A Panacea for American Tennis?
By Jim Bill
If you have been keeping up with USTA activities recently you will have noticed that the organization is wholeheartedly promoting the QuickStart Tennis (QST) program (smaller courts, lower nets, lower bouncing balls) for kids as a way to build the popularity of tennis and as a possible remedy for the growing concern that the USA isn’t presently producing Grand Slam champions. Although I agree that QST may be an appropriate way to introduce tennis to young children and possibly sustain their long-term interest in the sport, I don’t believe it will prove to be a panacea for America’s tennis ills. The eras that produced numerous American major tournament champions are gone forever and here is why:
Most importantly what should not be overlooked is the fact that the organization for developing professional tennis players has given birth in recent years to a system that has vastly extended itself throughout much of the world. If we look at the present day organization of the ATP Challenger and Futures Tour and the ITF Women’s circuit, we see aspiring players are competing in literally hundreds of events in almost seventy countries throughout the calendar year. This was not happening twenty to thirty years ago. As a result, we are seeing more and more highly-ranked professional players coming from different parts of the globe. (Serbia, Croatia, China, Belarus, Denmark, Latvia, and Cyprus to mention a few.)
Another factor is the large amount of prize money associated with the ATP and WTA Tours in the present times (2.2 million dollars each for the men’s and women’s winners of the Australian Open this year). The substantial increase in prize money associated with professional tournament events has had a huge impact by attracting topnotch athletes who might have otherwise gone into other professional sports. This is another reason why we are seeing more and more professional tennis players come from a much wider array of countries than years past.
One should also take note of how many foreign players we now have playing in our university system. This is taking away significant developmental opportunities from American players by eliminating possible positions on the team rosters. For the most part this was unheard of in previous decades in university and college tennis.
One last basic point in this argument as to why QST will not solve America’s tennis ills is the idea that for American children the opportunities to play such sports as football, basketball, baseball and soccer are much more accessible primarily because of cost. Parents can get their children involved and help them to develop relatively cheaply. Tennis, on the other hand, tends to be more technical in nature and undoubtedly costs parents more to develop their children’s talents due to the cost of equipment, one-on-one private lessons, club memberships, academies, tournament play, traveling expenses and the like. This factor obviously diminishes what could be a rather large pool of potential American Grand Slam champions and top-ten players.
The USA will always produce very high caliber professional tennis players, but it won’t dominate the field like it may have in the past. The game and the professional scene have changed forever. I for one, think that is good. It makes for more variety and is thus more
interesting.
JBill
By Jim Bill
If you have been keeping up with USTA activities recently you will have noticed that the organization is wholeheartedly promoting the QuickStart Tennis (QST) program (smaller courts, lower nets, lower bouncing balls) for kids as a way to build the popularity of tennis and as a possible remedy for the growing concern that the USA isn’t presently producing Grand Slam champions. Although I agree that QST may be an appropriate way to introduce tennis to young children and possibly sustain their long-term interest in the sport, I don’t believe it will prove to be a panacea for America’s tennis ills. The eras that produced numerous American major tournament champions are gone forever and here is why:
Most importantly what should not be overlooked is the fact that the organization for developing professional tennis players has given birth in recent years to a system that has vastly extended itself throughout much of the world. If we look at the present day organization of the ATP Challenger and Futures Tour and the ITF Women’s circuit, we see aspiring players are competing in literally hundreds of events in almost seventy countries throughout the calendar year. This was not happening twenty to thirty years ago. As a result, we are seeing more and more highly-ranked professional players coming from different parts of the globe. (Serbia, Croatia, China, Belarus, Denmark, Latvia, and Cyprus to mention a few.)
Another factor is the large amount of prize money associated with the ATP and WTA Tours in the present times (2.2 million dollars each for the men’s and women’s winners of the Australian Open this year). The substantial increase in prize money associated with professional tournament events has had a huge impact by attracting topnotch athletes who might have otherwise gone into other professional sports. This is another reason why we are seeing more and more professional tennis players come from a much wider array of countries than years past.
One should also take note of how many foreign players we now have playing in our university system. This is taking away significant developmental opportunities from American players by eliminating possible positions on the team rosters. For the most part this was unheard of in previous decades in university and college tennis.
One last basic point in this argument as to why QST will not solve America’s tennis ills is the idea that for American children the opportunities to play such sports as football, basketball, baseball and soccer are much more accessible primarily because of cost. Parents can get their children involved and help them to develop relatively cheaply. Tennis, on the other hand, tends to be more technical in nature and undoubtedly costs parents more to develop their children’s talents due to the cost of equipment, one-on-one private lessons, club memberships, academies, tournament play, traveling expenses and the like. This factor obviously diminishes what could be a rather large pool of potential American Grand Slam champions and top-ten players.
The USA will always produce very high caliber professional tennis players, but it won’t dominate the field like it may have in the past. The game and the professional scene have changed forever. I for one, think that is good. It makes for more variety and is thus more
interesting.
JBill
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