Lead Stories

Young Americans A Long, Long Way from Wimbledon

Last year, two American juniors bound for the pro circuit — Devin Britton and Jordan Cox — played an epic three-set semifinal in the boys singles.  Cox, then 17, won 6-3, 6-7 (5), 16-14, the final set lasting 83 minutes (which in the pre-Isner/Mahut days seemed liked a long time). Cox lost in the finals (pictured [...]

John Isner Stands Tall in Wimbledon’s Longest Match

John Isner Stands Tall in Wimbledon's Longest Match

6-4, 3-6, 6-7, 7-6, 70-68.
Epic. Unbelievable.  Amazing.  Classy.  Gracious. 
Aces 112 to 103.
Eleven hours, five minutes.

A Classic Blog Post for a Classic Match

Below is a selection from Xan Brooks’ live blogon the guardian.co.uk page.  Never has a live blog been so spontaneously brilliant, so fun to read:
9.25pm: Last thoughts before I ring me a hearse. That was beyond tennis. I think it was even beyond survival, because there is a strong suggestion (soon to be confirmed by doctors) [...]

Patrick McEnroe’s Hardcourt Confidential: Pat Mac’s Inside Look at Davis Cup, American Tennis and the Grand Slams

After Andy Roddick’s heartbreaking loss last year to Roger Federer at Wimbledon, an anxious U.S. Davis Cup captain Patrick McEnroe visited the London house where Roddick’s camp mourned.  He asked Roddick about playing in the U.S. team’s quarterfinal match with Croatia the next weekend, a grueling task on red clay. Roddick, “hemmed and hawed,” and McEnroe knew [...]

From the French Open to Philadelphia: Tennis and Red Brick Dust

From the French Open to Philadelphia: Tennis and Red Brick Dust

I’ve been updating this blog more infrequently than I’d like over the past few months, in part because of a new job but also due to the distraction of a major renovation of our row house in Philadelphia.  I didn’t think this project — tearing down and rebuilding the brick three-story front of a 103-year-old row [...]

A Nod to Jimmy C — Courier, that is…Two-Time French Open Champ

Jim Courier often does not get his due when American tennis players are discussed, but  he is the only one to win two French Opens (‘91, ‘92) since pros started playing Grand Slams 42 years ago.  And he is one of only three Americans in history to win the tournament twice (the others being Frank [...]

Bryans Best in All-American Final in Rome

Bob and Mike Bryan added another trophy to the case Sunday morning, winning the title in Rome over friends and fellow Amerians John Isner and Sam Querrey.  All this national media attention of late has been good for the twins.

The Red Dirt of the Mediterranean Spring

On mornings the past few weeks before work I’ve flipped on the Tennis Channel with breakfast, watching the ATP matches on red clay from Monte Carlo, Barcelona and this past week Rome, perhaps the best time of year for the tennis tour as long as you don’t mind that there aren’t any American competitors deep in [...]

Bryan Brothers Getting Their Due

First there was the prime-time feature on 60 Minutes last month, and this week a full-length profile by L. Jon Wertheim in Sports Illustrated.  It’s great to see the soon-to-be-best doubles team in the history of tennis getting some recognition.  It has been long overdue, as the media’s attention to doubles has been relatively non-existent.

Is this Roddick’s Year to Win Wimbledon?

Peter Bodo of Tennis magazine thinks so.  “I believe he’s going to do it, if not this year, then the next. If not then, then sometime,” Bodo writes on his blog. Roddick is coming off one of his best months ever, winning the Sony Ericsson and finishing second in Indian Wells.  He had not reached a Masters [...]