Stefan Edberg one of
the greatest player ever
The game
Tennis, game played with a racket and a ball by two (as in singles) or
four (as in doubles) competitors, on a rectangular court with a net strung
between the midpoints of the longer sides of the court. Tennis may be
played indoors or outdoors.
The game ranks as one of the most popular
spectator and participation sports in the world, with fans and competitors
in more than 100 countries. Originally called lawn tennis to distinguish
it from the sport of court tennis, from which it was derived, the game is
now commonly known as tennis.
Playing Court and Equipment
The court is marked with white lines to indicate its dimensions and
service areas. The court is 78 ft (23.8 m) long, divided into two equal
sides by a net standing 3 ft (0.9 m) high at the center of the court. For
singles the court is 27 ft (8.2 m) wide. For doubles the addition of
alleys 4.5 ft (1.4 m) wide along the two longer sides increases the width
to 36 ft (11 m). (For more detail, see accompanying diagram.) Courts may
be of grass, clay, asphalt, concrete, wood, artificial grass, or other
synthetic materials.
A tennis ball is hollow and composed of inflated
rubber covered with a fabric made of wool and artificial fibers. It is
between 2 1/2 and 2 5/8 in (6.35 and 6.67 cm) in diameter and weighs
between 2 and 2 1/16 oz (57.7 and 58.5 g). Yellow and white balls are used
in tournament competition and are the most common colors, although balls
of other colors are manufactured.
There is no uniform design of tennis
rackets, and their sizes and shapes vary. The general classifications,
determined by the size of the racket head, are standard, midsize,
oversize, and super oversize.
In tournament play, the maximum length of
a racket is 32 in (81.3 cm). The maximum width is 12.5 in (31.8 cm). The
head of the racket may not exceed a length of 15.5 in (39.4 cm) and a
width of 11.5 in (29.2 cm), and it is usually strung with resilient gut or
nylon or other synthetic materials. There are no restrictions on weight.
Rackets were originally made of wood, but now virtually all rackets are
made of such materials as aluminum or graphite, which are stronger and
lighter than wood. The racket handle is generally covered with a rubber or
leather grip. Players usually wear lightweight clothing, traditionally
white, and shoes with nonskid rubber soles.
Service and Play
A serve begins every point of a tennis match. The player who initiates
the point is called the server, and the one who receives the ball is
called the receiver. To serve, a player tosses the ball into the air and
strikes it before it touches the ground, hitting it into the opponent's
service area, known as the service box. Although players usually employ an
overhand motion to serve, it is permissible to strike the ball
underhanded.
The server delivers the ball from behind the baseline. His
or her feet must remain outside the court until the ball is struck. On the
first serve of a game, the server stands on the right side of the court
and attempts to hit the ball into the service box on the diagonally
opposite side of the court. Two tries are permitted for each service. If
the ball first strikes any part of the opponent's court except the service
box, or exits the court altogether, a fault is called. A fault is also
called if the ball is served into the net, or if it strikes the net before
hitting the opponent's court outside the service box or before exiting the
court altogether. A foot fault is called if the server's foot enters the
court before service is completed. After one fault a server may serve
again. If both tries result in faults, a double fault is called, and the
opponent wins the point. If the serve, on either try, touches the net and
then falls into the diagonally opposite service box, a let is called, and
the server is permitted to serve again. A valid serve that is not reached
by the opponent is called an ace.
In general, the faster the serve, the
more difficult it is to return. But a faster serve is also more difficult
for the server to control. Accordingly, first serve attempts usually have
more velocity; second serves usually have greater accuracy and, sometimes,
more spin. In preparation for returning serve, the receiver stands a
certain distance behind the service box line, usually close to the
baseline. In anticipation of a fast serve, many players move behind the
baseline to provide more time to react. After the first point has been
played, the service is made from the left-hand side of the court into the
opponent's diagonally opposite service court. On each point thereafter the
side from which service is made alternates until an entire game has been
played. The opponent serves the next game, and the pattern of alternation
of serve continues. In doubles, serves alternate between teams and also
between players, so that an individual player will serve every fourth
game.
After a successful serve the ball is hit back and forth until one
player or side fails to return the ball successfully. A shot is
unsuccessful when a player lets the ball bounce twice, drives it into the
net, or hits it beyond the boundaries of the opposite side of the court.
If the ball strikes the line of the court, it is considered in play. If,
after hitting the net, a shot falls out of bounds on the opposite side of
the court, it is considered out; if the ball falls in bounds in the
opposite court, it is considered in play. When a shot is unsuccessful, the
opponent scores a point.
Scoring
Scoring is identical in the singles and doubles games. A tennis game,
when not prolonged by a tie, is played to four points, designated by the
terms 15, 30, 40, and game, with zero points being referred to by the term
love (possibly derived from the French word for egg, l'oeuf, referring to
the physical appearance of the number zero). A tie at 40 is called deuce.
Because a game must be won by two points, play continues from deuce until
one player leads by a margin of two points. After reaching deuce, the
player who can win the game on the next point is said to have the
advantage, while a subsequent tied score is always called deuce. (A system
referred to as "no-ad" is sometimes employed in which the winner of the
point following the first deuce wins the game.) In tennis competition, the
score of the server is always given first. Typical scores at stages of a
given tennis game might be "love-15" or "40-30." The players or teams
exchange sides after each odd-numbered game.
Players must win six games
to win the set, but they must win by at least two games. Thus, if a set
becomes tied at 5-5, at least 7 game victories are required to win the
set. A tiebreaker is often employed if a set becomes tied at 6-6. A
tiebreaker is generally played to 7 points, but because it too must be won
by at least two points, it may be extended. The winner of a tiebreaker is
recorded as having won the set 7-6, regardless of the point total achieved
in the tiebreaker. Tennis matches are usually the best two out of three
sets or the best three out of five sets.
Officials
While most recreational matches are refereed by the players themselves,
in most tournament competitions officials keep score, determine if shots
are good, and interpret rules. The head official on the court, called the
chair umpire, sits on a tall chair at one end of the net. A varying number
of line judges sit around the court beyond the path of the players. Line
judges determine whether serves and shots are good or out. A net-cord
judge may be employed to determine when a ball touches the top of the net,
and a foot-fault judge may watch for that specific infraction. In the
1980s electronic devices began to be used in professional tournaments to
determine if serves, whose speeds may reach over 100 mph (161 km/h), land
in or out of the service box.
Strokes
The basic strokes used in tennis are the forehand and the backhand. In
the forehand, the player pivots the body so that the shoulder of the
nonracket-bearing arm faces the net. The player then swings the racket
forward to meet the ball. In the backhand stroke, the player turns so that
the shoulder of the racket-bearing arm faces the net before bringing the
racket forward and across the body to meet the ball. The basic types of
grips that players may use to hold the racket are called the Eastern,
Western, and Continental grips. Players often change their grip depending
on the type of shot they are required to hit. A two-handed (also known as
a two-fisted) grip is used by some players, primarily for its ability to
produce powerful shots. Most often employed to hit the backhand shot, some
players use it for forehands as well.
There are several other strokes
commonly used during a tennis match. The lob is a high, soft return behind
an opponent who has approached the net. It is frequently used to force the
opponent to retreat to the back of the court to play the ball. The lob can
also be used as a defensive stroke, providing time for the hitter to
regain court position. The overhead smash is a powerful shot often used to
return a lob that has not been hit high or deep enough. The shot is hit in
a similar manner to the serve. The drop shot is a lightly hit, spinning
return that drops softly over the net, forcing the opponent to approach
the net. If the opponent is positioned deep in the court, the drop shot
can be used to win the point. A volley occurs when a player strikes the
ball before it bounces. The volley is most often employed when a player is
playing close to the net. The half volley is a low return of the ball just
after it has bounced.
In addition to using different shots, a player
may put varying spins on the ball to make it bounce in certain ways.
Topspin is produced when a player strikes the ball so that it spins from
low to high as it travels forward. Topspin enables a player to strike the
ball with more power, because the added spin helps to bring the ball down
and keep it in play. Underspin occurs when a player strikes the ball so
that it spins from high to low as it travels forward. This shot is called
a slice. Underspin causes the ball to lose speed and to bounce lower. Most
players use both types of spin in the course of a game, as well as hitting
the ball flat-that is, without any particular spin.
Amateur Competition
Millions of people, most of them amateurs, play tennis worldwide,
either as recreation or in amateur tournaments. Internationally, tennis is
governed by the International Tennis Federation (ITF), located in London,
which is a parent body to national governing bodies in more than 100
countries.
Tennis was first played professionally in 1926, when
American promoter Charles C. Pyle organized a traveling tour for which the
players were paid. Professionals were barred, however, from competing in
tournaments sanctioned by national tennis organizations. During the next
40 years, players often built reputations as skilled players in amateur
competition before turning professional and earning money on tours. In
1968 several major tournaments were declared open-that is, eligible to
both amateur and professional players. As a consequence, professional
players came to dominate tournament tennis. To prevent players from
competing too intensely at too young an age, age requirements for play on
the professional tours were established by the professional tour
organizations. These regulations are sometimes altered, but current
guidelines decree that men under the age of 14 are not permitted to play
professionally, and from the ages of 14 to 16, they may only play a
limited number of tournaments. Women under the age of 15 cannot play
professionally, and until they reach the age of 18, they may only play a
limited number of tournaments.
There are three major organizations that
govern professional tennis. The ITF has jurisdiction over the four
so-called grand slam tournaments-the Australian Open in Melbourne,
Australia; the French Open in Paris; the Lawn Tennis Championships,
commonly called Wimbledon, in London; and the U.S. Open in New York
City-as well as over the Grand Slam Cup, a season-ending event involving
the most successful players each year in grand slam events. The ITF also
governs the Davis and Fed cups, annual international competitions held
between national teams. The ATP Tour (formerly the Association of Tennis
Professionals), located in Ponte Verde Beach, Florida, has jurisdiction
over the men's professional events except the grand slam tournaments. The
Women's Tennis Association (WTA) TOUR, located in Saint Petersburg,
Florida, governs women's professional tennis.
Tournaments
Entry-level professional tournaments are called satellite events and
are arranged in four-tournament "segments." A player must compete in all
four events on a satellite segment to earn ranking points. These
tournaments offer unranked and lower-ranked players the opportunity to
compete for the ranking points that enable them to qualify for challenger
series tournaments, which offer more prize money. At the challenger level,
players also compete for ranking points that are determined by their
performance in each individual event. Successful players at this level can
then compete at the tournaments sponsored by the professional
tours.
Annual tennis tournaments operated by the professional tours,
such as the French and Italian opens, are held throughout the world
between the months of January and November. They involve varying amounts
of prize money, and some tournaments are considered more prestigious than
others and thus attract better players. Matches in tournaments are
arranged by a system called seeding. By seeding players in certain places
within the pool of players, or draw, according to their abilities and past
performances, organizers ensure that the best players do not compete
against each other until the later rounds of a tournament. Unanticipated
upsets, in which unseeded or lower-seeded players defeat higher-seeded
players in early rounds, often add excitement to tournaments. Tournaments
involve up to 128 players and seven rounds of play. The ATP Tour operates
about 85 tournaments each year, while the WTA TOUR operates about 60
competitions annually.
Other major tennis championships include the
Davis Cup and the Fed Cup. The Davis Cup, started in 1900, is an annual
international men's competition held between national teams. The Fed Cup,
started in 1963, is the women's equivalent to the Davis Cup. Davis Cup and
Fed Cup competitions involve four singles matches and one doubles match.
The team that wins three out of the five matches is the winner. Tennis is
also an Olympic sport. It was first played in the Olympic Games from 1896
until 1924. After a long hiatus, Olympic play was renewed at the 1988
Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.
To win the grand slam-that is,
all four major tournaments in one calendar year-is considered the greatest
achievement in tennis. The first player to win the grand slam was American
Don Budge in 1938. The only other players to win the grand slam are
American Maureen Connolly in 1953, Australian Rod Laver in 1962 and 1969,
Australian Margaret Smith Court in 1970, and German Steffi Graf in
1988.
History
Although the origins of tennis are not clear, many experts believe
tennis, then called lawn tennis, was invented in 1873 by Major Walter
Clopton Wingfield, a British army officer. Although Wingfield claimed that
he modeled the game, which he called Sphairistiké (Greek for "playing at
ball") after an ancient Greek game, many authorities believe that he
adapted the principles of the popular English games of court tennis,
squash racquets, and badminton for outdoor play. Early players preferred
to call Wingfield's game tennis-on-the-lawn, or lawn tennis. The game was
introduced to Bermuda in 1873, and from Bermuda was brought to the United
States by Mary Ewing Outerbridge of Staten Island, New York. The first
game of lawn tennis in the United States was probably played in 1874 on
the grounds of the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club.
The first
world amateur championships were held at the All-England Lawn Tennis and
Croquet Club in Wimbledon, England (men, 1877; women, 1884). By the end of
the 19th century, lawn tennis had been introduced into British colonies
and other nations throughout the world. In the United States, local rules
and standards for the game varied widely until 1881, when the United
States Lawn Tennis Association (now the USTA) was organized to standardize
rules and equipment. Under its auspices, play for the annual U.S. singles
championships for men began in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1881. The
national men's singles championships continued to take place annually in
Newport until 1915, when they moved to the West Side Tennis Club in Forest
Hills, New York. The national women's singles matches began in 1887, at
the Philadelphia Cricket Club, and continued there until 1921, when they
were also brought to Forest Hills. In 1978 the U.S. championships, which
had been renamed the U.S. Open in 1968, moved to the National Tennis
Center in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in New York City.
At the
beginning of the 20th century the major international tournaments were
Wimbledon and the U.S. championships. Early Wimbledon men's champions
included British players Arthur Gore and brothers Reggie and Laurie
Doherty. Dorothea Douglass Lambert Chambers of England won the women's
title at Wimbledon seven times (1903, 1904, 1906, 1910, 1911, 1913, 1914).
The U.S. men's championships were dominated by American William Larned,
who won seven times (1901, 1902, 1907-1911). Americans Elisabeth Moore and
Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman both won several U.S. women's championships in
the early 1900s, and Norwegian-born Molla Mallory won eight such titles
(1915-1918, 1920- 1922, 1926).
In the 1920s British, American, and
French players were the most successful in international play. American
Bill Tilden dominated the men's game, winning Wimbledon three times (1920,
1921, 1930) and the U.S. championships seven times (1920-1925, 1929).
French players Jean Borotra, René Lacoste, and Henri Cochet were also
successful, particularly at Wimbledon, which one of the three of them won
each year from 1924 to 1929. Suzanne Lenglen of France and Helen Wills
Moody (see Wills, Helen Newington of the United States were the leading
female players. In the 1930s outstanding men's players included Don Budge
and Ellsworth Vines of the United States and Fred Perry of England. During
the same period Moody continued her success, finishing her career with
eight Wimbledon titles (1927-1930, 1932, 1933, 1935, 1938), seven U.S.
championship titles (1923-1925, 1927- 1929, 1931), and four French
championship titles (1928-1930, 1932). Other leading female players
included Alice Marble and Helen Jacobs of the United States and Dorothy
Round of England.
During the next decade American players such as
Pancho Gonzalez and Jack Kramer continued their successful play. Pancho
Segura of Ecuador, whose career would continue into the 1960s, also
started playing internationally in the 1940s. Dominant female players who
began their careers at this time included Americans Pauline Betz, winner
of four U.S. championships (1942-1944, 1946) and Louise Brough, winner of
four Wimbledon titles (1948-1950, 1955). In the 1950s, Australia became a
tennis power, and Australian men won the Davis Cup 15 times from 1950 to
1967, led by outstanding players such as Frank Sedgman, Ken Rosewall, Lew
Hoad, Roy Emerson, and Ashley Cooper. American Tony Trabert also became a
premier player during this time. Maureen Connolly was the dominant female
player of the early 1950s, winning the grand slam in 1953. Althea Gibson
won both the Wimbledon and the U.S. championships in 1957 and 1958,
becoming the first black player to win those tournaments. During the
1960s, Australians Rod Laver, Fred Stolle, and John Newcombe continued
that country's tennis success, and other male players who became prominent
included Manuel Santana of Spain and Arthur Ashe and Stan Smith of the
United States. Leading female players included Maria Bueno of Brazil,
Margaret Smith Court, Virginia Wade of England, and Billie Jean King of
the United States, who won Wimbledon six times (1966-1968, 1972, 1973,
1975).
In 1968 the open era began when tournaments were opened to
professionals as well as amateurs. In the 1970s Newcombe, Ashe, and Smith
continued their success, joined by such players as Ilie Nastase of Romania
and Guillermo Vilas of Argentina. Jimmy Connors, whose career spanned from
the early 1970s to the mid-1990s, won five U.S. Opens (1974, 1976, 1978,
1982, 1983). Björn Borg of Sweden won five consecutive Wimbledon titles
(1976-1980). Borg's rivalry with American player John McEnroe during this
period ranks as one of the best in tennis history. Among female players,
Court, Wade, and King continued their success, joined by Australian Evonne
Goolagong. Connors, Borg, and McEnroe continued their successful play in
the 1980s, and other leading male players of this decade included Czech-
born Ivan Lendl, Mats Wilander and Stefan Edberg of Sweden, and Boris
Becker of Germany, who in 1985 at the age of 17 became the youngest player
ever to win Wimbledon. One of the most successful female players ever was
Czech-born Martina Navratilova, whose career spanned from the early 1970s
to the mid-1990s. During her career, Navratilova won 167 singles titles,
including nine Wimbledon titles (1978, 1979, 1982-1987, 1990). American
Chris Evert was another dominant female player during the 1970s and 1980s,
winning seven French Opens (1974, 1975, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1985, 1986) and
six U.S. Opens (1975-1978, 1980, 1982). The rivalry between Navratilova
and Evert was one of the most intense and long lasting in tennis history.
In 1988 Steffi Graf had an outstanding year, capturing the grand slam and
the Olympic gold medal. Other leading female players of the 1980s included
American Tracy Austin and Czech Hana Mandilikova.
In the 1990s, Lendl,
Edberg, and Becker continued their success, joined by outstanding American
players such as Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi, Jim Courier, and Michael
Chang. Graf developed a rivalry with Serbian-born Monica Seles, who
emerged as a dominant player, winning the U.S., French, and Australian
opens in both 1991 and 1992. Navratilova remained one of the highest
ranking players until her retirement from singles competition in 1995, and
Arantxa Sánchez Vicario of Spain, Jennifer Capriati of the United States,
and Gabriela Sabatini of Argentina also encountered
success.
One of the best
Name: Stefan Edberg
Best Ranking: (8/90) 1
Country:
SWEDEN
Birthdate: 19/01/66
Height: 6'2"
Left/Right Handed:
R
Wimbledon Results: Won 88,90 RU 89
Australian Open Results: Won
85,87 RU 90,92,93
French Open Results: RU 89, QF 85,91,93
U.S.
Open Results: Won 91,92 SF 86,87
If the seedings were done on
popularity, then the quiet Swede, Stefan Edberg, would have been No.1
every time since 1983. That year he came to Wimbledon and won the junior
title, en route to the first ever Grand Slam of junior tennis.
He has
been quietly lifting trophies ever since - forty-one of them at the last
count. Six of those wins have been in Grand Slam Championships between
1985 and 1992 - two each in Australia, the United States and at Wimbledon.
There have been major doubles successes, too, most of them with Anders
Jarryd. In 1984 they handed McEnroe and Fleming their first- ever Davis
Cup defeat as Sweden beat the United States in Gothenberg and three years
later they won the Australian and US Opens together. In 1994 Stefan was
part of Sweden's Davis Cup triumph in Moscow - his third winning
experience.
Stefan's great rivalry with Boris Becker was one of the
main themes of men's tennis during the 1980's. Their three successive
finals here were momentous events, Becker's fire and fury countered by
Edberg's subtler but no less effective game. Stefan won in 1988 and Boris
had his revenge a year later. In 1990 Stefan won again in a five-set
thriller that displayed those silken serve-and-volley skills, razor-sharp
reflexes and backhand brilliance that had kept him among the world's top
ten ever since 1984. In 1995 Stefan slipped out of that exalted company
for the first time in 11 years as his career began to wind down. The
priorities of life had been changing ever since 1992, the year of his
second US Open success and of his fairy-tale marriage to Annette Olsen.
The arrival in 1993 of little Emilie accelerated the change. No longer did
the world No.1 ranking, which Stefan had earned for the first time in
August 1990, seem terribly important. Besides his family there were other
obligations, like the new Stefan Edberg Foundation he has established in
Sweden to help the next generation of young players and the many charities
he continues to support.
1996 Wimbledon was Stefan's 14th and last
Wimbledon. We shall remember him for his unfailing courtesy to opponents
and court officials, for his modesty in victory and for his dignity in
defeat. He has set a shining example to the next generation.