An introduction to the game of Tennis
For any future athlete that intends to start a new activity,
knowing a little bit of history about the sport is always a good
idea.
Ball games can be traced back for hundreds and thousands of
years. Usually played for entertainment or during religious
ceremonies, ball games became highly popular in countless
civilizations worldwide. European monks probably created the
game of tennis. The players quickly found out that instead of
hitting the ball off walls they had better control using their
hand. A leather glove was soon created, and not long after, an
adapted handle completed the first racquet. As the racquets
evolved, so did the balls that were used. A bouncier type
stuffed with bran material soon replaced the first primitive
wooden balls. The game became highly popular amongst monasteries
all around Europe during the 14th century. At one time, the
church considered forbidding the game.
In1874, Major Walter C. Wingfield patented in London the
equipment and rules for a game fairly similar to modern tennis.
In the same year, the first courts appeared in the United
States. By the following year, equipment sets had been sold for
use in Russia, India, Canada, and China. Croquet was highly
popular at this time, and the smooth croquet courts proved
readily adaptable for tennis. Wingfield's original court had the
shape of an hourglass, narrowest at the net, and it was shorter
than the modern court. His rules were subjected to considerable
criticism, and he revised them in 1875, but he soon left the
further development of the game to others.
In 1877, the All England Club held the first Wimbledon
tournament, and its tournament committee came up with a
rectangular court and a set of rules that are essentially the
game we know today. The net was still five feet high at the
sides, a carryover from the game's indoor ancestor, and the
service boxes were 26 feet deep, but by 1882, the specifications
had evolved to their current form. The growth of tennis
continued and the 1927 Championship saw the first ever radio
broadcast of a tennis event. This increased its popularity
further and in the 1930s the game became highly fashionable, led
by British stars such as Fred Perry and Don Budge and
International Champions such as Henri Lacoste. You'll notice
from the photographs that tennis fashions were somewhat
different in those days! Long trousers were the order of the day
for men, and for women it was long dresses and stockings.
Fashion trends became a development in their own right and Bunny
Austin from the USA shocked the crowds in 1933 when he became
the first player to step out on to centre court wearing shorts!
The 1930's became Wimbledon's boom time and in 1937, the
championship was broadcast on the radio for the first time. This
was a significant event, truly introducing tennis to the world.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s the game became dominated by the
new legion of international players and crowds became captivated
by the likes of Bjorn Borg, Jimmy Connors, and John McEnroe. In
the ladies game stars such as Sue Barker, Chris Evert Lloyd and
Martina Navratilova filled the courts with fans. Britain's
foremost ladies player was Virginia Wade, the last Brit to win
the Championships in 1977. The prize money went up, as did the
hemlines of players clothing! In 1986 the Championships adopted
yellow tennis balls for the first time - partly to make the
speeding balls more visible for television cameras.