I’m impressed by any subscriber who has heard of Hamilton Farrar "Ham" Richardson. But he deserves to be heard of. Ham was a different kind of man from a different tennis era: an economics major and a Rhodes Scholar, who happened to became the number one player in the United States in 1958 while still studying at Oxford. A successful Dallas stockbroker. And a man with an impeccable, lethal one-handed backhand.
According to Joseph B. Stahl, a student of the amateur game and a former writer for World Tennis, it was the best backhand in the history of wood racket tennis. As Joe wrote to me: "Going back as far as Tilden in the 1920s, I've seen a lot of backhands on film and in person, and I never saw one struck with a wood racket anywhere near as good as that of Richardson, not Budge's, not Rosewall's, not Hoad's, not Laver's. Its mechanics were perfect and he could bludgeon anything with it, high balls, low balls, anything."
I had the privilege of ball boying for Ham at a small clay court tournament in Tulsa where I grew up. At age 10 I didn't exactly have the perspective to know if it was the best backhand the game had yet seen, but I do remember the effortless grace and power of his entire game. If one picture is worth a thousand videos (or at least worth a lot) what do you guys make of this one picture?
And who had heard of Ham?
According to Joseph B. Stahl, a student of the amateur game and a former writer for World Tennis, it was the best backhand in the history of wood racket tennis. As Joe wrote to me: "Going back as far as Tilden in the 1920s, I've seen a lot of backhands on film and in person, and I never saw one struck with a wood racket anywhere near as good as that of Richardson, not Budge's, not Rosewall's, not Hoad's, not Laver's. Its mechanics were perfect and he could bludgeon anything with it, high balls, low balls, anything."
I had the privilege of ball boying for Ham at a small clay court tournament in Tulsa where I grew up. At age 10 I didn't exactly have the perspective to know if it was the best backhand the game had yet seen, but I do remember the effortless grace and power of his entire game. If one picture is worth a thousand videos (or at least worth a lot) what do you guys make of this one picture?
And who had heard of Ham?
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