquet

wielders, but do not rise to real heights. The Lowes  could easily  defeat any player who was slightly off his

game, as  they are very  steady and make few mistakes. Neither would defeat  a first class  player at his best. 

T. M. MAVROGORDATO 

One of the most consistent winners in English tennis for a span  of  years is a little man with a big name, who

is universally and  popularly known as "Mavro." 


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"Mavro" added another notable victory in 1920, when he defeated  R.  N. Williams in the last eight in the

World Championships.  "Mavro" has  always been a fine player, but he has never quite  scaled the top  flight. 

His game is steadiness personified. He shoves his service in the  court at the end of a prodigious swing that

ends in a poke. It  goes  where he wishes it. His ground strokes are fine, in splendid  form,  very accurate and

remarkably fast for so little effort.  Mavro is not  large enough to hit hard, but owing to his  remarkable

footwork he  covers a very large territory in a  remarkably short space of time. His  racquet work is a delight to

a student of orthodox form. His volleying  is accurate, steady,  well placed but defensive. He has no speed or

punch to his  volley. His overhead is steady to the point of being  unique. He  is so small that it seems as if

anyone could lob over his  head,  but his speed of foot is so great that he invariably gets his  racquet on it and

puts it back deep. 

Mavro turns, defence into attack by putting the ball back in play  so often that his opponent gets tired hitting it

and takes  unnecessary chances. His accuracy is so great that it makes up  for  his lack of speed. His judgment

is sound but not brilliant.  He is a  hardworking, conscientious player who deserves, his  success. 

There are many other players who are interesting studies. The two  Australians, now living in England, and to

all intents and  purposes  Englishmen, Randolph Lycett and F. M. B. Fisher, are  distinct and  interesting types

of players. C. P. Dixon, Stanley  Doust, M. J. G.  Ritchie, Max Woosnam, the rising young star, P.  M. Davson,

A. E.  Beamish, W. C. Crawley, and scores of other  excellent players, will  carry the burden of English tennis

successfully for some years. Yet  new blood must be found to  infuse energy into the game. Speed is a

necessity in English  tennis if the modern game is to reach its  greatest height in the  British Isles. 

Youth must be seen soon, if the game in the next ten years is to  be kept at its present level. Parke, Mavro,

Ritchie, Dixon,  Barrett,  etc., cannot go on for ever, and young players must be  developed to  take their places.

The coming decade is the crucial  period of English  tennis. I hope and believe it will be  successfully passed. 

CHAPTER XIV. FRANCE AND JAPAN

France 

ANDRE GOBERT 

One of the most picturesque figures and delightfully polished  tennis games in the world are joined in that

volatile,  temperamental  player, Andre Gobert of France. He is a typically  French product, full  of finesse, art,

and nerve, surrounded by  the romance of a wonderful  war record of his people in which he  bore a

magnificent part, yet  unstable, erratic, and uncertain. At  his best he is invincible. He is  the great master of

tennis. At  his worst he is mediocre. Gobert is at  once a delight and a  disappointment to a student of tennis. 

Gobert's service is marvellous. It is one of the great deliveries  of the world. His great height (he is 6 feet 4

inches) and  tremendous  reach enable him to hit a flat delivery at frightful  speed, and still  stand an excellent

chance of it going in court.  He uses very little  twist, so the pace is remarkably fast. Yet  Gobert lacks

confidence in  his service. If his opponent handles  it successfully Gobert is apt to  slow it up and hit it soft,

thus  throwing away one of the greatest  assets. 

His ground strokes are hit in beautiful form. Gobert is the  exponent of the most perfect form in the world

today. His swing  is  the acme of beauty. The whole stroke is perfection. He hits  with a  flat, slightly topped

drive, feet in excellent position,  and weight  well controlled. It is uniform, backhand and forehand.  His

volleying  is astonishing. He can volley hard or soft, deep or  short, straight or  angled with equal ease, while

his tremendous  reach makes him nearly  impossible to pass at the net. His  overhead is deadly, fast, and


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accurate, and he kills a lob from  anywhere in the court. 

Why is not Gobert the greatest tennis player in the world?  Personally I believe it is lack of confidence, a lack

of fighting  ability when the breaks are against him, and defeat may be his  due.  It is a peculiar thing in Gobert,

for no man is braver than  he, as his  heroism during the War proved. It is simply lack of  tennis confidence.  It

is an over abundance of temperament. In  victory Gobert is  invincible, in defeat he is apt to be almost

mediocre. 

Gobert is delightful personally. His quick wit and sense of  humour  always please the tennis public. His

courteous manner and  genial  sportsmanship make him universally popular. His stroke  equipment is

unsurpassed in the tennis world. 

I unqualifiedly state that I consider him the most perfect tennis  player, as regards strokes and footwork, in the

world today; but  he  is, not the greatest player. Victory is the criterion of a  match  player, and Gobert has not

proved himself a great victor. 

Gobert is probably the finest indoor player in the world, while  he  is very great on hard courts; but his grass

play is not the  equal of  many others. I heartily recommend Gobert's style to all  students of  the game, and

endorse him as a model for strokes. 

W. LAURENTZ 

Another brilliant, erratic and intensely interesting figure that  France has given the tennis world is Laurentz,

the wonderful  young  player, who, at the age of seventeen defeated A. F.  Wilding. 

Laurentz is a cyclonic hitter of remarkable speed and brilliance,  but prone to very severe lapses. His service is

of several  varieties,  all well played. He uses an American twist as his  regular delivery,  but varies it with a

sharp slice, a reverse  twist of great spin, and a  fast cannonball smash. Laurentz is  very versatile. He has

excellent  orthodox drives, fore and  backhand, and a competent forehand chop. 

His volleying is brilliant almost beyond description, but very  erratic. He is very fast on his feet, and

anticipates remarkably  well. He will make the most hairraising volleys, only to fall  down  inexplicably the

next moment on an easy shot. His overhead  is like his  volley, severe, brilliant, but uncertain. 

Laurentz is a very hard worker, and, unlike Gobert, is always at  his best when behind. He is a fair fighter and

a great match  player.  His defeats are due more to overanxiety than to lack of  fight. He is  temperamental,

sensational, and brilliant, a  sportsman of the highest  type, quick to recognize his opponent's  good work and to

give full  credit for it. He is one of the most  interesting players now before  the public. 

He is a clever court general but not a great tennis thinker,  playing more by instinct than by a really deeplaid

plan of  campaign.  Laurentz might beat anyone in the world on his day or  lose to the  veriest dub when at his

worst.[1] 

[1] It was with deepest regret the news of his death reached us,  as this edition went to press. 

J. SAMAZIEUHL 

The New French Champion of 1921 who defeated Andre Gobert most  unexpectedly in the challenge round, is

an interesting player of  the  mental type. He is anything but French in his game. His style  is  rather that of the

crafty American or English player than the  hardhitting Frenchman. 


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Samazieuhl is an exponent of crafty patball. His service is a  medium pace slice, well placed but not decisive.

His ground  strokes  are a peculiar stiff arm chop varied at times with an  equally cramped  drive, yet his

extreme mobility allows him to  cover a tremendous  amount of court, while his return, which is  well

disguised, is capable  of great angles. His volleying is  reliable but lacks severity and  punch. He makes

excellent low  volleys, but cannot put away shoulder  high balls while his  overhead is not deadly. 

It is Samazieuhl's clever generalship and his ability to recover  seemingly impossible shots that win matches

for him. He is a  comparatively new tournament player, and should improve greatly  as he  gains confidence

and experience. 

R. DANET 

One of the most interesting young players in France is R. Danet,  who has come to the fore in the past few

years. This boy, for he  is  little more, has a hard hitting brilliant game of great  promise. 

His service is a speedy slice. He drives with great speed, if as  yet with none too much accuracy, off both fore

and backhand. His  net  attack is very severe while overhead he is deadly. His speed  of foot  is remarkable, and

he is a very hard worker. His  limitations are in  his lack of a set plan of attack and the  steady adherence to any

given  method of play. He throws away too  many easy chances, but this will  correct itself as time goes on  and

Danet has fought through more  tournaments. I consider him a  player of great promise. 

Max Decugis and Brugnon, the two remaining members of the 1920  Davis Cup team of France, present

totally different types.  Decugis,  crafty, cool, and experienced, is the veteran of many  long seasons of  match

play. He is a master tactician, and wins  most of his matches by  outgeneralling the other player. Burgnon  is

brilliant, flashy, hard  hitting, erratic, and inexperienced.  He is very young, hardly twenty  years of age. He has

a fine  forehitting style and excellent net  attack, but lacks confidence  and a certain knowledge of tennis

fundamentals. A few years'  experience will do wonders for him. 

The French style of play commends itself to me very highly. I  enjoy watching the wellexecuted strokes,

beautiful mobile  footwork  of these dashing players. It is more a lack of dogged  determination to  win, than in

any stroke fault that one finds the  reason for French  defeats. The temperamental genius of this great  people

carries with it  a lack of stability that can be the only  explanation for the sudden  crushing and unexpected

defeats their  representatives receive on the  tennis courts. 

I was particularly impressed during my visit to France by the  large numbers of children playing tennis and the

style of game  displayed. The sport shows a healthy increase and should produce  some  fine players within the

next ten years. 

Keen competition is the corrective measure for temperamental  instability and with the advent of many new

players in French  tennis  I would not be surprised to see a marked decrease of  unexpected  defeats of their

leading players. 

Japan 

A new element has entered the tennis world in the last decade.  The  Orient has thrust its shadow over the

courts in the persons  of a small  group of remarkable tennis players, particularly  Ichija Kumagae and  Zenzo

Shimidzu, the famous Japanese stars. 

Kumagae, who for some years reigned supreme in Japan and  Honolulu,  has lived in America for the past

three years. Shimidzu  is a product  of Calcutta, where he has lived for some years. 


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No player has caused more discussion than Kumagae, unless it is  Shimidzu; while surely no man received

more critical comment than  Shimidzu, except Kumagae. The press of America and England have  vied  with

each other in exploiting these two men. There was  unanimity of  opinion concerning these two men in one

respect. No  finer sportsmen  nor more delightful opponents can be found than  these Japanese. They  have won

the respect and friendship of all  who have met them. 

Kumagae is the speedier tennis player. He came to America in  1916,  the possessor of a wonderful forehand

drive and nothing  else. Kumagae  is left handed, which made his peculiar shots all  the harder to  handle. He

met with fair success during the year;  his crowning triumph  was his defeat of W. M. Johnston at Newport  in

five sets. He lost to  J. J. Armstrong, Watson M. Washburn, and  George M. Church. He learned  much during

his year in America, and  returned to Japan a wiser man,  with a firm determination to add  to his tennis

equipment. 

In 1917 Kumagae returned to America to enter business in New  York.  Once established there he began

developing his game. First  he learned  an American twist service and then strengthened his  backhand. That

year he suffered defeat at the hands of Walter T.  Hayes and myself. He  was steadily improving. He now

started  coming to the net and learning  to volley. He is not yet a good  low volleyer, and never will be while  he

uses the peculiar grip  common to his people; but his high volleying  and overhead are now  excellent. Last year

Kumagae reached his top form  and was ranked  third in America. His defeats were by Johnston, Vincent

Richards,  and myself; while he defeated Murray, S. H. Voshell, Vincent  Richards, and me, as well as

countless players of less note. 

The season of 1920 found Kumagae sweeping all before him, since  Johnston, Williams, Garland, and I were

away on the Davis Cup  trip.  Williams barely defeated him in a bitter match, just  previously to  sailing.

Kumagae left America in the middle of the  summer to compete  in the Olympic games, representing Japan. 

Kumagae is still essentially a baseline player of marvellous  accuracy of shot and speed of foot. His drive is a

lethal weapon  that  spreads destruction among his opponents. His backhand is a  severe  "poke," none too

accurate, but very deadly when it goes  in. His  service overhead and high volley are all severe and  reliable.

His low  volley is the weak spot in an otherwise great  game. Kumagae cannot  handle a chop, and dislikes

grasscourt  play, as the ball bounds too  low for his peculiar "loop" drive.  He is one of the greatest  hardcourt

players in the world, and  one of the most dangerous  opponents at any time on any surface. 

Shimidzu is today as dangerous as Kumagae. He, too, is a  baseline  player, but lacks Kumagae's terrific

forehand drive.  Shimidzu has a  superior backhand to Kumagae, but his weak service  rather offsets  this. His

low volleying is far superior to  Kumagae, while his high  volleying and overhead are quite his  equal. He has

all the fighting  qualities in his game that make  Kumagae so dangerous, but he has not  had the experience.

Shimidzu  learns very quickly, and I look to see  him a great factor in the  game in future years. 

Both Shimidzu and Kumagae are marvellous court coverers, and seem  absolutely untiring. They are "getters"

of almost unbelievable  activity, and accurate to a point that seems uncanny. Both men  hit to  the lines with a

certainty that makes it very dangerous to  attempt to  take the net on anything except a deep forcing shot  that

hurries them. 

With such players as Kumagae and Shimidzu, followed by S. Kashio  and K. Yamasaki, and the late H.

Mikami, Japan is a big factor in  future tennis. 1922 will again see Japan challenging for the  Davis  Cup, and

none but a firstclass team can stop them. The  advent of a  Japanese team with such players will mean that

this  year we must call  out our best to repel the Oriental invasion: so  competition receives  another stimulus

that should raise our  standard of play. 


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The probability of journeying to Japan to challenge for the Davis  Cup is not so remote but that we must

consider it as a future  possibility. 

CHAPTER XV. SPAIN AND THE CONTINENT

Spain 

A new factor entered the arena of world tennis in 1921 in the  appearance of a Spanish Davis Cup team.

Among their number is a  star  who bids fair to become one of the greatest players the  world has ever  seen. A

scintillating personality, brilliant  versatile game, and  fighting temperament placed this young  unknown in the

first rank in  one year of competition. 

MANUEL ALONZO 

Seldom have I seen such wonderful natural abilities as are found  in this young Spaniard. Here is a player par

excellence if he  develops as he gives promise. Alonzo is young, about 25, slight,  attractive in personality and

court manners, quick to the point  of  almost miraculous court covering. He is a great attraction at  any

tournament. 

His service is a fairly fast American twist. It is not remarkable  but is at least more severe than the average

continental  delivery. 

Alonzo has a terrific forehand drive that is the closest rival to  W. M. Johnston's of any shot I have seen. He is

reliable on this  stroke, either straight or crosscourt from the deep court but if  drawn in to midcourt is apt to

miss it. His backhand is a flat  drive, accurate and low but rather slow and in the main  defensive. 

His volleying is at once a joy and a disappointment. Such  marvellous angles and stop volleys off difficult

drives! Yet  immediately on top of a dazzling display Alonzo will throw away  the  easiest sort of a high volley

by a pitiable fluke. 

His overhead is at once severe, deadly and reliable. He smashes  with speed and direction. It is not only in his

varied stroke  equipment that Alonzo is great but in his marvellous footwork.  Such  speed of foot and lightning

turning I have never before seen  on a  tennis court. He is a quicker man than Norman E. Brookes and  higher

praise I cannot give. I look to see Alonzo, who today  loses matches  through lack of resource, become by

virtue of  experience and  tournament play the greatest player on the  continent. 

His brother, J. M. Alonzo, although nowhere in Manuel's class, is  a fine all court player as are Count de

Gomar and Flaquer, the  remaining members of the Cup team. If Alonzo and his teammates  are an  indication

of the type of players Spain is developing a  new and  powerful factor in the tennis world is entering the field

to stay. 

Some Other Champions 

There are some individual players of interest from the countries  where tennis as a game has not reached a

place worthy of national  analysation but who deserve mention among the great players of  the  world. 

First among them comes Nicholas Mishu of Rumania. 

N. MISHU 


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What can I say of Mishu? As a tennis player he defies analysis.  His game is a freak. He adores to do the

unusual and his game  abounds  in freak shots that Mishu executes with remarkable skill.  He has many  and

varied services, underhand cuts, fore and  backhand, a "push" off  his nose, and even one serve where he  turns

his back on the court and  serves the ball back over his  head. 

His drives are cramped in swing and hit with excessive top spin.  His footwork is a defiance of all rules. His

volleying game looks  like an accident, yet Mishu produces results. In 1921 he beat A.  H.  Gobert in the

World's Hard Court Championship at St. Cloud.  Mishu is a  winner. I don't know how he does it but he does.

He is  above all a  unique personality. Cheery, individual, at times  eccentric, Mishu is a  popular figure in

tournaments abroad. He  plays with a verve and  abandon that appeals to the European  galleries while his droll

humour  and good nature make him a  delightful opponent. 

J. WASHER 

Belgium is represented by J. Washer, my opponent in the final  round of the Hard Court Championship of the

World in 1921. Washer  is  a fine orthodox tennis player. His service is a well placed  twist  delivery of medium

pace. He has a terrific forehand drive  that gains  in effectiveness owing to the fact he is a  lefthander. Like so

many  players with a pronounced strength, he  covers up an equally pronounced  weakness by using the

strength.  Washer has a very feeble backhand for  so fine a player. He pokes  his backhand when he is unable to

run  around it. 

His overhead is strong, speedy and reliable. His volleying lacks  punch and steadiness. He has had little

tournament experience and  shows promise of great improvement if given the opportunity. 

E. TEGNER 

Denmark is represented by a player of promise and skill in the  person of E. Tegner. This young star defeated

W. H. Laurentz at  St.  Cloud in the Hard Court Championship of the World in 1921  when the  latter was

holder of the title. 

Tegner is a baseline player of fine style. His strokes are long  free drives of fine pace and depth. His service is

hardly  adequate  for first flight tennis, yet while his ground game  cannot make up for  the lack of aggression in

his net attack.  Tegner is not of  championship quality at the moment but his youth  allows him plenty of  time

to acquire that tournament experience  needed to fill in the gaps  in his game. He is a cool, clever  court general

and should develop  rapidly within the next few  years. 

H. L. DE MORPURGO 

The Italian champion, H. L. de Morpurgo, is a product of his own  country and England where he attended

college. He is a big, rangy  man  of great strength. He uses a terrific service of great speed  but  little control on

his first ball and an exaggerated American  twist on  the second of such extreme contortion that even his  great

frame wears  down under it. 

His ground game is of flat drives that lack sufficient pace and  accuracy to allow him to reap the full benefit of

his really  excellent net attack. His volleying is very good owing to his  great  reach. His overhead, like his

service, is hard but erratic.  Unfortunately he is slow on his feet and thus loses much of the  advantage of his

large reach. He seems to lack confidence in his  game  but that should come with more experience. 

A. ZERLENDI 


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Tennis in Greece. No! not in ancient times but in modern, for  that  little country has a remarkable little

baseline star, by  name A.  Zerlendi. This man is a baseliner of the most pronounced  type. He gets  everything

he can put his racquet to. He reminds me  irresistibly of  Mavrogordato, seemingly reaching nothing yet they

all come back. I  cannot adequately analyse his game because his  first principle is to  put back the ball no

matter how, and this  he carries into excellent  effect. Zerlendi is a match winner  first and a stylist second. 

CHAPTER XVI. THE COLONIES

Australasia 

The death of that sterling sportsman, Anthony F. Wilding, and the  natural decline in the playing powers of

Norman E. Brookes, owing  to  the advance of years and his war experiences, leave  Australasia  (Australia and

New Zealand) in a somewhat uncertain  condition  regarding its tennis prospects. 

NORMAN E. BROOKES 

Volumes have been written about N. E. Brookes and his tennis  genius, but I would not feel right if I could not

pay at least a  slight tribute to the greatest tennis player and genius of all  time. 

There is no need to dwell on Brookes' shots, his marvellous  mechanical perfection, his peculiar volleying

style, his uncanny  anticipation. All these are too well known to need my feeble  description. They are but the

expression of that wonderful brain  and  dominant personality that lie behind that sphinx like face  we know

as  Brookes'. 

To see across the net those everrestless, evermoving eyes,  picking the openings in my never too well

guarded court, and  know  that against me is pitted the greatest tennis, brain of the  century,  is to call upon me

to produce my best. That is what my  match with  Brookes meant to me, and still does today. Brookes  should

be an  inspiration to every tennis player, for he has  proved the power of  mind over matter in tennis: "Age

cannot  wither nor custom stale his  infinite variety." 

Brookes is the most eminently just man on a tennis court I have  ever met, for no excitement or emotion

clouds his eyesight or  judgment in decisions. He cannot abide bad decisions, yet he  hates  them quite as much

when they favour him as when they are  against him.  I admit frankly I am a great admirer of Brookes,

personally and from  every tennis sense. He is a master that I as  a student of the game  feel proud to study

under. 

GERALD PATTERSON 

Australia's leading player, Gerald Patterson, is one of the most  remarkable combinations of tennis virtues and

tennis faults, I  have  ever seen. 

Patterson has a wonderful service. He has speed, direction,  control, and all kinds of twist. He hits his service

consistently  hard and puts it in. His overhead is the most remarkable in the  game.  He can kill from any place

in the court. His, shot is  clean, with  little effort, yet carries terrific speed. His  volleying above the net  is

almost faultless on his forehand. He  has an excellent forehand  drive that is very severe and  consistent, but his

backhand . . . Where  in all the rest of  tennis history was there a firstclass man with a  backhand so

fundamentally wrong? His grip is bad, he pulls up on the  ball and  "loops" it high in the air. I do not mean

Patterson always  misses  his backhand. He does not. He even makes remarkable shots off  it  at times, but, if

Patterson is pressed, his backhand is the first  portion of his game to crack, because it is hit inherently wrong. 


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Patterson relies mainly on speed to win matches. He is not a  strategist, and finesse is not part of his tennis

equipment. He  has a  magnificent physique, and relies largely on his, strength  to carry him  through a long

match and win in the end. 

He is very quiet, and inclined to be somewhat careless on the  court, unless pressed, when his businesslike,

determined play  shows  what a great match player Patterson can become. He produces  his best  game at the

crucial moment of the match. Patterson is a  superior match  player to his real tennis ability. His is not  truly a

topnotch game.  It has superlative features, but its  whole texture is not of the  finest. 

Patterson owes much of his success in 1919 to Brookes, under  whose  guidance he played. The absence of the

master mind  directing his  attack proved a decided handicap in 1920, and  Patterson's attack was  not so certain

nor sustained as in the  previous season. Patterson's  game plus Brookes' strategy would be  a great combination

in one man. 

PAT O'HARA WOOD 

This young Australian is one of the greatest doubles players in  the world and bids fair to press the leading

singles stars close. 

Pat O'Hara Wood is a player without a weakness, yet also one  without a strength. He is a typical all court

player with no  outstanding feature to his game unless it be his volleying. Pat  Wood  has a natural aptitude for

doubles which at times seriously  interferes  with his singles game. 

His service is a well placed speedy slice that he mixes up well.  It is not a great delivery but very effective.

His ground  strokes,  taken on the rising bounces, are flat drives, accurate  and varied as  to direction but lacking

punch. He does not hit  hard enough. He is a  brilliant volleyer, cutting off at sharp  angles the hardest drives.

His overhead is erratic. At times he  is deadly overhead but is prone  to lapses into uncertainty. He is

remarkably quick and speedy of foot.  His sense of anticipation is  magnificent. His generalship good, though

not brilliant. It is  lack of punch, the inability to put the ball  away, that keeps Pat  O'Hara Wood from the first

flight in singles. 

Clever, blessed with a keen sense of humour, a sterling sportsman  and delightful opponent, Pat O'Hara Wood

is a big asset to tennis  and  a man who is needed in the game. 

J. C. HAWKES 

The youngest of the Australasian players and a boy of great  promise is Jack Hawkes. He is only 22 and young

in the game for  his  age. 

Let me state now I do not approve of Hawkes' style. His footwork  is wrong, hopelessly wrong and I fear that

unless he corrects it,  it  may keep him from attaining the place his natural abilities  promise.  "Austral," the

famous critic, describes him as "having  the genius of  the game." 

Jack Hawkes has an exaggerated American twist service that, since  he is a lefthander, places an unnecessary

strain on his heart  muscles. It carries terrific twist but little speed and does not  Pay  him for the amount of

energy he expends. 

His forehand drive is excellent, fast, deep, and well placed, yet  in making this he steps away from the ball,

again wasting energy.  His  backhand is a poke and very unreliable. To save it he runs  around  everything

possible, again causing unnecessary exertion.  His volleying  is brilliant while his overhead is magnificent. 


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Hawkes' waste of energy has cost him many a match, yet for all  the  inherent defects in his game he is so

clever in using what he  has, his  tactics are so good for so young a player that I believe  he will be  one of the

leading players of the world in a few  years. Under the  watchful eyes of Norman Brookes I foresee Hawkes

changing his footwork  to at least a reasonable copy of the old  master. 

J. O. ANDERSON 

This young player is again a promise rather than a star. He is a  big, rangy, hardhitting type like Gerald

Patterson. He is crude,  at  times careless and unfortunately handicapped in 1920 and 1921  by a  severe illness

that only allowed him to resume play in the  middle of  the latter year. His ground strokes are flat drives  fore

and backhand.  His forehand is a particularly fine shot. He  hits it with a short  sharp snap of his arm that

imparts great  speed and yet hides the  direction. His backhand is defensive. His  volleying clever, accurate  but

soft. His overhand severe and  reliable. His service flat, fast and  dangerous. 

He needs finesse, experience and season, with which he may well  become one of the greatest players as the

fundamental  potentialities  are there. 

NORMAN PEACH 

The steady baseline game of England has its exponent in Australia  in Norman Peach. He has a beautiful

driving game, with adequate  but  not severe service, that one finds so much in England. At  times Peach  will

advance to the net but his volleying and  overhead are secondary  to his baseline game. He is not a great  tennis

player but is certainly  one of high standard of play. He  is just below the first flight in  Australia. 

R. V. Thomas is one of the finest doubles players in the world as  is amply attested by his win of the world's

title in 1919 with  Pat  O'Hara Wood and their two successive wins of the Australian  Championship in

191920. Thomas with his hardhitting off the  ground,  and his brilliant volleying is a fine foil for Pat Wood's

steady  accuracy. 

Just a word about one veteran, a good friend of mine, who is  again  playing fine tennis, Rodney L. Heath, hero

of the famous  Davis Cup  match in 1911 when he defeated W. A. Larned, is again  in the game. 

Heath with his long beautiful groundstrokes, forehand, or  backhand, his incisive crisp volleys and fine,

generalship based  on  young experience, is a notable figure in the tennis world. 

The mantle of Wilding and Brookes must fall on the shoulders of a  really great player. Who it will be is hard

to say at present. No  outstanding figure looms on the horizon at the time of writing. 

South Africa 

The 1920 South African Davis Cup team players, following their  disastrous defeat by Holland, journeyed to

England for the  Championship and following tournaments, and I had the opportunity  of  studying three

players of great promise. The remaining two  were  excellent, but hardly as exceptional as the former. 

Charles Winslow, the leading player in the team, has a remarkable  versatile game. He uses a high, bounding

service of good speed,  which  at times he follows to the net. His best ground stroke is a  severe  chop, not

unlike Wallace F. Johnson. He has a good drive  both forehand  and backhand, which he only uses when

pressed or in  attempting to pass  a net man. He volleys very well, and covers  the net quickly. His  overhead is

very severe, steady, and  reliable. He is a fine natural  player just below the top flight.  He is an excellent

strategist, and  mixes his shots very well. He  has exceptionally fast footwork, and  repeatedly runs around his

backhand to chop diagonally across the  court in a manner very  similar to Johnson. 


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B. I. C. Norton, the South African champion, a youngster of  twenty, is a phenomenal player of extreme

brilliancy. He has  everything in stroke equipment, drives, slices, volleys, and a  fine  service and overhead.

Unfortunately Norton regards his  tennis largely  as a joke. His judgment is therefore faulty, and  he is apt to

loaf on  the court. He tries the most impossible  shots that sometimes go in;  and in the main, his court

generalship is none too good. 

He is an irrepressible boy, and his merry smile and chatter make  him a tremendous favourite with the gallery.

He has a very strong  personality that should carry him a long way. 

Louis Raymond, the lefthanded star of the South Africans, has an  excellent ground game coupled with a

good service and fair  volleying  and overhead. His game is not remarkable. He is a  hardworking,  deserving

player who attains success by industry  rather than natural  talent. His judgment is sound and methods of  play

orthodox, except for  a tendency to run around his backhand. 

C. R. Blackbeard, the youngest member of the team, and G. H.  Dodd,  its captain, are both very excellent

players of the second  flight.  Blackbeard is very young, not yet twenty, and may develop  into a star.  At present

he chops too much, and is very erratic.  .  .  .  .  .  .  . 

There are many other players whom I would analyse if I had the  time or space; but in these days of paper

shortage and ink  scarcity,  conservation is the keynote of the times. 

Let me turn for a few moments to the women whose fame in the  tennis world is the equal of the men I have

been analysing. 

CHAPTER XVII. FAMOUS WOMEN PLAYERS

Women's Tennis 

The great boom that featured the whole tennis season of 1921 in  America found one of its most remarkable

manifestations in the  increased amount of play, higher standard of competition and  remarkable growth of

public interest in women's tennis. 

England has led, and still leads, the world in women's tennis.  The  general standard of play is on a higher scale

and there is  more  tournament play in England than elsewhere. France, with  Mlle. Suzanne  Lenglen, Mme.

Billout (Mlle. Brocadies) and Mme.  Golding, forces  England closely for European supremacy, but until

recent years  America, except for individuals, has been unable to  reach the standard  of women's tennis found

abroad. 

Miss May Sutton, now Mrs. Thomas H. Bundy, placed American  colours  in the field by her wonderful

performances in winning the  World's  Championship at Wimbledon more than a decade ago, but  after her

retirement America was forced to content itself with  local honors. 

Neither Miss Mary Browne nor Miss Hazel Hotchkiss, now Mrs.  George  Wightman, followed Mrs. May

Sutton Bundy in her European  invasion, so  the relative ability of our champions and Mrs.

LambertChambers of  England or Mlle. Brocadies of France could  not be judged. Mrs. Molla  Bjurstedt

Mallory followed Miss Browne  as the outstanding figure in  American tennis when the wonderful

Norsewoman took the championship in  1915. Miss Browne, then  holder of the title, did not compete, so their

relative ability  could not be decided. Throughout the period from 1900  to 1919 the  woman's championship

event had been held annually in June.  The  result was that the blue ribbon event was over so early in the

season that the incentive for play during July and August died a  natural death. 


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Finally in 1920, at the request of the Women's Committee,  particularly on the advice of Mrs. George

Wightman, the national  champion, and Miss Florence Ballin of New York, under whose able  guidance the

entire schedule was drawn up, the United States Lawn  Tennis Association moved the Women's

Championship to September.  Miss  Ballin, following the successful system used in the men's  events,

organized a schedule that paralleled the big fixtures on  the men's  schedule and placed in operation "a circuit,"

as it is  called, that  provided for tournaments weekly from May to  September. Miss Ballin,  together with Mrs.

Wightman, organised  junior tournaments for girls  under 18, along the lines used for  the boys' events. The

response was  immediate. Entry lists, which  in the old days were in "the teens,"  jumped to the thirties or

forties, in the regular events. Young girls  who, up to now, had  not played tournaments, fearing they lacked

the  necessary class,  rushed to play in the Junior girls' events. From this  latter  class came such a promising

young star of today as Miss Martha  Bayard, who bids fair to be national champion at some not distant  date. 

It was a tremendous task of organization that Miss Ballin and her  assistants undertook, but they did it in a

most efficient manner.  Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt Mallory lent her invaluable assistance by  playing in as many

tournaments as possible. She was a magnet that  drew the other players in her wake with an irresistible force. 

1920 saw Mrs. Mallory's first invasion of Europe since her  American triumphs. Misfortune was her portion.

She was ill before  sailing and, never at her best on shipboard, a bad voyage  completed  the wreck of her

condition. She had little time for  practice in  England and it was a player far below her best who  went down to

crushing de feat at the hands of Mrs.  LambertChambers in the semi  final round of the World's

Championship at Wimbledon. 

Defeated but not discouraged, Mrs. Mallory returned to America  and, again reaching her true form, won the

championship with  ease.  She made up her mind the day of her defeat in England that  1921 would  again find

her on European courts. 

The season of 1921 in America opened in a blaze of tournaments  throughout the entire country. Mrs. Mallory

showed early in the  year  she was at her best by winning the Indoor Championship of  the United  States from

one of the most representative fields ever  gathered  together for this event. 

Early May found Mrs. Mallory on the seas bound for France and  England. The story of her magnificent, if

losing, struggle in  both  countries is told elsewhere in this book, but she sailed for  home  recognised abroad as

one of the great players of the world,  a thing  which many of the foreign critics had not acknowledged  the

previous  year. 

The trip of the American team to France, and particularly the  presence of Mrs. Mallory, coupled with the

efforts of the  Committee  for Devastated France, finally induced Mile. Suzanne  Lenglen, the  famous French

World's Champion, to consent to come  to America. The  announcement of her decision started a boom in  the

game that has been  unequalled. Out in California, Mrs. May  Sutton Bundy and Miss Mary  Kendall Browne,

our former champions,  heard the challenge and, laying  aside the duties of everyday  life, buckled on the

armour of the courts  and journeyed East to  do battle with the French wonder girl. Mrs.  Mallory, filled with  a

desire to avenge her defeat in France, sailed  for home in time  to play in the American championship. 

What a marvelous tournament this proved to be! In very truth it  was a World's Championship. Mrs. May

Sutton Bundy, former world's  champion, back again after fifteen years with all her old charm  of  manner,

much of her speed of shot and foot, and even more  cunning and  experience; Miss Mary K. Browne, brilliant,

fascinating, clever Mary,  with all her oldtime personality and  game that three times had  carried her to the

highest honors in  American tennis; Mrs. Mallory,  keen, determined and resourceful,  defending the title she

had held so  long and well; the young  players, rising in the game, struggling to  attain the heights,  and finally

looming over all the figure of the  famous French  champion of champions, Suzanne Lenglen, considered by

many  competent critics the greatest woman tennis player of all time. 


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The stage was set for the sensational, and for once it occurred.  The God of Luck took a hand in the blind

draw and this resulted  in  all the stars, with the exception of Miss Mary Browne, falling  in one  half. Mile.

Suzanne Lenglen was drawn against Miss Eleanor  Goss, while  Mrs. Mallory met Mrs. Marion Zinderstein

Jessop, her  famous rival, in  the first round, with the winners of these  matches to play each other  in the

second. 

Unfortunately illness prevented Mile. Lenglen from sailing at her  appointed time. She arrived in America but

one day before the  tournament was to start. The officials of the United States Lawn  Tennis Association

wisely granted Mile. Lenglen another day's  grace  by holding her match with Miss Goss until Tuesday. Mrs.

Mallory,  playing brilliantly, crushed Mrs. Jessop on Monday. 

Then came the deluge! Miss Goss, taken suddenly ill, was forced  to  default to Mlle. Lenglen on Tuesday and

Mrs. Mallory was  called upon  to meet the great French player in Mlle. Lenglen's  first American  appearance. 

There is no question but what it was a terribly hard position for  Mlle. Lenglen. Mrs. Mallory was physically

and mentally on the  crest.  She had lived for this chance ever since Mlle. Lenglen had  defeated  her at St.

Cloud in June. Now it was hers and she  determined to make  the most of it. 

The two women stepped on the court together. Mlle. Lenglen was  obviously and naturally nervous. Mrs.

Mallory was quietly, grimly  confident. Her whole attitude said "I won't be beaten." Every one  of  the 10,000,

spectators felt it and joined with her in her  determination. It was an electric current between the gallery and

the  player. I felt it and am sure that Mlle. Lenglen must have  done so  too. It could not fail to impress her. The

match opened  with Mrs.  Mallory serving. From the first ball, the American  champion was  supreme. Such

tennis I have never seen and I verily  believe it will  never be seen again. The French girl was playing  well.

She was as good  as when she defeated Mrs. Mallory in France  or Miss Ryan in England,  but this time she

was playing a  superwoman who would not miss. One  cannot wonder her nerves,  naturally overwrought,

broke under the  strain. 

Mrs. Mallory, in an exhibition of faultless, flawless tennis, ran  through the first set 62. It was at this point

Mlle. Lenglen  made  her mistake. 

She had trouble getting her breath and was obviously feeling the  strain of her tremendous exertions. She

defaulted the match! Mrs.  Mallory walked from the court conqueror, clearly the superior of  the  much vaunted

world's champion. 

It is regrettable Mlle. Lenglen defaulted, for if she had played  out the match, everyone would have made full

allowance for her  defeat, due, it would be said, to natural reaction from her  recent  sea journey. No one would

have been quicker to make  allowance for  Mlle. Lenglen than Mrs. Mallory herself. The whole  tennis public

deeply regretted an incident that might well have  been avoided. 

Mrs. Mallory was the woman of the hour. She marched on to victory  and successfully defended her title by

virtue of victories over  Mrs.  May Sutton Bundy in the semifinal and Miss Mary Browne in  the final. 

Marvellous Molla! World's Champion in 1921 beyond shadow of  dispute! 

It is deplorable that the quite natural reaction and nervous  upset, coupled with a return of her bronchial

illness, forced  Mlle.  Lenglen to return to France before she was able to play her  exhibition  tour for the

Committee for Devastated France. Possibly  1922 will find  conditions more favorable and the Gods of Fate

will smile on the  return of Mlle. Lenglen to America. 

MRS. FRANKLIN I. MALLORY  (Molla Bjurstedt) 


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One of the most remarkable personalities in the tennis world is  Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, the American

Champion and actually  Champion of the World, 1921. 

Mrs. Mallory is a Norsewoman by birth. She came to America in  1915. In 1919 she married Franklin I.

Mallory, and thus became an  American citizen. 

It is a remarkable game which Mrs. Mallory has developed. She has  no service of real value. Her overhead is

nil, her volleying is  mediocre; but her marvellous forehand and backhand drives,  coupled  with the wonderful

courtcovering ability and fighting  spirit that  have made her worldfamous, allow her to rise above  the

inherent  weaknesses of those portions of her game and defeat  in one season all  the greatest players in the

world, including  Mlle. Suzanne Lenglen. 

Mrs. Mallory, with delightful smile, never failing sportsmanship  and generosity in victory or defeat, is one of

the most popular  figures in tennis. 

MRS. THOMAS C. BUNDY (May Sutton) 

It is said "they never come back," but Mrs. May Sutton Bundy has  proved that at least one great athlete is an

exception to the  saying.  Fifteen years ago, May Sutton ruled supreme among the  women tennis  stars of the

world. 

In 1921 Mrs. May Sutton Bundy, mother of four children, after a  retirement of over a I decade, returned to

the game when Mlle.  Lenglen announced her intention of invading America. If Mlle.  Lenglen's visit to our

shores did nothing more than bring Mrs.  Bundy  and Miss Browne back to us, it was well worth while. 

Mrs. Bundy in 1921 was still a great player. She has a peculiar  reverse twist service, a wonderful forehand

drive, but with  excessive  top spin, a queer backhand poke, a fine volley and a  reliable  overhead. Much of her

old aggressiveness and speed of  foot are still  hers. She retains all of her famous fighting  spirit and

determination,  while she is even more charming and  delightful than of old. She is a  remarkable woman, who

stands for  all that is best in the game. 

MARY KENDALL BROWNE 

The return of another former National Champion in 1921 in the  person of Mary K. Browne, who held the title

in 1912, '13 and  '14,  brought us again a popular idol. The tennis public has  missed Miss  Browne since 1914

and her return was in the nature of  a personal  triumph. 

Mary Browne has the best produced tennis game of any American  woman. It is almost if not quite the equal

in stroke technique of  Suzanne Lenglen. She has a fast flat service. Her ground strokes  are  clean, flat drives

forehand and backhand. She volleys exactly  like  Billy Johnston. No praise can be higher. Her overhead is

decisive but  erratic. She couples this beautiful game with a  remarkable tennis head  and a wonderful fighting

spirit. 

Miss Browne is a trig and trim little figure on the court as she  glides over its surface. It is no wonder that her

public love  her. 

MRS. GEORGE WIGHTMAN (Hazel Hotchkiss) 

The woman to whom American tennis owes its greatest debt in  development is Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman,

National Champion 1909,  '10,  '11 and 1919. Mrs. Wightman has practically retired from  singles play.  Her

decision cost the game a wonderful player. She  has a well placed  slice service, a ground game that is


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essentially a chop fore and  backhand, although at times she  drives off her forehand. She volleys  remarkably.

She is the equal  of Mary Browne in this department, while  her overhead is the best  of any woman in the

game. 

Hazel Wightman is as clever a court general and tactician, man or  woman, as I have ever known. She has

forgotten more tennis than  most  of us ever learn. She is the Norman Brookes of woman's  tennis. 

It is not only in her game that Mrs. Wightman has stood for the  best in tennis, but she has given freely of her

time and ability  to  aid young players in the game. She made Marion Zinderstein  Jessop the  fine player she is.

Mrs. Wrightman is always willing  to offer sound  advice to any player who desires it. 

Mrs. Wightman and Miss Florence Ballin are the prime factors in  the new organization of woman's tennis

that has resulted in the  great  growth of the game in the past two years. 

MRS. JESSOP (Marion Zinderstein) 

There is no player in tennis of greater promise than Marion  Zinderstein Jessop. She has youth, a wonderful

game, the result  of a  sound foundation given her by Hazel Wightman, and a  remarkable amount  of experience

for so young a girl. She has a  beautiful fast service,  but erratic. Her ground game is  perfectly balanced, as

she chops or  drives from either side with  equal facility. She volleys with great  severity and certainty.  Her

overhead is possibly her weakest point.  She lacks the  confidence that her game really deserves. 

HELEN WILLS 

The most remarkable figure that has appeared on the horizon of  woman's tennis since Suzanne Lenglen first

flashed into the  public  eye, is little Helen Wills of California, Junior Champion  of 1921. She  is only fifteen.

Stocky, almost ungainly, owing to  poor footwork, her  hair in pigtails down her back, she is a  quaint little

person who  instantly walks into hearts of the  gallery. 

The tennis this child plays is phenomenal. She serves with the  power and accuracy of a boy. She drives and

chops forehand and  backhand with reckless abandon. She rushes to the net and kills  in a  way that is

reminiscent of Maurice McLoughlin. Suddenly she  dubs the  easiest sort of a shot and grins a happy grin.

There is  no doubt she  is already a great player. She should become much  greater. She is a  miniature Hazel

Wightman in her game. Above  all, she is that  remarkable combination, an unspoiled child and a  personality. 

There are many other players of real promise coming to the front.  Boston boasts of a group that contains Mrs.

Benjamin E. Cole  (Anne  Sheafe) who has made a great record in the season of 1921;  Miss Edith  Sigourney,

who accompanied Mrs. Mallory abroad, Miss  Leslie Bancroft  and Mrs. Godfree. There are Miss Martha

Bayard,  Miss Helen  Gilleandean, Mrs. Helene Pollak Folk, Miss Molly  Thayer, Miss Phyllis  Walsh and Miss

Anne Townsend in New York and  Philadelphia. 

France 

MLLE. SUZANNE LENGLEN 

There is no more unique personality, nor more remarkable player  among the women than Mademoiselle

Suzanne Lenglen, the famous  French  girl who holds the World's Championship title. Mlle.  Lenglen is a

remarkable figure in the sporting world. She has  personality,  individuality, and magnetism that hold the

public  interest. She is the  biggest drawing card in the tennis world. 


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Mlle. Lenglen's fame rests on her drive. Strange though it may  seem, her drive is the least interesting part of

her game. Mlle.  Lenglen uses a severe overhead service of good speed. It is a  remarkable service for a

woman, one which many men might do well  to  copy. Her famous forehand drive is a full arm swing from the

shoulder.  It meets the ball just as Mlle. Lenglen springs in the  air. The result  is pictorially unique, but not

good tennis. She  loses speed and power  by this freak. Her backhand is beautifully  played, from perfect

footwork, with a free swing and topped  drive. It is a remarkable  stroke. Her volleying is perfect in  execution

and result. She hits her  overhead smash freely with a  "punch" that is as great as many men. It  is as fine an

overhead  as that of Mrs. George Wightman, the American  Champion. 

Mlle. Lenglen's speed of foot is marvellous. She runs fast and  easily. She delights in acrobatic jumps, many

of them  unnecessary, at  all times during her play. She is a wonderful  gallery player, and wins  the popularity

that her dashing style  deserves. She is a brilliant  court general, conducting her attack  with a keen eye on both

the court  and the gallery. 

Mlle. Lenglen is not outstanding among the women players of the  world, in my opinion. She is probably the

best stroke player in  the  world today, yet Mrs. Lambert Chambers, Mrs. George  Wightman, Miss  Elizabeth

Ryan, Mrs. Franklin L. Mallory (formerly  Miss Molla  Bjurstedt), Miss Mary Browne, and Mrs. May Sutton

Bundy are all in her  class in match play. There is no woman  playing tennis that has the  powerful personality

of Mlle.  Lenglen. Her acrobatic style and grace  on the court form an  appeal no gallery can resist. Her very

mannerisms  fool people  into considering her far greater than she really is, even  though  she is a wonderful

player. 

MME. BILLOUTT (Mlle. Brocadies) 

Second only to Suzanne Lenglen in France is Mme. Billoutt,  formerly Mlle. Brocadies, once the idol of the

Paris tennis  public.  This remarkable player has as perfectly developed a game  as I have  seen. Her actual

stroking is the equal of Mlle.  Lenglen. Her strokes  are all orthodox, flat racquet ones. Her  ground game is

based wholly  on the drive, fore or backhand. She  has grown rather heavier in the  last few years and

consequently  slowed up, but she is still one of the  great players of the  world. 

England 

In marked contrast to the eccentricities of Mlle. Lenglen one  finds the delightfully polished style of Mrs.

Lambert Chambers.  Mrs.  Chambers has a purely orthodox game of careful execution  that any  student of the

game should recognize as the highest form  of tennis  strokes. 

Mrs. Chambers serves an overhead delivery of no particular  movement. She slices or "spoons" her ground

strokes, forehand or  backhand. She seldom volleys or smashes. Her only excursions to  the  net are when she is

drawn to the net. 

It is not Mrs. Chambers' game itself so much as what she does  with  it, that I commend so highly. Her change

of pace and  distance is  wonderfully controlled. Her accuracy marvellous. Her  judgment is  remarkable, and

the way in which she saves undue  exertion is an art in  itself. She gets a wonderful return for her  outlay of

effort. 

Hers is a personality of negation. Her manner on the court is  negative, her shots alone are positive. She is

never flustered,  and  rarely shows emotion. 

Mrs. Chambers is the "Mavro" of women as regards her recovering  ability. Her errors are reduced to a

minimum at all times. To err  is  human; but at times there is something very nearly inhuman  about Mrs.

Chambers' tennis. 


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ELIZABETH RYAN 

The EnglishAmerican star Elizabeth Ryan is another player of  marked individuality. Born in California,

Miss Ryan migrated to  England while quite young. For the past decade "Bunny," as she is  called, has been a

prominent figure in English and Continental  tournaments. 

Miss Ryan has a queer pushreverse twist service that is well  placed but carries little speed. She chops

viciously forehand and  backhand off the ground and storms the net at every opening. Her  volleying is crisp

and decisive. Overhead she is severe but  erratic.  She is a dogged fighter, never so dangerous as when  behind.

Her  tactics are aggressive attack at all times, and if  this fails she is  lost. 

Although Miss Ryan is an American by birth she must be considered  as an English player, for her

development is due to her play in  England. 

MRS. BEAMISH 

This English player is an exponent of the famous baseline game of  the country. She drives, long deep shots

fore and backhand,  corner  to corner, chasing her opponent around the court almost  impossible  distances.

Her service volleying and overhead are fair  but not  noteworthy. Another player of almost identical game and

of almost  equal class is Mrs. Peacock, Champion of India. Her  whole game is a  little better rounded than Mrs.

Beamish, but she  lacks the latter's  experience. 

Among the other women in England who are delightfully original in  their games are Mrs. Larcombe, the

wonderful chopstroke player,  whose clever generalship and tactics place her in the front rank,  and  Mrs.

M'Nair, with her volleying attack. 

Women's tennis in England is on a slightly higher plane at this  time than in America; but the standard of play

in America is  rapidly  coming up. International competition between women on the  lines of the  Davis Cup, for

which a trophy has previously been  offered by Lady  Wavertree in England, and in 1919 by Mrs.  Wightman in

America, and  twice refused by the International  Federation, would do more than any  other factor to place

women's  tennis on the high plane desired. This  plan has succeeded for the  men, why should it not do as well

for the  women? 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. The Art of Lawn Tennis, page = 4

   3. William T. Tilden, page = 4

   4. INTRODUCTION, page = 4

   5. PREFACE TO NEW EDITION, page = 6

6. PART I: TENNIS TECHNIQUE--STROKES AND FUNDAMENTALS OF THE GAME, page = 7

   7. CHAPTER I. FOR NOVICES ONLY, page = 7

   8. CHAPTER II. THE DRIVE, page = 12

   9. CHAPTER III. SERVICE, page = 14

   10. CHAPTER IV. THE VOLLEY AND OVERHEAD SMASH, page = 16

   11. CHAPTER V. CHOP, HALF VOLLEY, AND COURT POSITION, page = 20

12. PART II: THE LAWS OF TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY, page = 22

   13. CHAPTER VI. GENERAL TENNIS PSYCHOLOGY, page = 22

   14. CHAPTER VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF MATCH PLAY, page = 27

   15. CHAPTER VIII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PHYSICAL FITNESS, page = 31

   16. CHAPTER IX. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SINGLES AND DOUBLES, page = 34

17. PART III: MODERN TENNIS AND ITS FUTURE, page = 36

   18. CHAPTER X. THE GROWTH OF THE MODERN GAME, page = 36

   19. CHAPTER XI. THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF THE GAME, page = 44

20. PART IV: SOME SIDELIGHTS ON FAMOUS PLAYERS, page = 56

   21. INTRODUCTORY, page = 56

   22. CHAPTER XII. AMERICA, page = 58

   23. CHAPTER XIII. BRITISH ISLES, page = 63

   24. CHAPTER XIV. FRANCE AND JAPAN, page = 65

   25. CHAPTER XV. SPAIN AND THE CONTINENT, page = 69

   26. CHAPTER XVI. THE COLONIES, page = 71

   27. CHAPTER XVII. FAMOUS WOMEN PLAYERS, page = 74