1975 Part 1
I wanted to respond to this sooner, but it's been tough working and watching all the tennis I could the last few days. The rain gave me a little break, so:
1975
That was a very interesting year. But you need the context of the previous years to get me there. In early 1973, I sold my interest in the Tennis Academy, Inc in Grand Central Station that I had founded in 1971 and used the money to support me playing the satellite circuits in Florida and the South. I didn't do very well and then my girlfriend told me to get lost, so I did. I went to Europe with the clothes on my back and a Eurorail pass and an Amex card that I promptly lost. I got offered a job in Germany, so I went home and spent 5 weeks learning to speak German before returning to Augsburg in time for Octoberfest in Munich (oh, my head!!). I was fluent … with the vocabulary and grammar of a 4 year old and some additional vocabulary for teaching tennis. But I didn't have to translate. Anyway, I came back from that gig in the spring of '74 to LA and went to work for Hollywood Indoor Tennis. (Yes, we did have indoor courts in LA for a couple of years). Ostensibly, I had returned to bid on the tennis concession at the park where I had learned to play and still teach today. I thought I had an inside track, but I didn't really understand what a true "inside track" might have cost me. Hollywood Indoor would have been fun, but I got offered a job to run the Long Island Adult Tennis Camp at the Bridgehampton Tennis and Surf Club for Billie Jean King and Dennis Van der Meer's Tennis America (I had been a camp counselor for Dennis in 1968 after my sophomore year in college and he had gotten me a head pro job the following year at the Glenbrook Inn and Ranch, which was the real life Ponderosa in the 19th century!). So that's how I ended up getting to the Hamptons for the first time in the summer of 1974. (Also, how I lost my heart to Mary M during the week of indoctrination into Tennis America's system at Dennis's camp in Incline Village. They gave me my own hotel room right across from the courts. Wow! What a week! I was a broken puppy for at least 8 months. Pan Am stewardess, model, gourmet cook, mensa IQ, absolutely gorgeous, couldn't figure out what she was doing with me…)
Anyway, I went to Bridgehampton and I had no idea what I was getting myself into. Absolutely beautiful spot. 14 courts right on the beach. Paul Annacone's dad, Dom, was the manager of the club. I ran the camp for the summer and at the end of the summer, Tennis America went bankrupt. So I went back to the club and cut a deal to run my own Long Island Adult Tennis Camp at the club in the summer of 1975. I didn't have that deal cut and signed until well into 1975. In the meantime, that winter I had sublet a 3 floor walk-up studio apartment on 72nd street near 3rd Avenue and was teaching here and there. I was fed up with the tournaments we were playing that didn't offer any prize money, so I organized my own circuit. I think I ran 4 events in total from Thanksgiving to New Year's and gave away $500 so that quarterfinalists got back their $25 entry fee. I never got credit for that, but it changed the way local open tournaments operated in the East. I didn't lose much, but I got closer to being broke and at the end of my 3 month sublease at the beginning of 1975, I was trying to get my hack license. I got the NY driver's license upgrade, but I hadn't quite gotten familiar enough with NY to take the NYC hack license test.
So in the beginning of 1975, I had no place to live. I had payments on a Subaru I had bought from a dealer in Ridgefield, CT who was the co-owner of an indoor club that had been a partner in a satellite operation of Tennis Academy, Inc and had provided my with my address for most of 1973. I was driving around the NY metro area from Westchester county to Long Island giving lessons where I could and practicing where I could and, of course, playing tournaments when I could. I took a room in a boarding house in Hastings-on-the-Hudson close to the River Tennis Club where I did most of my practicing and some teaching. It wasn't worth a penny more than the $17 a week it cost me. I was in the process of finalizing the deal for the adult tennis camp at Bridgehampton. A couple of times a week I would go out to Seaford Indoor Tennis to play with the kids of the owner, Larry Levins. He had cosigned a note for me to buy a video camera to use in my teaching. I was even going around using the camera to video basketball games for Hofstra University. Video was pretty scarce in 1975. Another tennis pro, Paul Lynner, had hooked my up with the athletic department. But I ended up getting stiffed there too! Then in March, it seemed like things started to go my way.
My lawyer from Tennis Academy, Kevin MacCarthy, was settling the estate for a man who had been in a rent controlled studio apartment in midtown on Lexington between 64th and 65th Streets. All I had to do was pay the rent. The real estate company(I think Douglass Elliman), could raise the rent to anything for the new tenant. Kevin wanted the apartment eventually, but I could have it in the meantime. I went in as the dead man's brother's nephew. I found out later that the lawyer, never told the brother. Anyway, the first few month's I only had to pay the rent at the old rate, $37 a month, about a tenth of what it could have been. When they eventually raised it to a new level on the new lease (not in my name, unfortunately), they raised that rent to $100 a month. When they finally figured out I wasn't who we were claiming, I had to leave so the lawyer could try to fight it out for himself. By that time the rent was up to about $125 a month and I had put in almost $10,000 into refurbishing the place, but that was not for another 6 years in May of 1981! Needless to say, it was a very good deal.
Originally posted by don_budge
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1975
That was a very interesting year. But you need the context of the previous years to get me there. In early 1973, I sold my interest in the Tennis Academy, Inc in Grand Central Station that I had founded in 1971 and used the money to support me playing the satellite circuits in Florida and the South. I didn't do very well and then my girlfriend told me to get lost, so I did. I went to Europe with the clothes on my back and a Eurorail pass and an Amex card that I promptly lost. I got offered a job in Germany, so I went home and spent 5 weeks learning to speak German before returning to Augsburg in time for Octoberfest in Munich (oh, my head!!). I was fluent … with the vocabulary and grammar of a 4 year old and some additional vocabulary for teaching tennis. But I didn't have to translate. Anyway, I came back from that gig in the spring of '74 to LA and went to work for Hollywood Indoor Tennis. (Yes, we did have indoor courts in LA for a couple of years). Ostensibly, I had returned to bid on the tennis concession at the park where I had learned to play and still teach today. I thought I had an inside track, but I didn't really understand what a true "inside track" might have cost me. Hollywood Indoor would have been fun, but I got offered a job to run the Long Island Adult Tennis Camp at the Bridgehampton Tennis and Surf Club for Billie Jean King and Dennis Van der Meer's Tennis America (I had been a camp counselor for Dennis in 1968 after my sophomore year in college and he had gotten me a head pro job the following year at the Glenbrook Inn and Ranch, which was the real life Ponderosa in the 19th century!). So that's how I ended up getting to the Hamptons for the first time in the summer of 1974. (Also, how I lost my heart to Mary M during the week of indoctrination into Tennis America's system at Dennis's camp in Incline Village. They gave me my own hotel room right across from the courts. Wow! What a week! I was a broken puppy for at least 8 months. Pan Am stewardess, model, gourmet cook, mensa IQ, absolutely gorgeous, couldn't figure out what she was doing with me…)
Anyway, I went to Bridgehampton and I had no idea what I was getting myself into. Absolutely beautiful spot. 14 courts right on the beach. Paul Annacone's dad, Dom, was the manager of the club. I ran the camp for the summer and at the end of the summer, Tennis America went bankrupt. So I went back to the club and cut a deal to run my own Long Island Adult Tennis Camp at the club in the summer of 1975. I didn't have that deal cut and signed until well into 1975. In the meantime, that winter I had sublet a 3 floor walk-up studio apartment on 72nd street near 3rd Avenue and was teaching here and there. I was fed up with the tournaments we were playing that didn't offer any prize money, so I organized my own circuit. I think I ran 4 events in total from Thanksgiving to New Year's and gave away $500 so that quarterfinalists got back their $25 entry fee. I never got credit for that, but it changed the way local open tournaments operated in the East. I didn't lose much, but I got closer to being broke and at the end of my 3 month sublease at the beginning of 1975, I was trying to get my hack license. I got the NY driver's license upgrade, but I hadn't quite gotten familiar enough with NY to take the NYC hack license test.
So in the beginning of 1975, I had no place to live. I had payments on a Subaru I had bought from a dealer in Ridgefield, CT who was the co-owner of an indoor club that had been a partner in a satellite operation of Tennis Academy, Inc and had provided my with my address for most of 1973. I was driving around the NY metro area from Westchester county to Long Island giving lessons where I could and practicing where I could and, of course, playing tournaments when I could. I took a room in a boarding house in Hastings-on-the-Hudson close to the River Tennis Club where I did most of my practicing and some teaching. It wasn't worth a penny more than the $17 a week it cost me. I was in the process of finalizing the deal for the adult tennis camp at Bridgehampton. A couple of times a week I would go out to Seaford Indoor Tennis to play with the kids of the owner, Larry Levins. He had cosigned a note for me to buy a video camera to use in my teaching. I was even going around using the camera to video basketball games for Hofstra University. Video was pretty scarce in 1975. Another tennis pro, Paul Lynner, had hooked my up with the athletic department. But I ended up getting stiffed there too! Then in March, it seemed like things started to go my way.
My lawyer from Tennis Academy, Kevin MacCarthy, was settling the estate for a man who had been in a rent controlled studio apartment in midtown on Lexington between 64th and 65th Streets. All I had to do was pay the rent. The real estate company(I think Douglass Elliman), could raise the rent to anything for the new tenant. Kevin wanted the apartment eventually, but I could have it in the meantime. I went in as the dead man's brother's nephew. I found out later that the lawyer, never told the brother. Anyway, the first few month's I only had to pay the rent at the old rate, $37 a month, about a tenth of what it could have been. When they eventually raised it to a new level on the new lease (not in my name, unfortunately), they raised that rent to $100 a month. When they finally figured out I wasn't who we were claiming, I had to leave so the lawyer could try to fight it out for himself. By that time the rent was up to about $125 a month and I had put in almost $10,000 into refurbishing the place, but that was not for another 6 years in May of 1981! Needless to say, it was a very good deal.
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