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tennis
tennis, original name
TABLE OF CONTENTS
lawn tennis, game in
which two opposing Introduction
players (singles) or pairs History
of players (doubles) use
Play of the game
Serena Williams tautly strung rackets to
hit a ball of specified
size, weight, and bounce over a net on a rectangular court. Points are awarded to a player or
team whenever the opponent fails to correctly return the ball within the prescribed dimensions
of the court. Organized tennis is played according to rules sanctioned by the International
Tennis Federation (ITF), the world governing body of the sport.
Tennis originally was known as lawn tennis, and formally still is in Britain, because it was
played on grass courts by Victorian gentlemen and ladies. It is now played on a variety of
surfaces. The origins of the game can be traced to a 12th–13th-century French handball game
called jeu de paume (“game of the palm”), from which was derived a complex indoor racket-
and-ball game: real tennis. This ancient game is still played to a limited degree and is usually
called real tennis in Britain, court tennis in the United States, and royal tennis in Australia.
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sizes, shapes, and materials, the most significant milestones being the introduction of metal
frames beginning in 1967 and the oversized head in 1976.
While tennis can be enjoyed by players of practically any level of skill, top competition is a
demanding test of both shot making and stamina, rich in stylistic and strategic variety. From
its origins as a garden-party game for ladies in whalebone corsets and starched petticoats and
men in long white flannels, it has evolved into a physical chess match in which players attack
and defend, exploiting angles and technical weaknesses with strokes of widely diverse pace
and spin. Tournaments offer tens of millions of dollars in prize money annually.
History
Origin and early years
There has been much dispute over the invention of modern tennis, but the officially recognized
centennial of the game in 1973 commemorated its introduction by Major Walter Clopton
Wingfield in 1873. He published the first book of rules that year and took out a patent on his
game in 1874, although historians have concluded that similar games were played earlier and
that the first tennis club was established by the Englishman Harry Gem and several associates
in Leamington in 1872. Wingfield’s court was of the hourglass shape and may have developed
from badminton. The hourglass shape, stipulated by Wingfield in his booklet “Sphairistiké, or
Lawn Tennis,” may have been adopted for patent reasons since it distinguished the court from
ordinary rectangular courts. At the time, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) was the
governing body of real tennis, whose rules it had recently revised. After J.M. Heathcote, a
distinguished real tennis player, developed a better tennis ball of rubber covered with white
flannel, the MCC in 1875 established a new, standardized set of rules for tennis.
Meanwhile, the game had spread to the United States in the 1870s. Mary Outerbridge of New
York has been credited with bringing a set of rackets and balls to her brother, a director of the
Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club. But research has shown that William Appleton of
Nahant, Massachusetts, may have owned the first lawn tennis set and that his friends James
Dwight and Fred R. Sears popularized the game.
An important milestone in the history of tennis was the decision of the All England Croquet
Club to set aside one of its lawns at Wimbledon for tennis, which soon proved so popular that
the club changed its name to the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club. In 1877 the club
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There were several alterations in some of the other rules (e.g., governing the height of the net)
until 1880, when the All England Club and the MCC published revised rules that approximate
very closely those still in use. The All England Club was the dominant authority then, the
British Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) not being formed until 1888. In 1880 the first U.S.
championship was held at the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club. The victor was an
Englishman, O.E. Woodhouse. The popularity of the game in the United States and frequent
doubts about the rules led to the foundation in 1881 of the U.S. National Lawn Tennis
Association, later renamed the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association and, in 1975, the U.S. Tennis
Association (USTA). Under its auspices, the first official U.S. national championship, played
under English rules, was held in 1881 at the Newport Casino, Newport, Rhode Island. The
winner, Richard Sears, was U.S. champion for seven consecutive years.
Tennis had taken firm root in Australia by 1880, and the first Australian Championships were
played in 1905. The first national championships in New Zealand were held in 1886. In 1904
the Lawn Tennis Association of Australasia (later of Australia) was founded.
The first French Championships were held at the Stade Français in 1891, but it was an
interclub tournament that did not become truly international until 1925; the French Federation
of Lawn Tennis was established in 1920. Other national championships were inaugurated in
Canada (1890), South Africa (1891), Spain (1910), Denmark (1921), Egypt (1925), Italy
(1930), and Sweden (1936). In 1884 a women’s championship was introduced at Wimbledon,
and women’s national championships were held in the United States starting in 1887.
Outstanding players
Tennis in the 1880s was dominated by the remarkable twin brothers William and Ernest
Renshaw. William won the Wimbledon singles championship seven times, on three occasions
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defeating his brother in the final. Ernest was victorious once, and in partnership they won the
doubles championship, first played at Oxford in 1879, seven times.
In the 1890s public interest began to wane. The Wimbledon Championships showed a
financial loss in 1894 and 1895; the All England Club committee turned back to croquet to
revive its flagging fortunes. The popularity of Wimbledon and tennis were reestablished by
two more brothers: Reginald and Laurie Doherty. Reginald won the Wimbledon singles from
1897 to 1900. Laurie won from 1902 to 1906, took the U.S. championship in 1903, and won a
gold medal in the Olympic Games in 1900.
The Doherty reign ended in 1906, but tennis was by then firmly established. The new star was
Norman Brookes, the first in a long line of Australian champions and the first left-hander to
reach the top. He won at Wimbledon in 1907 and again on his next visit, in 1914. He and his
doubles partner, Tony Wilding of New Zealand, wrested the Davis Cup from Great Britain in
1907 and held it until 1911, arousing enduring public interest in Australia and New Zealand.
Of the women champions of the early 1900s, Dorothea Douglass (later Mrs. Lambert
Chambers) won at Wimbledon seven times, beginning in 1903. In 1905, however, Douglass
met her match in the first U.S. women’s champion to win at Wimbledon, May Sutton, who
again defeated her at Wimbledon in 1907. The outbreak of World War I in 1914 interrupted
tennis activities in Britain and Europe, but, with the exception of 1917, when a Patriotic
Tournament was held, U.S. championships continued to be played.
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France also made its mark on men’s tennis with the fabulous “Four Musketeers”—Jean
Borotra, Henri Cochet, René Lacoste, and Jacques Brugnon. Among them, they monopolized
the Wimbledon singles title from 1924 through 1929, won 10 French and 3 U.S. singles
championships, and won 5 Wimbledon and 10 French doubles championships. They captured
the Davis Cup from the United States in 1927 and held it until 1933.
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Don Budge 1940, and in 1939 she won the singles, doubles, and
mixed doubles at Wimbledon, a “triple” previously
accomplished only by Lenglen and Budge.
Australia ruled men’s tennis in the 1950s and ’60s, winning the Davis Cup in 15 of 18 years.
Among the Wimbledon and U.S. singles champions who played for Harry Hopman, the
outstanding nonplaying Australian captain, were Frank Sedgman, Lew Hoad, Ken Rosewall,
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Rod Laver
Jaroslav Drobny, an expatriate Czech, in 1954 and Alex
Olmedo, from Peru, in 1959 and in the victories of
Mexican Rafael Osuna in the U.S. championship in
1963, Manuel Santana of Spain in the U.S. championship
in 1965 and Wimbledon in 1966, and Brazilian Maria
Bueno, the U.S. champion four times and Wimbledon
champion three times between 1959 and 1966.
Maria Bueno
Australian Margaret Smith Court was the second woman
to win the Grand Slam, in 1970, and she set the all-time
record for singles, doubles, and mixed doubles titles in
the four major championships: 65 between 1960 and
1975, including 3 Wimbledon, 6 U.S., 5 French, and 11
Australian singles. Billie Jean Moffitt King set a record
Billie Jean King
for career Wimbledon titles, winning 6 singles, 10
doubles, and 4 mixed between 1961 and 1979.
Starting in the 1930s, many of the amateur champions became barnstorming professionals.
After World War II, Jack Kramer became the pro champion and in the early 1950s took over
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promotion of the pro tour. He kept raiding the amateur ranks, signing such stars as Frank
Sedgman, Tony Trabert, Lew Hoad, and Ken Rosewall. They made money with the one-night
stands, but their matches were virtually unreported. Although the traditional tournament
circuit was avowedly amateur, leading players were paid substantial guarantees “under the
table” in addition to expenses. For more than four decades there was discussion of having
“open” competition between amateurs and pros to end the hypocrisy of “shamateurism,” but
proposals were always defeated by conservative elements within the International Lawn
Tennis Federation (ILTF—later the ITF). In 1967, however, two new professional groups were
formed: the National Tennis League, organized by former U.S. Davis Cup captain George
MacCall, and World Championship Tennis (WCT), founded by New Orleans promoter Dave
Dixon and funded by Dallas oil and football tycoon Lamar Hunt. Between them they signed a
significant number of the world’s top players, professional and amateur.
In 1967 a British proposal for a limited schedule of open tournaments was voted down by the
international federation, but the British LTA refused to accept the verdict. In December 1967,
despite the threat of expulsion from the ILTF, the LTA voted to abolish the distinction between
amateurs and pros in their tournaments. This revolutionary step forced an emergency meeting
of the ILTF in March 1968 in which 12 open tournaments were approved. The era of open
professionalism in tennis dawned in 1968.
The transition years from quasi-amateurism to full-fledged professional tennis were rife with
political disputes and lawsuits for control of what had become a big-money sport. Both male
and female players formed guilds—the men’s Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and
the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA), which in 1986 became the Women’s International
Tennis Association (WITA). Previous player unions had been ineffective, but the ATP showed
itself a potent political force when the majority of its members boycotted Wimbledon in 1973
in a dispute over the eligibility of the Yugoslav pro Nikki Pilic. The women’s union proved
similarly unified. The women have had a separate pro tour, except at the major championships,
since 1971.
The first few seasons of open tennis were ruled by players who were products of the old
system and reflected its behavioral standards and norms. These included the compact, classical
Rosewall, the Australian John Newcombe, and the Americans Arthur Ashe and Stan Smith.
Graf’s emergence also ended an extraordinary streak by the American Chris Evert, who had
won at least one of the Grand Slam singles titles for 13 consecutive years, 1974–86, an
unprecedented feat. A paragon of backcourt consistency and controlled temperament, Evert
was the perfect contrast in both style and personality to several net-rushing rivals: the
Australian Evonne Goolagong, who won her first Wimbledon in 1971 at age 19, Billie Jean
King, and Navratilova, whom Evert played in 13 Grand Slam finals in one of the game’s
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greatest rivalries. Evert, probably more than anyone, popularized the two-handed backhand,
and she made a steady baseline game the prevalent style of a whole generation of women
players.
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played on grass in several cities until 1968, when they moved to Melbourne; in 1988 they
moved within that city to the synthetic courts of the new Australian National Tennis Centre.
The principal team events are the Davis Cup, Federation Cup, and Wightman Cup (U.S. versus
British women). The Davis Cup series consists of five matches played over three days: two
singles, one doubles, then two “reverse” singles. The Davis Cup draw was played in two zones
from 1923 through 1965 and in four zones from 1966 through 1980. Starting in 1981, the top
16 teams competed in a World Group and all other participating nations in four zones. The
Federation Cup, inaugurated in 1963, is contested at one site over a one-week period, each
series consisting of three matches: two singles and a doubles. The Wightman Cup alternates
between U.S. and British sites and consists of best-of-seven matches: five singles and two
doubles.
A tennis ball consists of a pressurized rubber core covered with high-quality cloth, usually
wool mixed with up to 35 percent nylon. Balls gradually go soft with use, and in tournament
play they are changed at regular intervals agreed upon by officials and depending upon such
factors as the court surface. Balls must have a uniform outer surface, and, if there are any
seams, they must be stitchless. The ITF specifies that the ball must be yellow or white,
between 2.5 and 2.8 inches (6.35 and 7.14 cm) in diameter, and between 1.975 and 2.095
ounces (56 and 59.4 grams) in weight. The ball must have a bounce between 53 and 58 inches
(135 and 147 cm) when dropped 100 inches (254 cm) upon a concrete base.
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Nothing in the rules defined the racket until 1981. After an ITF committee had made studies of
the so-called “double-strung,” or “spaghetti,” racket, introduced in 1977, which had two layers
of strings that imparted topspin on the ball, it was banned by the following rule:
A racket shall consist of a frame, which may be of any material, weight, size or shape and stringing.
The stringing must be uniform and smooth and may be of any material. The strings must be
alternately interlaced or bonded where they cross. The distance between the main and/or cross
strings shall not be less than one quarter of an inch nor more than one-half inch. If there are
attachments they must be used only to prevent wear and tear and must not alter the flight of the ball.
In 1979 the ITF limited racket length for professional play to 29 inches (73.7 cm). This
maximum was applied to nonprofessional play in 2000. Maximum racket width is 12.5 inches
(31.75 cm).
Principles of play
Opponents spin a racket or toss a coin to decide on side and service. The winner may decide to
serve or receive service first (in which case the opponent chooses the side) or may decide on a
choice of side (in which case the opponent may choose to serve or receive service first). The
players serve alternate games and change sides after every odd number of games.
Beginning each game from behind his or her right-hand court, the server has both feet behind
the baseline and strikes the ball diagonally across the net and into the opponent’s right-hand
service court. Should the ball on service strike the top of the net before falling in the correct
service court, it is a “let” and is replayed. The server is allowed one miss, or “fault,” either into
the net or outside the opponent’s service court. Failure to deliver a correct service on two
attempts constitutes loss of the point.
To return service, the receiver strikes the ball back (before it hits the ground a second time)
over the net and within the boundaries of the opponent’s court. After the service has been
correctly returned, the players may volley the ball (i.e., hit it before it bounces) or hit it after
its first bounce, and the point continues until one player fails to make a correct return. This
may occur if a player fails to hit the ball over the net, hits it outside the opponent’s boundaries,
or fails to hit it before it strikes the ground a second time on his or her side of the net.
To win a game, a player must win four points and by a margin of two. The scoring goes 15,
30, 40, game; this system, derived from real tennis, is medieval in origin. It never has been
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satisfactorily explained why three points equal 40 rather than 45. Zero is generally referred to
as “love,” which is thought to be derived from l’oeuf, the French word for “egg.” The server’s
score is called first; thus, 30–15 means that the server has two points to one, whereas 15–30
means that the receiver has two points to one. If both players reach 40, the score is said to be
“deuce,” and the game continues until a player achieves first “advantage” and then the two-
point margin for “game.” There is no limit to the number of times a game can go to deuce
before it is decided, but in some competitions a so-called “no-ad” system is used, which means
that no two-point margin is required and the first player to win four points wins the game. As
points make up a game, games make up a set, and sets make up a match. The first player to
win six games traditionally wins the set, although a two-game margin is again required; thus, a
set in which each player has won five games cannot be won before 7–5.
Since the early 1970s virtually all competitions have come to employ tiebreakers to eliminate
marathon sets. Usually played at six games all, the tiebreaker can consist of an odd number of
points with no two-point margin required (“sudden death”) or an even number of points with a
two-point margin required. For example, in a 12-point tiebreaker the first player to reach 7
points with a margin of 2 wins the tiebreaker game and the set, 7–6. Virtually all tournaments
now play tiebreakers at six games all. In major tournaments and the Davis Cup, men generally
play best-of-five-set matches and women best-of-three. In most other tournaments, men now
also play best-of-three sets; women occasionally play best-of-five for finals. In Olympic
competition, all matches are best-of-three sets, except for the men’s finals, which are best-of-
five.
The same basic principles of play and scoring apply to doubles. Service alternates between the
two opposing teams, but each team must decide at the start of each set which partner shall
serve first. Equally, the receiving team must decide at the start of each set which of them shall
receive service first, and they then receive service on alternate points for that game and set.
Thus, the server will alternate sides of the court on successive points in each game, but the
receiver will always receive on the same side of the court during that game (and the set).
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of power and clever angle and spin, he can win points outright with the serve, called an “ace”
if the opponent cannot get his racket on the ball and a “service winner” if the opponent reaches
it but cannot play it, or the server can force such a weak return that his second shot is an easy
“kill.” Especially on faster surfaces, the server may also follow his delivery to the net and
establish his position. At the net a player is always vulnerable to a passing shot—one angled
cross-court or played down-the-line, beyond reach—but if the serve or approach shot puts the
opponent under enough pressure, the server, now at the net, has the upper hand, since a volley
is generally easier to put away (play for a point) than a ground stroke (one played on a
bounce). An effective first serve is a considerable asset on any surface. The best servers not
only deliver the ball hard but vary their patterns so that a receiver cannot anticipate where the
serve is coming. Equally important is the ability to deliver an effective second service (one
made after an initial fault), usually with less power but more spin or “kick.”
For good volleyers, the key to winning is to get to the net, behind either the serve or approach
shot. For players whose strength is their ground stroke, the priority is to maneuver the
opponent into a vulnerable position for a winning passing shot, placement, or drive that forces
an error. All shots after the serve—volley or ground stroke—can be played on either the
forehand (where, if the racket were viewed as an extension of the hand, the palm would be
striking the ball) or the backhand (where the back of the hand would be striking the ball).
Styles of play at the top level have varied widely with changing court surfaces. When most
major tournaments were played on grass, for instance, there was a distinct advantage to a
powerful serve-and-volley game and short, controlled, underspin ground strokes that kept the
ball low. When slow clay became the predominant surface of the professional game in the
mid-1970s, there was more emphasis on solid ground strokes and topspin, which allowed
players to loop the ball well over the net and have it bounce high, pinning opponents to the
backcourt. Hard-surface courts of medium speed and true bounce favour an all-court game and
enable both net rushers and baseliners to play their preferred styles.
Other strokes, besides the serve, volley, and drive, include the lob, overhead smash, half
volley, and drop shot. The lob, a soft high-arched loop, can be played either defensively, to try
to recover from an awkward, vulnerable position where an attacking stroke is impossible, or
offensively, to get the ball over the reach of an opponent at the net and put him on the
defensive. The player who makes an offensive lob often follows it to the net, but if a lob is not
high enough to get over the opponent, it can be returned with an overhead smash, the most
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forceful of strokes. The player making the smash often leaps to hit the ball with a stroke
similar to the serve from a position approximating the service toss. The half volley is a shot
played on a very short bounce, usually a defensive stroke effected when one cannot quite
reach an opponent’s shot in the air and volley it. The drop shot, which is often hit from the
same motion as a drive, attempts to get the ball just over the net with underspin so that it
barely bounces, either catching an opponent flat-footed in the backcourt where he cannot reach
the ball or forcing him to run in and lunge at the ball, leaving him off balance.
Morys George Lyndhurst Bruce, 4th Baron Aberdare Barry Steven Lorge The Editors of Encyclopaedia
Britannica
Citation Information
Article Title:
tennis
Website Name:
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Publisher:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Date Published:
26 August 2022
URL:
https://www.britannica.comhttps://www.britannica.com/sports/tennis
Access Date:
October 27, 2022
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