91 years ago! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_90PPjyGBgk
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How I play tennis - Suzanne Lenglen
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Incredible footage...
I posted this same video some time ago. I think it's the most extraordinary footage I have ever seen. I just love the way she makes a post out of her flank to hit the backhand smash. The clip is a treasure, it really is.Originally posted by gzhpcu View Post91 years ago! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_90PPjyGBgk
Stotty
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-leading to a real backhand "smash"- (in "slow-motion"
I particularly like the caption as well…"-leading to a real backhand "smash"- (in "slow motion")
Exquisite…sublime! It puts GeoffWilliams' backhand smash (read high backhand volley) to shame.Originally posted by klacr View PostThe backhand smash at 10:27 is poetry in motion.
Kyle LaCroix USPTA
Boca Raton
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When I was in my early twenties, I was playing in a club in Lugano (which I wrote about), and the founder, Lee Born, who was then in his 80's, absolutely adored Susan Lenglen and used to tell endless stories about her.
Here is Lee as I knew him, a great Belle Epoque character full of tall tales about tennis...
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That's nice photo of Lee. What racket is that he's holding, a Spalding?Originally posted by gzhpcu View PostWhen I was in my early twenties, I was playing in a club in Lugano (which I wrote about), and the founder, Lee Born, who was then in his 80's, absolutely adored Susan Lenglen and used to tell endless stories about her.
Here is Lee as I knew him, a great Belle Epoque character full of tall tales about tennis...
Stotty
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She is amazing and just loves the camera. She is deliberately making poses for the camera. The press must have loved her back in the day. I imagine her strokes during matchplay against worthy opponents were less dramatic.Originally posted by gzhpcu View PostStotty
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What was true then... is still true now!
When people come in to the shop to sign up themselves or their children to learn to play tennis, I tell them that if they want to learn to play, they better make friends with a wall somewhere. While the game may have changed, this axiom still holds as well now as it did 100 years ago.
don
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