Categories
News News Blog

‘State-of-the-Art’ Tennis Facility in the Works for Memphis

A new “world-class tennis facility” is coming to Memphis, the city, along with the University of Memphis and local organization Tennis Memphis announced Monday.

The three entities are partnering to renovate Leftwich Tennis near Audubon Park into what officials call a “state-of-the-art facility.” The $19 million project will “dramatically improve” the facility with the construction of 32 new courts. Twenty of those will be outdoors, and 12 will be indoors. The center currently has 12 courts in total.

Upon completion, the renovated Leftwich Tennis Center will remain a public facility open to the community for competitive and recreational play, as well as tennis lessons and clinics. It will also be the new home courts for the men’s and women’s Tiger tennis teams.


Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland was at Leftwich Monday for the announcement. He said the new facility will be a “true gem” for the community.

“I can’t say enough about how excited I am for this project to begin,” Strickland said. “And I’m not the only one. The philanthropic support shown for this has been exceptional. Not only will this be a tremendous asset for the University, but it will be a true gem for our community and all tennis lovers.”

Officials said the majority of funding for the project was raised privately, while $3 million is coming from the city and $5 million from the university.

U of M president M. David Rudd said the tennis center will be “one of the finest in the country, one that all Memphians will be proud of.”

Paul Goebel, coach of the U of M men’s tennis team said the new facility will be fit to host major events, such as national tennis tournaments and NCAA and conference championships. Goebel anticipates that will “attract thousands of out-of-town visitors each year.”

The new facility is slated to be completed by January 2021.


‘State-of-the-Art’ Tennis Facility in the Works for Memphis

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Match Point: Play Tennis Family Day

In an effort to introduce the public to the game of tennis and to the newly renovated tennis centers throughout the city, local nonprofit youth development organization Tennis Memphis has partnered with the city of Memphis’ Division of Housing and Community Development to host its first annual Play Tennis, Memphis! Family Play Day event.

The five participating tennis centers (Leftwich, Wolbrecht, Raleigh, Eldon Roark, Frayser, and Bellevue), which have received about $1 million in renovations, will host various tennis events.

Alyssa Ivey | Tennis Memphis

Anyone for tennis?

“We’re going to be hosting clinics at all levels, tournaments, skills challenges, cardio workouts, and more for every facet of every age group from tots up to senior citizens,” says Arnold Thompson, Director of Outreach & Community Development for Tennis Memphis and Elite Professional for the United States Professional Tennis Association. “There’s always something for everybody.”

Events are free to attend, and visitors are not required to bring their own equipment.

“Our mission is to build a better community and enhance lives with tennis education,” says Thompson. “To go along with that mission, our motto is ‘tennis is for everyone.’ So we look to equalize to make tennis available to everybody, not just to people who’ve been traditionally afforded. We want to do everything we can to take the financial constraints off people playing tennis.”

While taking breaks between clinics, games, and demonstrations, attendees can also enjoy music and grub from on-site food trucks, including Marble Slab Creamery, Chef TNT BBQ, and Central BBQ.

Play Tennis, Memphis! Family Play Day, various tennis centers, Saturday, August 3rd, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., free to attend. Pre-registration is encouraged but not required. Visit tennismemphis.org to register.

Categories
Sports

Is Memphis a Fitness Friendly City?

Audubon_Park_Memphis_TN_06.jpg

Surveys of America’s fittest and fattest and park-friendly cities are a dime a dozen, and I see about one a week. Here’s one that came in today from the Trust for Public Land. I don’t read most of them any more. But public sports facilities — that means anyplace you can use for free or by paying a fee — have played a big part in my life and they are part of our lifestyle and our personal and municipal budgets.

Most surveys lie. Fat cities are not fat due to a lack of public facilities. The problem is diet, personal motivation, and access. Ours is a disposable city, and the facilities and the people are not always in the same place. Here’s my Memphis survey. It is personal, subjective, anecdotal, and uninformed in some categories, less so in others. But in most cases I have seen ’em and and used ’em, which is more than most of the surveys can claim.

Public parks: Oversupplied. Shelby Farms is four times bigger than Central Park. Overton Park is getting better year after year. There are riverfront parks from Mud Island to Tom Lee Park to Crump Park near the Ornamental Metals Museum, some of them rarely visited. Mud Island River Park is closed half the year. Greenbelt Park on Mud Island is the best of the lot. Tiger Lane at the Fairgrounds is for the football crowd. Kennedy, Willow Road, Bellevue, and Leftwich/Audubon serve multiple needs. There are probably too many parks for a disposable city to maintain adequately.

Walking trails and running: Adequate. Put your shoes on and take off. True story: a former colleague was so obsessed with training for a marathon that he ran hundreds of laps around his living room when it rained. There are oval tracks at the fairgrounds and many high schools. There is an organized race of some kind nearly every weekend.

Fitness machines and structured programs: Unbalanced. Suburbs oversupplied with clubs and community facilities, inner city Memphis is undersupplied. Kroc Center, Streets Ministries, Memphis Athletic Ministries, and Church Health Center are helping a lot.

Tennis: Oversupplied in both indoor and outdoor courts. High schools and colleges that emphasize tennis build to tournament capacity, which leaves a lot of courts unused at other times. The University of Memphis has moved its tennis operations to the Racquet Club, leaving several perfectly good courts on campus for everyday players. Memphis has more public indoor tennis centers than Chicago. There are unused and deteriorating but still playable courts at Frayser Tennis Center. There is no single public center to compare with the biggest public centers in Little Rock, Mobile, Murfreesboro, and Nashville but overall Memphis is still oversupplied.

Racquetball. Oversupplied. A dying sport that thrived in Memphis 30 years ago, but plenty of courts remain at University of Memphis, Racquet Club, downtown YMCA, and some of the fitness clubs and community centers.

Outdoor basketball: Adequate. The cheapest sport around, requiring only nets, backboards, level rims, and a ball.

Indoor basketball: Adequate. Schools, churches, and community centers meet the need.

Bicycle riding: Oversupplied. If you want to ride a bike, there’s nothing stopping you, assuming you can afford one, and if you can’t there are organizations that will help. The dedicated bike lanes, bike paths, and sharrows are nice but a city-wide grid is unnecessary. Memphis is mostly flat and the weather is more conducive to riding than in the Snow Belt.

Football: Oversupplied. Liberty Bowl Stadium is used nine times a year. Football defined the fairgrounds. Most high schools have a field, and some of them are putting in artificial surfaces.

Baseball and softball: Oversupplied. Baseball is a suburban game, and teams migrate to the suburban baseball fields for tournaments and leagues. An unkempt field and backstop is a typical scene at most Memphis parks and high schools, a relic of another day. Good fields like the ones at Rodney Baber are expensive to light and maintain and lightly used.

Soccer: Equals suburban, although some of the world’s greats came out of poor Third World countries. Adequate to oversupplied, thanks to Mike Rose Fields.

Golf: Adequate. Memphis had to close public courses, which are magnets for wasteful spending and political squabbles on the City Council. Galloway serves the high end, and if you are willing to spend $40 you can play just about anywhere. Overton Park needs real greens.

Swimming: Undersupplied, but expensive, seasonal, and fraught with liability. The Kroc Center will help when it opens next year. Closing the Mason YMCA hurt. High marks for suburbs, downtown YMCA, University of Memphis, and Rhodes College which offers a summer membership.

Others: volleyball, skateboarding, squash, lacrosse, field hockey, rugby, bowling, Ultimate. You want to play it, you can find a place. It may require some effort and practice but that’s the point. And it may require some cash and a car, but if you don’t have those there are less expensive or free alternatives. It comes down to motivation and lifestyle. A new building or a new facility — or a survey — is usually not the answer.

Categories
Sports

What a Racquet: Prince is Bankrupt

prince_racquet_.jpg

To anyone who plays racquet sports, the news that Prince is bankrupt is like hearing that Wilson failed at footballs or McDonald’s flopped at making burgers.

Prince may not have invented the oversized racquet, but for my money — a few thousand dollars in various racquets and other equipment over four decades — nobody tried harder or did it better. As a player, I appreciated the quality and durability of their products. As a fan, I am grateful for their sponsorships. And as a wordsmith, I marvel at their ability to make racquets that are virtually identical to other Prince racquets and other manufacturers’ racquets seem exciting, cutting edge, different, performance-enhancing and, of course, new. Entire issues of tennis magazines are devoted to racquet hype.

The real advances in racquets in tennis, racquetball, and squash came when small wooden or metal racquets were replaced by ever-larger and ever-lighter composite racquets. Within eras, the racquets were more alike than different. The unenviable job of the Prince marketing and sales departments was to make each innovation of a few grams of weight, change in balance, a few inches more or less in head size, and different shapes seem as exciting as a new Corvette or the latest offering from Apple.

“After considering several business options, the board of directors and the senior management team firmly believe that the Chapter 11 filing is not only a necessary step but also the right thing to do to ensure a secure future for Prince,” said Gordon Boggis, president and CEO of Prince Sports Inc. “We have a long history, and are planning for an exciting future, focused on game-changing, product innovation, engineered to take players’ games to the next level. Securing this protection will help us to continue to focus on that vision.”

Now, about that vision. Can better equipment change your game or take your game to the next level?

Tennis coach Vic Braden, who is one part teaching pro and three parts psychologist, wit, and salesman, once said at a clinic in Memphis that “it’s not the racquet, it’s the turkey on the end of the handle.” A killer marketing phrase, or rather a killer-of-marketing phrase, if there ever was one.

In his book “Open,” Andre Agassi said the biggest change in the game in his final years was not bigger racquets or bigger players but the new elastic polyester string that imparts more spin on the ball.

Sarah Hatgas, tennis coach at Rhodes College, says “New tech in racquets makes it easier on the elbow! The game has developed into a power game from the baseline and volleying is becoming a lost art.”

Senior player Nancy Gates says “I would in no way consider myself a racquet sports expert, but at my age my primary concern is about how badly my body gets destroyed by the sport, and how equipment may or may not exacerbate the pain. There are some racquets that are stiff and cause my elbow to hurt, so I stay away from those. Other than that, any racquet, once I get used to it, probably has no effect one way or the other on my game. I have one bad foot, so shoes are key for me. If I don’t have the right shoes, I cannot play. In fact, I have given away two different pair of brand new shoes after only one wearing, because they weren’t quite right – hundreds of dollars wasted.”

Randy Stafford, a former racquetball pro, said that rule changes adopted by the sport in 1997 increased racquet size about 25 percent which resulted in 50 percent more hitting area for more power. “This change was made in racquetball due to the manufacturers’ demands to increase sales and royalties. No question, the changes to the racquet size changed the game from a control and manageable power game, to one of excess speed that not only changed the original design and intent of the game, but increased the speed of the ball to a level that is quite unmanageable for the everyday player.”

Ted Gross, former squash pro and editor of the Daily Squash Report, says, “Nothing to back this up but my opinion is racquets (assuming we are comparing only top-of-the-line models) make a difference in tennis but not in squash. Hitting a tennis ball well is substantially more complicated than hitting a squash ball well, and differences in frame stiffness and head balance and even grip shapes are therefore quite apparent. The grip over-wrap is the most important piece of equipment in squash, because before the invention of the Tournagrip you couldn’t hold onto the racquet no matter what you tried.”

I’m with Gross and Gates. The most underrated piece of equipment is a $2 roll of grip tape. I don’t see how players did without it, especially tennis players in the hot and humid South back in the days of wooden racquets with slippery leather grips or gauzy overwraps. Second place is shoes with gum soles that are much lighter than those Goodyear-rubber soled clodhoppers you see on the tennis court. Gum-soled shoes are designed for indoor court sports but once you get used to them anything else is like putting on ankle weights.

To the extent that overgrips extend the life of racquets by making players less likely to discard them, Prince was doomed not by faulty marketing or Internet sales or all those fancy $200 racquets produced by its competitors but by a $2 piece of tape.

Categories
Sports

Andy Roddick Gave Memphis His Best Shot

RoddickMemphis.jpg

How do you top a diving forehand winner on match point in the third set of a championship final?

You don’t. Andy Roddick still says his layout last February was the best shot he has ever hit under the circumstances. Roddick, who is rehabilitating a hamstring injury but is scheduled to play in the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships in Memphis later this month, talked with Memphis reporters by conference call Thursday.

“Listen, there’s probably about 10% skill and 90% luck on that one,” he said. “I used all 90% of that luck. But it was a shot I certainly couldn’t believe at the time.”

It was voted the second best tennis shot of 2011, behind a Novak Djokovic forehand on match point against Roger Federer in the U.S. Open.

“If that’s not the number one shot for the year, I’ll never get it,” Roddick said.

He has played Memphis 12 years in a row, but this year is a little dicey.

“I haven’t hit a ball since Australia. We’ve just been working on different types of treatments trying to get it right. The MRI came back probably not as good as we were hoping. But I’m hoping to be hitting balls for the first time next Monday.”

Roddick said he didn’t watch all of the nearly six-hour Australian Open final last week but was as amazed as any fan by the quality of the tennis between Djokovic and Rafael Nadal.

“It almost looked like kind of the tennis you see when you play XBOX, where the guys really don’t get tired and they just hit whatever shot they want.”

In a separate call, John McEnroe talked about his upcoming exhibition doubles match in Memphis on February 20th. He’s over 50 but said that’s not that much older than the 30-somethings who dominate the men’s doubles tour.
McEnroe plays for keeps, as anyone who saw his angry outbursts during an exhibition at the Racquet Club a few years ago knows.

“People love tennis in Memphis. There is something about it that’s nice when you’re real close to people where you literally can everything, I mean, as long as they’re not hurling insults at you like I would get — not, of course, from the people of Memphis. Of course not. But they can really hear what I’m saying or what players are saying, and it’s sort of nice to have that sometimes, you know, for some of the players when they’re playing with some of these huge courts. I think Roddick’s only tournament win was there last year. I bet you some of it had to do with the rush from having the crowd close and them appreciating that he’s playing there.”

Playing, yes. Cursing and cutting up, no. Big difference.

Categories
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.

Categories
Sports

New Flyer Blog: A Fan’s Notes

sportswall.JPG

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.

Categories
Opinion

Scenes from a Hot Day in Memphis

2009_12_wheelchair.jpg

I was driving to work this morning when I stopped at a red light at the corner of Poplar and Danny Thomas. On the west side of the street, a man in a wheelchair was getting ready to cross toward the Exxon station. As he turned his chair around, I could see that he had only one leg which he used, in tandem with his arms, to push his non-motorized wheelchair. In other words, he was crossing Danny Thomas at rush hour, against the light, backwards in a wheelchair, powered by one leg. And we think we have it tough. As he started across, a MATA bus made a right turn right in front of him. I was certain he would be hit, but the bus just missed him. Then he navigated his way to the middle of the street, where cars and trucks rushed past hm in both directions. I felt helpless and wished that some motorist would stop traffic for him but no one did. Finally, he made it almost to the Exxon and another MATA bus stopped so he could cross the rest of the way. He gave the driver a little wave, turned his chair around, and went on his way.

The city swimming pools open Saturday. There are a total of 17 of them, both indoors and outdoors, and they are free to children who sign up with their parents Thursday or Friday or have a pass and ID from last year. I visited the Ed Rice Community Center in Frayser, where the pool was being filled this afternoon. There are some slides and a large wading area but no diving boards. The pool supervisor told me they’ve been gone since 2008. The pool and community center survived this round of budget trimming, meaning that hundreds of kids will be able to play basketball in the gym and swim in the pool this summer until school starts again. Good news, good choices.

The tennis courts next to the Ed Rice Community Center used to be one of my haunts when my friend Don Miller ran the pro shop. That was 20 years ago, and when Don moved to East Memphis the center slowly went downhill. City schools still use the courts for tournaments, but there doesn’t seem to be much free play on weekends and during the summer, even though the courts are open and in decent but not great shape. Steve Lang, the tennis pro who has given the last 15 years of his career to public tennis in Memphis, was at the council budget hearings Tuesday making a last-ditch appeal to keep the centers at Whitehaven and Bellevue open. He failed, and Lang said the centers and their indoor courts will have to close. That will leave Leftwich and Wolbrecht tennis centers. I think tennis play is down everywhere, from private clubs to public courts. I can’t say I’m surprised. I learned the game on public courts with metal nets in Michigan 50 years ago, played regularly in the tennis boom of the 1970s and 1980s (the subject of a new book about John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg called “High Strung” by Stephen Tignor) and still play a little today at Rhodes College and the Racquet Club. My theory is that tennis is pretty hard to play without someone better bringing you along, and the most promising players gravitate to the schools and centers that have the other good players. Anyway, the two summer pasttimes of my youth, tennis and baseball, are having a hard go of it in Memphis these days. And Jim Northrup, who hit a ball out of Tiger Stadium and a memorable triple off of Bob Gibson in the 1968 World Series and never took steroids, is dead. Don’t feel so good myself.

Categories
Opinion

Wharton to Memphis: “Read!”

acwhartonpix.jpg

Memphis Mayor A C Wharton has some blunt advice for people who question the city spending money to attract new companies: get better informed about how the world works.

“Look at what the world is doing, take a global view,” he said at a press conference Tuesday. “Read! Read! Look at what the world is doing.”

Wharton is exasperated at critics of incentives for companies like Electrolux and Mitsubishi Electric, who are locating new plants here in exchange for multi-million dollar tax breaks.

“It really does get to me,” he said, noting that other cities give even more incentives to attract automakers such as Hyndai (Montgomery, Alabama) or Nissan (Nashville and Smyrna).

The press conference was called to announce that the state team tennis tournament is coming to Memphis in 2011 and 2012, but Wharton quickly shifted from tennis players to taxpayers. Asked about looming budget cuts and layoffs of city employees, he told a quick story about a woman from Orange Mound who rides a bus to her job cleaning houses in Germantown every day and has no benefits or health insurance.

He said he must consider “the hundreds of thousands of people who have to pay for what they don’t even get.”

Again, he noted that critics sometimes seem unaware the states and cities all over the U.S. are making drastic cuts to stay solvent. Preliminary budget projections show Memphis could have a $70 million deficit plus $57 million it owes Memphis City Schools.

Asked about the schools referendum, Wharton said he is concerned about the low turnout so far. Only some 3,400 people had voted as of Tuesday morning. Whatever the decision, he said, “I hope it will feel like a mandate.”

He said Memphis will pay $78 million to MCS in 2011 no matter the outcome, and has paid roughly that amount to MCS in 2010 and 2009 also.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Memphis Pro Tennis Tourney Now in Elite Group

The ATP, the governing body of men’s professional tennis, has included Memphis in its 10 cities awarded elite status for the 2009 ATP Tour.

The Racquet Club of Memphis is home to the annual men’s indoor professional tournament in February, as well as a women’s tournament at the same time.

The ATP has designed a tier of “500” events to complement its nine “1000” events, which award more points for each champion. At the top of the prestige list are the four Grand Slam Tournaments (U.S. Open, Wimbledon, Australian Open, French Open) and the ATP World Tour Finals.

The designation is a coup for Memphis and the Racquet Club because it is a comparatively small venue.

Other “500” cities include Rotterdam, Dubai, Acapulco, Barcelona, Washington, Beijing, Tokyo, Basel, and Valencia.