AUCKLAND PARK - TENNIS

Facilities
The Club has 9 tennis courts at Auckland Park.
History
Unlike most other sports, lawn tennis has precise
origins. An Englishman, Major Walter C. Wingfield, invented lawn tennis
(1873) and first played it at a garden party in Wales. Called "Sphairistik'"
[Gr.,=ball playing] by its inventor, the early game was played on an
hourglass-shaped court, widest at the baselines and narrowest at the
net. In creating the new sport, Wingfield borrowed heavily from the
older games of court tennis and squash racquets and probably even from
the Indian game of badminton.
Court tennis is also known as royal tennis. It originated
in France during the Middle Ages and became a favorite of British royalty,
including Henry VIII. The progression from court tennis, which used
an unresilient sheepskin ball filled with sawdust, sand, or wool, to
lawn tennis depended upon invention of a ball that would bounce.
Lawn tennis caught on quickly in Great Britain, and
soon the All England Croquet Club at Wimbledon held the first world
tennis championship (1877). Restricted to male players, that event became
the famous Wimbledon Tournament for the British National Championship,
still the most prestigious event in tennis. In 1884 Wimbledon inaugurated
a women's championship. Soon the game became popular in many parts of
the British Empire, especially in Australia.
Tennis spread to the United States by way of Bermuda.
While vacationing there, Mary Ewing Outerbridge of New York was introduced
(1874) to the game by a friend of Wingfield. She returned to the United
States with a net, balls, and rackets, and with the help of her brother,
set up a tennis court in Staten Island, N.Y. The first National Championship,
for men only, was held (1881) at Newport, R.I. A women's championship
was begun six years later, and in 1915 the National Championship moved
to Forest Hills, N.Y. Since 1978 the National Tennis Center in Flushing,
N.Y., has hosted the event (known as the U.S. Open). The Tennis Hall
of Fame is in Newport, R.I.
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The Professionalization of Tournament Tennis
In 1900 the international team competition
known as the Davis Cup tournament began. Along with the Wightman Cup
(begun 1923), an annual tournament between British and American women's
teams, the Davis Cup helped to focus international attention on tennis.
In 1963, a women's Davis Cup equivalent, the Federation Cup, usurped
the prestige of the Wightman Cup. In the first decades of the 1900s
tennis was primarily a sport of the country club set. The widespread
construction of courts on school and community playgrounds in the 1930s
(many built by the federal government's New Deal agencies) helped to
make tennis more accessible to the public.
When the professional game showed itself to be profitable
in the late 1920s, a number of amateur players joined the tour. One
of the first to do so was William Tilden, perhaps the greatest player
in the history of tennis. Before Tilden turned pro (1931), he won a
total of seven United States singles championships and three Wimbledon
championships.
The continued defection of amateur players into the
professional ranks was one of the factors that led amateur tennis's
world governing body, the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF,
founded 1913), to open its tournaments to both professionals and amateurs
in 1968. For many years the major ILTF-sponsored tournaments, including
Wimbledon and the U.S. National Championship, had been restricted to
amateurs. With the advent of open tennis, however, the great professionals
were allowed to compete for the major titles. Eventually, the Davis
Cup also allowed professionals.
The four major annual tournaments in international
tennis are Wimbledon, the Australian Open, the French Open, and the
U.S. Open. Winning all four in the same year is called a grand slam.
Only Don Budge (1938), Rod Laver (1962, 1969), Maureen Connolly (1953),
Margaret Court (1970), and Steffi Graf (1988) have won grand slams.
In 1971, the establishment of a women-only professional tour gave female
pros financial parity with their male counterparts. In the same year
Billie Jean King became the first woman athlete in any sport to earn
more than $100,000 in one year. In the 1970s a team league, World Team
Tennis, operated for several years, but was unsuccessful. The professional
tour remains the most visible focus for the sport, its major tournaments
surpassing in prestige even competition in the Olympics, which added
tennis in 1988.
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