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Sports

Right Sizing Memphis Sports and Venues

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The professional men’s and women’s tennis tournaments could be leaving the Racquet Club of Memphis next year for Rio de Janeiro. Big deal or, as one of our commenters succinctly put it, a big yawn?

In the big picture, this is all about “right-sizing” sports facilities and events, from the Racquet Club to AutoZone Park to Liberty Bowl Stadium to public playing fields, golf courses, and amateur sports complexes like First Tennessee Fields and Snowden Grove in DeSoto County. More on that in a minute.

First though, as someone who has played and watched tennis, racquetball, and squash at the Racquet Club for many years, I guess I should be in the “big deal” camp, but I’m not, at least not without qualifications. Teams and tournaments come and go, and this one is 36 years old and has gone by more names than an inmate in the county jail — U.S. Indoor, Volvo, Kroger, Regions Morgan Keegan to name a few. The women’s tournament, ten years old, was sponsorless this year.

If they are replaced, as seems likely, by a “lower-level” pro tournament, the average fan, not to mention the non-fan, won’t notice the difference. Case in point: Andy Roddick and Milos Raonic have been recent finalists in Memphis (a “500” tournament) and, a week earlier, San Jose (a “250” tournament). Above the satellite-tournament level, the strength of the field is determined by convenience as much as anything, and several big names have either failed to show up in Memphis or made an early exit.

The Racquet Club and the tournament are the legacy of William Dunavant Jr., founder of the club, cotton magnate, tennis player, but no longer actively involved in day-to-day Memphis. He sold the club to Mac Winker, who pledged to keep the tournament in Memphis, as indeed he did. Winker sold the club to Sharks Sports & Entertainment in San Jose, which reportedly plans to sell it to IMG, a sports marketing and management company with global connections.

Winker told me that in his early years as manager of the club, the tournament was supported by the club, but that flipped in the later years, and the tournament supported the club and its declining membership. He said his mantra was to make the tournament an event, with a St. Jude tie-in and as much fanfare and as many sponsors (bannered around the stadium court) as could be mustered. Tennis big-wigs such as Barry McKay and Donald Dell were regulars in the boxes, courtside seats were cherished, there was fancy food in the Walnut Room, and sport jackets and dresses were not uncommon for the packed finals. There was no competition from NBA basketball, and American players like Jimmy Connors, Andre Agassi, Jim Courier, Michael Chang, Brad Gilbert, Todd Martin, and Pete Sampras were among the Memphis champions and in the world Top Five.

There are more foreign players in the tournament these days, although Americans Roddick and Sam Querrey have also been recent winners along with Jurgen Melzer and Tommy Haas. But none of them are as well known as the tennis Big Four of Nadal, Federer, Djokovic, and Murray who dominate the Grand Slams.

The women’s tournament lost Cellular South as its title sponsor, and the prize money is less than the men get. The crowds for the women’s finals have been smaller, with the exception of Venus Williams matches. Overall, I think the twin tournaments suffer from “too much tennis” syndrome when you take into account split day and evening sessions, qualifying matches, singles and doubles, action on multiple courts, and $40-$60 tickets.

There is some fear among members that the Racquet Club itself could now be sold along with the tournaments. Giving credence to that, San Jose is clearly calling the shots. Tournament director Peter Lebedevs and Morgan Keegan managing partner Reggie Barnes both told me they got the news on Monday morning, like everyone else in Memphis. Lebedevs had just returned from a trip to Australia and said he couldn’t comment on a possible sale of the tournament. Allen Morgan Jr., one of the founding partners of Morgan Keegan, committed to the title sponsorship for six years and an additional year to fill the breach after the sale to Raymond James. He noted that he once tried unsuccessfully to buy the pro tournament in Atlanta. After a nine-year absence, the ATP tour returned to Atlanta in 2010, but the event is played in a smaller venue with less prize money than Memphis.

Winker, now retired, said he has been contacted by at least one company interested in putting several million dollars into another southern ATP tournament but declined to identify the company or location.

Racquet Club member and commercial real estate investor and developer Trip Trezevant thinks the future of the club is secure.

“If they (the owners) have $8 million in the club including renovations then that is now, just land cost, of $36 a foot which is too expensive for residential. The owners purchased the club to be a tennis club and I am certain that is what they will do. They have done a great job thus far on improving the club. I think we will end up getting a 250 series tennis tournament and still have the same players that we had for the 500 series and they probably got money selling the 500 series which will go back into the club to improve the club. Just a guess.”

While Winker was owner, some courts along White Station were replaced with housing, leaving the club with 11 indoor courts and 16 outdoor courts used by members and the University of Memphis.

To my eye at least, that may still be too many. I’ve seen too many empty outdoor courts on a beautiful weekend afternoon or empty indoor courts at times when they are being lighted and air-conditioned. The three racquetball courts are lightly used, and racquetball, once a Memphis institution, looks like a dying sport. As for squash, all I will say is that I helped bring the former number-one player in the world to Memphis a month ago and drew about five spectators to a free exhibition. These are not called minor sports for nothing.

It wasn’t my first sports miscalculation. Some years ago I got it in my head that outdoor basketball tournaments were a perfect fit for Memphis, but they died after a year or two downtown. Then I went through a baseball phase when my son was growing up and playing at Snowden Grove, USA Stadium in Millington, and Dulin’s academy. First Tennessee Fields filled that need, and there’s plenty of competition from baseball complexes in Jackson, Tennessee, and Jonesboro, Arkansas and Tipton County, Tennessee. AutoZone Park is too big for the Redbirds much less college or high school teams. I had a brief fling with soccer as an American fan favorite, but last week a game between the United States and El Salvador in Nashville, with an Olympics berth at stake, drew about 8,000 fans. And, briefly, I had hopes for the River Kings hockey team and indoor soccer in the Coliseum. I thought the people who go to meetings about bike lanes on North Parkway and other city streets might actually use them. And surely golfers would flock to T. O. Fuller, Riverside, and Davy Crockett when they were threatened. Nope.

I have counted the house at old Tim McCarver, new AutoZone Park, and the 60,000-seat Liberty Bowl on nights when you couldn’t get to 3,000 without kidding yourself. The only regular near-capacity crowds seem to be at FedEx Forum for the Grizzlies or Tigers. And the amateur sport that never ceases to amaze me with its growth in participation is distance running or walking for some cause.

What’s the deal? Big screen televisions. Too many venues. Ticket prices. Fees. Changing habits. Declining neighborhoods. Fitness machines. Sloth. Boredom. Whatever, tennis isn’t the only sport being right sized.

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Sports

The Problem with Appearance Money

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Tennis tournaments and tennis fans are getting shortchanged by appearance money.

The Regions Morgan Keegan Championships and the Memphis International Women’s Tournament come to a close this weekend. Once again, there are several no-names in the finals and several big names who got several thousands of dollars in appearance money were beaten and are long gone, including men’s 2nd seed Andy Roddick and women’s top seed Nadia Petrova. Both lost in straight sets in the first round.

Take the money and run.

They ought to call it disappearance money.

Here are the names and faces that appeared in the ads and billboards promoting the tournament: Roddick, Petrova, Cilic, Blake, Raonic, Hewitt, Querrey, Isner, Monfils, McEnroe.

John McEnroe played an exhibition doubles match Monday night that filled the stadium court to what looked like about three-quarters capacity. At $40 a ticket, that’s over $100,000. He also did media interviews before and after the match. He played hard and well, and kept his temper in check.

Milos Raonic is in Sunday’s finals. No problem there. The winner gets $277,915. And Isner and Querrey each won a round or two in singles and in doubles. Cilic, Hewitt, and Monfils withdrew a few days before the tournament due to injuries. James Blake got wiped out in the first round. Roddick lost to Xavier Malisse, but it was close and Roddick had been off the court for several weeks due to injuries. He’s a gamer, and offered no excuses. But, sorry, he didn’t earn his fee.

Petrova lost to a qualifier. Good grief. The sponsorless women’s tournament is lucky to be here, with prize money of $220,000 in singles and $220,000 in doubles. The only woman who was a proven draw in Memphis was Venus Williams. Otherwise, the women’s final in recent years has barely filled half the house. Last night was no exception. The doubles, by the way, was won by the drop-dead gorgeous Andrea Hlavackova and her partner Lucie Hradecka, aka the Scrabble board sisters. The photo with this post suggests the WTA and local promoters should perhaps try a different tack.

I love tennis, love the tournament, and wish it the best. But the players need to act for the good of the game and recognize the limited appeal that tennis has in Memphis, and the responsibility that comes with appearance money. On Sunday, the skies are blue in Memphis and the temperature is pushing 60. It’s a great day for tennis. I think I’ll go outside and hit some.

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Sports

Why Pro Tennis Is Worth Watching

Bethanie Mattek-Sands

  • Bethanie Mattek-Sands

Tennis fans know it’s fun to watch the pros. The non-fans — the people who shell out for basketball and football and golf — are the ones we need to reach to keep world-class players coming back to Memphis for a tournament that could soon find itself looking for new sponsors.

In sports as in publishing, nobody promises you a long life. You adapt, play smart, and get some breaks or you die. The Regions Morgan Keegan Championships — there’s two companies that won’t have such a presence in Memphis a year from now — will soon be 40 years old. Elvis was still alive when this tournament got started. Without Cellular South, the women’s tournament is already title sponsorless.

Why watch, and what to watch if you do? A few suggestions.

The seats: The worst seat in the 4600-seat Stadium Court where the finals are played is comparable to the best seats at a football or basketball game. And in the early rounds three courts are in use. On a weekday before 5 p.m., you can easily get a seat in the front row at one of them.

The women: This is one of the few tournaments other than the four Grand Slams with both men’s and women’s draws. Watch Bethanie Mattek-Sands, a free spirit, creative dresser, and hell of a player who might be the best athlete in the women’s field. And, if this picture is any indication, she might have an interesting wardrobe malfunction or get jumped by a ball boy.

John McEnroe: I have mixed feelings about this one. He will play in a doubles exhibition Monday evening against Sam Querrey and James Blake. Exhibitions can be tedious, but McEnroe takes everything seriously, maybe too seriously. He made an ass of himself a few years ago in an exhibition here. But at 53 he is still competitive. When McEnroe was in his prime, doubles specialist Tim Gullikson once said the best doubles team in the world was “McEnroe and anyone else.”

Names don’t matter. Sure it would be nice to have Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal and French phantom Gael Monfils, but the men coming to Memphis are just a few shots a set from being in the Top Ten. Andy Roddick would probably have won four or five Grand Slams by now if he were not in such tough company.

Roddick’s Dive: The guy didn’t have to dive on match point in last year’s final. He was up a game and an ad. If he misses the shot it’s deuce. If he loses the next two points he goes into a tiebreaker. If he loses the match he goes home with a nice paycheck and a standing ovation. But he took a dive and made an incredible shot, and that says something about his heart as well as his skills.

Women’s doubles: They usually play one up at the net and one slugging crosscourts from the baseline. The only matches that bear any semblance whatsoever to the game played by club players.

The big serve is overrated. Hitting a 125-mile-an-hour serve is like dunking a basketball. Any pro can do it. Watch and see who hits a first serve on the line when the set score is 6-5 and it’s game point. That separates the winners from the losers.

The service return is underrated. Especially in doubles. The server is probably a giant. Or else the net man is probably a giant who moves like a cat and is waiting to jump on the return. They each know where the ball is going. The returner doesn’t, and has to pick a spot and hit it with velocity. Pretty tough.

The qualifying rounds: Best sports bargain in Memphis. Pros playing for their professional lives to get into the main draw.

Hawk Eye: The line cameras have been installed on the Stadium Court for all matches for the first time so players can challenge calls and spectators can see where the ball landed.

It’s February. March Madness is a month away. The NBA Playoffs are two months away. And that big Memphis-UT-Martin football game that has everyone talking is six months away. This is better.

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Sports

Top-seed Monfils Out of Regions Morgan Keegan Championships

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Hope you didn’t buy tickets for the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships to watch Gael Monfils, who is prominently featured in advertising for the tournament.

For the second year in a row Monfils, the flamboyant French tennis star with dreadlocks and sleeveless shirts, has dropped out due to an injury. What a headache it must be for tournament director Peter Lebedevs, with the qualifying rounds starting tomorrow and Monfils scheduled to play next Tuesday.

The good news is that American hottie Ryan Harrison now gets a pass into the main draw. Harrison won a Davis Cup match against Switzerland last week and is a rising star who grew up in Louisiana.

The reason given for Monfils’ withdrawal was an injury to his right knee. His feature match on Tuesday, February 21 at 7 p.m. will now be replaced by American John Isner’s first-round match.

Additionally, Croatian Marin Cilic has been forced to withdraw with a “knee injury.” He’s a highly ranked player but not as well known as Monfils and not part of the pre-tournament publicity. Also withdrawing is Australian Lleyton Hewitt, winner of the U.S. Open in 2001 and Wimbledon in 2002.

Andy Roddick, who is recovering from a hamstring injury, is still coming as of today. If you’re a tennis fan, cross your fingers. Roddick is playing in a tournament in San Jose this week and won his match yesterday in three sets to reach the quarterfinals despite rolling a heavily taped ankle. He had not played since quitting his second-round match at last month’s Australian Open.

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Sports

Davis Cup Stars Isner and Harrison Will Play in Memphis

Ryan Harrison

  • Ryan Harrison

Memphians might get to see the next “best tennis player in the world” this month.

John Isner beat Roger Federer in a Davis Cup match last week but he won’t be top seed in the Regions Morgan Keegan Championship at the Racquet Club February 17-26th.

Isner beat Federer 4-6, 6-3, 7-6, 6-2 on an indoor clay court in Switzerland, Federer’s home. If anything the Racquet Club courts are more of an advantage for the 6′-9″ Isner, who was runner-up in the tournament in 2010. Tournament director Peter Lebedevs said Isner will be seeded second or third based on his ranking this week. According to The New York Times, Isner is seen as a possible world top-ranked player in the near future.

Another rising American star, Isner’s Davis Cup teammate Ryan Harrison, is also coming to Memphis, but the 19-year-old from Shreveport will have to fight his way through the qualifying tournament to earn one of four spots in the main draw. Harrison won his match 7-6, 7-6, helping the Americans to a 5-0 sweep.

Does this matter as far as putting fans in the seats? Maybe not, even though the worst seat at The Racquet Club is as close to the court as a $100 seat for a basketball game at FedEx Forum. The fact is there’s SportsCenter material and there’s everything else. Without Federer, Nadal, or Djokovic — or Venus or Serena Williams on the women’s side — Memphis has a hard time expanding the tennis appeal.

Racquet Notes: Good story on Kane Waselenchuk in the Times this week. Waselenchuk is the top-ranked pro racquetball player, and played several times in Memphis. He had a streak of 137 wins broken due to an injury recently. Previously, the longest streak was 54 matches.

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Opinion

Weekend Report: Barbecue Makeover, Big East, Big Bluff

Best line of the week: “It was a bluff they hoped would be called,” by Jackson Baker, on the annexation moves and counter-moves by Sen. Mark Norris and the Memphis City Council.

A picture worth a thousand words: Memphis Tigers in Times Square, as noted by my colleague Frank Murtaugh, who got this comment from Big East associate commissioner John Paquette on how it happened: “This is a terrific benefit of a deal we have with American Eagle Outfitters. The sign is at their Times Square store. AEG is the presenting sponsor of our men’s and women’s basketball tournaments. They also sponsor our academic awards. We also are able to use it for acknowledging conference champions after we conduct one of our championships. We welcomed our other new members in a similar way.”

The Food Network is coming to Memphis next week to Pollards Bar-B-Q in Whitehaven. Robert Irvine, the muscular take-charge host of “Restaurant: Impossible” will bring in his crew to do a makeover of the restaurant at 4560 Elvis Presley Boulevard, about a mile south of Graceland. The gimmick is that the crew spends $10,000 on design and Irvine whips the staff into shape. I had lunch there Friday with Memphis City Councilman Harold Collins, who represents Whitehaven. “No worse than an 8” on a scale of 1 to 10, was our evaluation of the food and the premises. Our sandwiches were so so big we had to eat them with a fork, the meat was lean, the fries crisp, the beans not bad, the vinyl booths clean. There were only a couple of other customers, however, and the orange/mustard colored cinder block interior decor needs work, but this one looks like a lay down for Irvine and company. Tenesia Pollard, who was at the counter, said the show contacted her two days after she contacted them. Filming is next week, with the show scheduled to air in May.

It’s always something at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. With the Big East news came the predictable cry for public funds to fix the turf, press box (cry me a river), big-screen, and they’ll think of something else. If there was ever a case for user fees, this is it. College football is a big-bucks goldmine, even for lower tier bowls, as I have reported. Let them pay to play. And put on a ticket surcharge. Attendance can’t get much worse than it has been for the last two or three years, so there is huge upside when Memphis joins the Big East and upgrades its schedule in 2013. As for the media, give ’em a Pollards barbecue sandwich and a free beer. Works for me.

The Racquet Club is installing the Hawk-Eye System for the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships February 17-26. The system lets players challenge calls and fans see how close the ball was to the line. Tournament Director Peter Lebedevs said it will be used on all main-draw matches on the Stadium Court.

Attorney Webb Brewer said the mortgage settlement between 49 states and big lenders does not put an end to the city of Memphis lawsuit against Wells Fargo. tn incl. “It is not identical to the issues in our lawsuit,” he said. “Ours had more to do with the making of the loans and discrimination targeting minorities for bad loans, which resulted in foreclosures.” The federal lawsuit, he said, survived a motion to dismiss and is in the discovery phase.

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Sports

The Case for Tennis Pros as Great(est) Athletes

Andy Roddick

  • memphistennis.com
  • Andy Roddick

This won’t go down well with football and basketball fans, but the best pro athletes in Memphis — counting coordination, stamina, nerves, and agility — may be the tennis players coming to the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships at the Racquet Club in February.

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Sports

New Flyer Blog: A Fan’s Notes

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Blogs come and go, and come again.

A Fan’s Notes (the title of Frederick Exley’s memoir about fandom, Frank Gifford, and being a man) will be my take on sports, with an emphasis on racquet sports and occasional television spectacles that everyone is talking about like the Super Bowl.

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News

Borg Vs. McEnroe: When Tennis Came of Age

On the eve of Memphis’ big tennis tourney, Frank Murtaugh remembers when he caught racquet fever.