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  • ...edit|{{Roger Federer.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}[[Roger Federer]], a professional tennis player, hitting a forehand against [[James Blake]] in the quarterfinals of ...ined remarkably unchanged since the 1890s. Millions of people also follow tennis as a spectator sport, especially the four Grand Slam tournaments.
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 02:10, 10 October 2007
  • * [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players|Famous players]] * [[Tennis/Catalogs/World_No._1_male_players|World No. 1 male players]]
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  • ...the [[United States Tennis Association]] (formerly the United States Lawn Tennis Association), edited by Bill Shannon, Harper & Row, New York, 1981, ISBN 0- *''Total Tennis: The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia'', edited by [[Bud Collins]], Sport Media Publishing, Toronto,
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis]]
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  • In [[tennis]], a "grip" is the manner with which the player's hand holds the racquet du [[Category:Tennis forms & functions]]
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  • 35 bytes (3 words) - 15:22, 5 June 2012
  • ...nded in 1926 and is based in [[Lausanne]] with 226 member countries. Table tennis became an [[Olympic Games|Olympic sport]] in 1988. [[Category:Table tennis]]
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  • The manner with which the tennis player's hand holds the racquet during play.
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  • Indoor sport based on lawn tennis.
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  • The '''International Tennis Federation (ITF)''' is the governing body of [[tennis]]. It was founded in 1913 and is based in [[London, United Kingdom|London]] [[Category:Tennis organisations]]
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  • {{rpl|Table tennis}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players]]
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  • [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14489546/ Top Stars of Tennis]
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  • ...29, 1947, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania) was a top amateur and professional [[tennis]] player of the 1960s and 1970s. He and his longtime partner [[Stan Smith] Lutz grew up in the Los Angeles area of Southern California and began taking tennis lessons from [[Ray Casey]], a prominent coach in Santa Monica, when he was
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  • ...e forearm extensor muscle mass as a result of unusual strain. It occurs in tennis players as well as housewives, artisans, and violinists; not limited to [[l
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players]]
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  • {{r|Tennis}} {{r|Tennis racquet}}
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  • * [[:Category:Table tennis|Table tennis]]
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  • ...ational Table Tennis Federation (ITTF)''' is the governing body of [[table tennis]]. It was founded in 1926 and is based in [[Lausanne]]. [[Category:Table tennis organisations]]
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  • {{Tennis Subgroup}}
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  • ...yers. Many of them were considered to be the [[Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players|'''World No. 1''']] player at some point in their career. Althoug {{Tennis header2}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Bob Lutz (tennis)]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...king that encompassed the entire world; rankings were done by the national tennis association of each individual country. It was only with the introduction ...okes and Wilding tied for 2nd, Froitzheim, Williams, Parke, [[Arthur Lowe (tennis)|Arthur Lowe]], [[F. Gordon Lowe]], [[Heinrich Kleinschroth]], and Décugis
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players]]
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Page text matches

  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'' (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9) * ''The History of Professional Tennis'' (2003) Joe McCauley
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  • * [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous_players|Famous tennis players]] *[[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] tennis players
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  • * [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous_players|Famous tennis players]] *[[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] tennis players
    150 bytes (19 words) - 18:45, 30 January 2010
  • * [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous_players|Famous tennis players]] *[[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] tennis players
    150 bytes (19 words) - 18:36, 30 January 2010
  • The '''International Tennis Federation (ITF)''' is the governing body of [[tennis]]. It was founded in 1913 and is based in [[London, United Kingdom|London]] [[Category:Tennis organisations]]
    216 bytes (29 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...ational Table Tennis Federation (ITTF)''' is the governing body of [[table tennis]]. It was founded in 1926 and is based in [[Lausanne]]. [[Category:Table tennis organisations]]
    214 bytes (29 words) - 06:21, 4 October 2019
  • ...ican [[tennis]] player in the 1940s and '50s known as the "Clown Prince of Tennis".
    123 bytes (19 words) - 15:16, 26 September 2009
  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'' (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9) * Rich Hillway, tennis historian http://www.coloradotennis.com/cta/website.asp?Dept=News&Sec=Featu
    231 bytes (34 words) - 15:52, 13 November 2007
  • ...layer of the 1940s, who, as either an amateur or a professional, was the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player for two or, po
    251 bytes (38 words) - 18:57, 30 January 2010
  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G.P Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979. ISB * ''The History of Professional Tennis'', by Joe McCauley, The Short Run Book Company Ltd., Windsor, England, 2003
    504 bytes (77 words) - 17:40, 8 June 2011
  • * [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=233 International Tennis Hall of Fame] ...97/07/28/sports/frank-parker-us-tennis-champion-81.html Frank Parker, U.S. Tennis Champion, 81] By Richard Goldstein Published by New York Times, July 28, 19
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  • ...S. [[tennis]] player of the 1940s and 1950s; strong candidate for greatest tennis player of all time.
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  • ...is sometimes sketchy. [[Bud Collins]] says in ''Total Tennis, The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia'', that its dates were "1955-1962" and that it was called the ...h Hotel in Florida. In Joe McCauley's book, ''The History of Professional Tennis,'' March is shown as playing in the U.S. Professional Championship from at
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  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'' by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, 1979, P.G. Putnam's Sons, New York, 197 ...e Lott, in the May, 1973, issue of ''Tennis Magazine'', reprinted in ''The Tennis Book'', edited by Michael Bartlett and Bob Gillen, Arbor House, New York, 1
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  • ...of the 1930s who came within one set of completing the first [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] in 1933, 5 years prior to [[Don Budge]].
    201 bytes (29 words) - 13:55, 29 November 2008
  • ...]] [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|World No. 1]] professional [[tennis]] player who won 11 grand slam tournaments in a 9-year career.
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  • * [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players|Famous players]] * [[Tennis/Catalogs/World_No._1_male_players|World No. 1 male players]]
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  • {{r|Tennis}} {{r|National Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame}}
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  • ...yer for the year 1955. He is not to be confused with another professional tennis player of the same era, [[Jack March]]. [[Category:Tennis biographies]]
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  • {{r|Tennis}} {{r|Grand Slam (tennis)}}
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  • ...nded in 1926 and is based in [[Lausanne]] with 226 member countries. Table tennis became an [[Olympic Games|Olympic sport]] in 1988. [[Category:Table tennis]]
    724 bytes (124 words) - 15:54, 24 September 2019
  • ...e early 20th century and remains a candidate for the title of the greatest tennis player of all time.
    196 bytes (31 words) - 17:07, 11 June 2008
  • ...the mid-20th century and remains a candidate for the title of the greatest tennis player of all time.
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  • * Gonzales, Pancho, ''Tennis'', Avenel Books, 1952, ASIN: B000UCUNFU. ...N 0-396-08544-X)—Twenty-five somewhat idiosyncratic interviews with former tennis champions; Gonzales and [[Pancho Segura]] were the only players asked who r
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  • * History of the Pro Tennis Wars *[http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=176 Tennis Hall of Fame profile of Karel Koželuh]
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  • {{r|Tennis}} {{r|International Tennis Hall of Fame}}
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  • {{Tennis Subgroup}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Grips (tennis)]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Bob Lutz (tennis)]]
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  • ...nnis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] professional [[tennis]] player. He holds the record for the most grand slam titles, winning 14 du ...n and his second U.S. Open in 1993, and also became the first professional tennis player to serve more than 1,000 aces in a single year. Sampras was able to
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players]]
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  • [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14489546/ Top Stars of Tennis]
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  • (1986-) Spanish professional [[tennis]] player.
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  • (1981-) Swiss professional [[tennis]] player
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  • (1971- ) American professional [[tennis]] player
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  • Indoor sport based on lawn tennis.
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  • ...One [[tennis]] player. Navratilova played across several “generations” of tennis champions, and still holds records for the most singles titles of any playe Navratilova officially retired from professional tennis in September 2006, and now acts as a sports commentator. She supports many
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  • #REDIRECT [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players]]
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  • English tennis player and three-time Wimbledon champion.
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  • ...pril 1972 in [[Monzón]], [[Aragón]], [[Spain]]) is a former professional [[tennis]] player. She is the only Spanish woman to have won the singles title at [ [[Category:Tennis biographies]]
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  • ...te= |accessdate=2008-08-05}}</ref> The center stadium at the USTA National Tennis Center is named Arthur Ashe Stadium. == Most significant tennis results ==
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  • Fine American tennis player of the 1940s (1921–2006)
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  • *''The History of Professional Tennis'', Joe McCauley (2003)
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  • (1927 -), leading Australian tennis player of the 1950s.
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  • A professional [[Germany|German]] [[tennis]] player of the 1930s.
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  • American professional golfer and amateur tennis player, born 1946.
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  • (1904–1977) Fine amateur American tennis player of the 1930s.
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  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979, I * ''Tennis Is My Racket'', by Bobby Riggs, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1949—obviou
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  • (1913–1991) Fine Australian tennis player of the 1930s and '40s.
    102 bytes (13 words) - 19:09, 3 February 2010
  • Fine Australian tennis player of the mid-20th Century, particularly in doubles.
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  • Mid-20th century American tennis player, both an amateur and a professional.
    112 bytes (15 words) - 11:49, 26 March 2009
  • Fine American amateur tennis player (born 1923–) of the 1940s and '50s.
    109 bytes (15 words) - 11:27, 30 January 2010
  • Round robin [[tennis]] tournament in which mixed (male and female) teams compete representing th
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  • ...1991, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia) was an outstanding Australian [[tennis]] player of the 1930s and '40s. Although he was a three-time Australian Cha In his 1979 autobiography tennis great [[Jack Kramer]] writes that in doubles "Quist played the backhand cou
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  • ...played on [[grass]]. Dating back to 1877, it is the oldest and best-known tennis competition in the world, and involves both singles and doubles matches. [[Category:Tennis competitions|Wimbledon]]
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  • ...sters]], and the [[China Open]]. At the 2006 French Open, Nadal beat the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player, [[Roger Feder [[Category:Tennis biographies]]
    1 KB (159 words) - 22:52, 9 September 2020
  • ...0, Nuremberg, Germany–June 28, 1991, Altenkirchen, Germany) was a German [[tennis]] player of the 1930s who is almost totally forgotten today. ...ines_03_03_01.html]]</ref> According to his profile at the [[International Tennis Hall of Fame]], Nüsslein won the French Pro title in 1937 and 1938, the L
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
    473 bytes (63 words) - 16:39, 11 January 2010
  • ...rld No. 1''']] player for four years in the 1930s. Although a fine amateur tennis player, Conner never won a major tournament and, in the three years he ente ...nis Association]] and for many years were played at the [[West Side Tennis Tennis]] at [[Forest Hills]] in the [[Queens]] borough of [[New York, New York|New
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  • Any sport such as [[tennis]] or [[badminton]] in which contestants use a [[racquet]] to hit the ball.
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  • {{r|Bob Lutz (tennis)}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • *[http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=121 International Tennis Hall of Fame] profile of Pancho Gonzales
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The first tennis grand slam event of the calendar year.
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • ...e>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Many statistics about the career of the American tennis player [[Bill Tilden]].
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  • Four outstanding tennis players from France, given their name from the Alexandre Dumas book The Thr
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  • (1916–1997) Fine American amateur tennis player who was ranked in the top 10 for nearly two decades.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Eight top amateur tennis players who were simultaneously signed by Lamar Hunt to play as professiona
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  • *[http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=164 Tennis Hall of Fame] profile of Frank Sedgman
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  • * [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=186 International Tennis Hall of Fame profile]
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • In [[tennis]], a "grip" is the manner with which the player's hand holds the racquet du [[Category:Tennis forms & functions]]
    605 bytes (98 words) - 10:43, 13 September 2019
  • *''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'' (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9)
    108 bytes (16 words) - 01:52, 15 September 2013
  • ...[[tennis]] player in the first part of the 20th century. He was the co-[[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player in 1919 along Johnston was inducted into the [[International Tennis Hall of Fame]] in [[Newport, Rhode Island]], in 1958.
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • * [[:Category:Table tennis|Table tennis]]
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  • ...six times in all, an all-time record <ref>[http://www.usatoday.com/sports/tennis/2006-05-24-borg-cover_x.htm Borg still making the shots] Douglas Robson, '' ...90s, but ultimately failed. He then retired for good but continued to play tennis in the senior tour.
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  • Professional American tennis player and promoter of a major professional tournament in the mid-20th cent
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>two-week Grand Slam tennis tournament held at the All England Club; oldest in the world.
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  • * ''How to Play Tennis: The Beasley System'' by Mercer Beasley, American Sports Publishing, New Yo
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  • ...lexandre Dumas]] book [[The Three Musketeers]]. They dominated the game of tennis in the second half of the 1920s and early 1930s, winning numerous Grand Sla ...[[Fred Perry]], [[Jack Crawford]], and [[Don Budge]] on the international tennis scene.
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • {{r|Tennis}} {{r|Tennis racquet}}
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  • ...sports played on a table including [[chess]], [[cue sports]], and [[table tennis]].
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  • (1943-1993) A [[United States of America|United States]] [[tennis]] player and social advocate.
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • (March 7, 1895–April 27, 1950) A top Czech tennis, soccer (association football), and ice hockey player of the 1920s and '30s
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  • * [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=200 International Tennis Hall of Fame] profile of Bobby Riggs
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Born August 16, 1930, was a top American tennis player of the 1950s, first as an amateur and then as a professional.
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  • A great American [[tennis]] player of the 1930s and 40s who was the World No. 1 player for 5 years.
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  • The manner with which the tennis player's hand holds the racquet during play.
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  • German tennis player (1909-1976) of the 1930s who was one of the greatest players of all
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  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979, I
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  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979, I
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  • * ''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979, I
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  • (1921) Ecuadorian/American tennis player of the 1940s and '50s who was one of the best professional players i
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  • American tennis coach of the first half of the 20th century who discovered [[Ellsworth Vine
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  • Was a prominent West Coast tennis player of the 1920s and 1930s whose greatest moment of glory was nearly win
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  • *[http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=140 Tennis Hall of Fame] profile of Bill Tilden
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  • * [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=162 International Tennis Hall of Fame] profile of Pancho Segura
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  • ...ry 15,1900, died Palo Alto, California, January,1982) was a top American [[tennis]] player of the 1920s on the West Coast of the United States and later a su ...ent match.<ref>''United States Tennis Association Official Encyclopedia of Tennis, Centennial Edition'', edited by Bill Shannon, Harper & Row, New York, 1981
    3 KB (416 words) - 13:15, 8 September 2020
  • ...Australia–September 10, 1991, Sydney, Australia) was a great Australian [[tennis]] player of the 1930s who nearly won immortality by coming within one set o [[Jack Kramer]], the longtime promoter and great tennis player himself, wrote in his 1979 autobiography that Crawford was one of th
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  • ...30, 1923, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania–) was a top-rated American amateur [[tennis]] player for many years in the 1940s and '50s, three times being ranked as
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  • (1911-1994) American tennis player of the 1930s and professional golfer of the 1940s and '50s who was w
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  • {{r|Table tennis}} {{r|Tennis}}
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  • ...other throughout the 30s. [[Jack Kramer]], the longtime promoter and great tennis player himself, wrote in his 1979 autobiography that von Cramm was one of t [[Category:Tennis biographies]]
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  • :*[[Tennis]]
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  • *[http://www.tennisfame.com/hall-of-famers/ken-mcgregor International Tennis Hall of Fame]
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  • ...the [[United States Tennis Association]] (formerly the United States Lawn Tennis Association), edited by Bill Shannon, Harper & Row, New York, 1981, ISBN 0- *''Total Tennis: The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia'', edited by [[Bud Collins]], Sport Media Publishing, Toronto,
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  • ...perhaps even the greatest of all time.<ref>[http://www.usatoday.com/sports/tennis/wimb/2005-07-03-roddick-marvels_x.htm Roddick: Federer might be greatest ev ...hen he played for the Swiss [[Davis Cup]] Team. He won the bronze medal in tennis at the 2000 Olympic Games in [[Sydney]] and finished the year ranked at 29.
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  • ...r Kramer at the United States Tennis Association Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City.}} ...is powerful serve and forehand, as well as his ability to play "percentage tennis", in which he maximized his efforts on certain points and certain games dur
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  • ...e forearm extensor muscle mass as a result of unusual strain. It occurs in tennis players as well as housewives, artisans, and violinists; not limited to [[l
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  • ...uet]], [[cue sports]], [[baseball]], [[golf]], the [[hockey]] group, and [[tennis]].
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  • ...like [[cricket (sport)|cricket]], [[baseball]], [[golf]], [[hockey]] and [[tennis]] evolved from a generic activity which they have named "'''club-ball'''". ..., unless he thought tennis involves "goals" and so is akin to hockey. With tennis, there are four groups which involve hitting a ball with some kind of bat,
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  • ...1888 – September 5, 1918), was an [[United States of America|American]] [[tennis]] player active in the early 1910s, famous for his elegance. ...n married in 1911 at a ceremony in which most of the groomsmen were famous tennis players, and that was attended by many members of New York's high society.
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  • ...Tennis Center]], where the [[U.S. Open (tennis)|US Open]] [[Grand Slam]] [[tennis]] tournament is played every year, and [[Shea Stadium]], host to the games
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  • ...952 or 1953, and is still a strong candidate for the title of the greatest tennis player who ever lived. ...plane fly by while the fans watched them." <ref>''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, page 51 </ref>
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  • ...uarantee of abut $60,000 for three years."<ref>''Total Tennis:The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia,'' by Bud Collins, page 703.</ref> ...was beaten by Gonzales 15 matches to 0.<ref>''The History of Professional Tennis'', Joe McCauley, page 64.</ref> Gonzales was just on the threshold of becom
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  • ...29, 1947, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania) was a top amateur and professional [[tennis]] player of the 1960s and 1970s. He and his longtime partner [[Stan Smith] Lutz grew up in the Los Angeles area of Southern California and began taking tennis lessons from [[Ray Casey]], a prominent coach in Santa Monica, when he was
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Bob Lutz (tennis)]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...rs and two sisters. His younger brother, [[Jan Koželuh]], was an excellent tennis player also, one good enough to be ranked as high as number 10 in the world ...l sport was rugby and it was only at the age of 16 that he learned to play tennis. In 1914 he joined the powerful soccer team of Sparta Praha. In later year
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  • ...1946 through 1949. He was born in Newark, New Jersey, but developed as a tennis player in Southern California under the guidance of [[Perry T. Jones]]. ...tobiography, the long-time tennis promoter and great player [[Jack Kramer (tennis player)|Jack Kramer]] included Schroeder in his list of the 21 greatest pla
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  • {{r|Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players}}
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  • ...ines was unbeatable by anyone: "...On his best days, Vines played the best tennis ever. Hell, when Elly was on, you'd be lucky to get your racket on the bal ...ts like Babe Ruth." Kramer made up his mind on the spot to concentrate on tennis.
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  • {{r|Tennis}}
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  • * ''Table tennis'' * ''Tennis''
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  • ...e forearm extensor muscle mass as a result of unusual strain. It occurs in tennis players as well as housewives, artisans, and violinists."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref | title = Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow)}}</ref> It may also involve the extensor digitorum, and extensor ca
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  • ...n Rosewall]], [[Gottfried von Cramm]], [[Ted Schroeder]], [[Jack Crawford (tennis player)|Jack Crawford]], [[Pancho Segura]], [[Frank Sedgman]], '''Tony Trab Trabert was a stand-out athlete in Tennis and Basketball at the [[University of Cincinnati]], and was a member of Sig
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  • ...''1930''' and '''1932''' National Champion. '''1931, 1934, 1937, 1938''' [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player
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  • ...]], [[baseball]], [[basketball]], [[golf]], [[swimming]] and [[diving]], [[tennis]], [[track]] and field, and [[cross-country]]. ...]], [[softball]], [[basketball]], [[golf]], [[swimming]] and [[diving]], [[tennis]], [[track]] and field, [[cross-country]], [[rowing]], and [[soccer]].
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  • ...July 24, 1997, San Diego, California) was an outstanding American amateur tennis player for nearly two decades, being rated among the top 10 players for 17 ...d mentor who, unable to play himself, was gaining acclaim as "the greatest tennis coach in history." Beasley and his wife essentially adopted the youthful P
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  • ...om 1950 through 1967. In his 1979 autobiography Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, included Sedgman in his list of the 21 g ...>Interview with tennis historian Rich Hillway in 2005 at the International Tennis Hall of Fame.</ref>
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  • ...t, then [John] [[John Newcombe|Newcombe]]".<ref>''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'' by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, 1979, P.G. Putnam's Sons, New York, 197 ...e lost the 1930 title to the aging [[Bill Tilden]], the greatest player in tennis history to that point. Playing doubles with [[John Van Ryn]], Allison won
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  • ...Open tournaments were authorized for the year 1968 by the [[International Tennis Association]], and the first Open tournaments were held in the spring and s ...other four of the Eight were not ranked.<ref>''Total Tennis: The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia'', by [[Bud Collins]], Sport Classic Books, Toronto, Canada, 2
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  • ...at_Wimbledon.jpg|left|100px|A statue of Fred Perry at the All England Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon holding the racquet with his characteristic Continental g ...ce</ref> Even today, more than 70 years later, any promising young British tennis player is frequently, and hopefully, called "the next Fred Perry."<ref>1,10
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  • The '''Australian Open''' is an annual tennis tournament and the first Grand Slam tournament of the calendar year. It is
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  • ...f being the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] tennis player for three consecutive years, 1950 through 1952. ...s the first part of the book to individual chapters about the ten greatest tennis players from [[Don Budge]] through the date of the book's publication. He c
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  • *[[Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players]]
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  • ...sasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/1170100/1/.html | title=Ex-table tennis chief Choo Wee Khiang charged with graft | publisher=[[Channel NewsAsia]] | ...eakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_757802.html | title=Ex-Singapore Table Tennis Association chief claims trial | publisher=[[The Straits Times]] | access-d
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  • ...as far. Because of this, badminton can be played in a smaller area than [[tennis]] and so it has been a popular choice for indoor sport in schools with limi
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  • *''[[Mario's Tennis]]'' ([[Virtual Boy]]) *''[[Mario Tennis (video game)|Mario Tennis]]'' (Nintendo 64)
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  • ...net. Teams accumulate points gained in each service. Service is similar to tennis except that it is done by hand. To win a point, the team must volley the ba
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  • ...was also generally considered to have the best backhand in the history of tennis, at least until the emergence of [[Ken Rosewall]] in the 1950s and '60s. T ...gh, 2005</ref> Growing up, Don played a variety of sports before taking up tennis, in which he was coached by his older brother, Lloyd. <ref>''Time'' magazin
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  • ...nd street hockey, typically played outdoors with (ice) hockey sticks and a tennis ball.
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  • *''[http://www.gamersquarter.com/tennisfortwo/ Tennis For Two]''
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  • ...l. The polo shirt was made famous by [[René Lacoste]], a prominent male [[tennis]] player of the twentieth century.
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  • ...hool also plays - athletics, Gaelic football, soccer, hurling, badminton, tennis to but mention a few. The school also engages in many non-sporting extra-cu
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  • ...ptember 3, 2008. Her very large yellow crane is visible between two domed tennis courts.}}
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  • ...bia and Cornell), swimming (except Columbia, but including Army and Navy), tennis (including Army and Navy) and wrestling (except Brown and Dartmouth). Champ
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  • ...''"Big Bill"''', was a flamboyant American [[tennis]] player who was the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player for 7 years, t ...r; the other's a manly sort of fellow." (Fields, in real life, also played tennis. The quotation can be found in many sources; one is ''Capital of the World:
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  • ...the Sexes" match against [[Billie Jean King]], was one of the most famous tennis events of all time. [[Jack Kramer]], the long-time promoter and top tennis player himself, calls Riggs in his 1979 autobiography "the most underrated
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  • ...''"Big Bill"''', was a flamboyant American [[tennis]] player who was the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player for 7 years, t ...r; the other's a manly sort of fellow." (Fields, in real life, also played tennis. The quotation can be found in many sources; one is ''Capital of the World:
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  • ...r team. White "athletic" socks are typically worn with [[sneakers]], or [[tennis shoes]] as they are made for comfort inside the shoe.
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  • ...ticle incorporating all of the text of Zelcer's original contribution to ''Tennis Week''. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 16:35, 12 March 2010 (UTC))< ...surrogate coach to the growing legions of players who took his How to Play Tennis with them to the hard courts of the public parks and schools where the spor
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  • ...king that encompassed the entire world; rankings were done by the national tennis association of each individual country. It was only with the introduction ...okes and Wilding tied for 2nd, Froitzheim, Williams, Parke, [[Arthur Lowe (tennis)|Arthur Lowe]], [[F. Gordon Lowe]], [[Heinrich Kleinschroth]], and Décugis
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  • * [[Tennis elbow]]/[[lateral humeral epicondylitis]]
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  • ...d badminton players; and sometimes golfers, who use a lot of wrist action. Tennis players are less prone as they tend to make strokes using the shoulder.
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  • This is a list of the main career statistics of American former [[tennis]] player '''[[Bill Tilden]]''' (1893–1953) whose amateur and professiona Bill Tilden joined professional tennis in 1931 and was unable to compete in the amateur Grand Slam tournaments fro
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  • ...yers. Many of them were considered to be the [[Catalog of World No. 1 male tennis players|'''World No. 1''']] player at some point in their career. Althoug {{Tennis header2}}
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  • ...and the Australian [[Harry Hopman]] had generally been great or near-great tennis players in their own right before turning to instruction. ...Vines was the No. 1 American player for each year, as well as being the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] player for 1932. In 1
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  • It is important to note that activities such as playing [[yoyo]] or playing tennis against a wall are not generally thought of as playing a game. However, thi ...hide and seek in a school building and an outside field, tennis and table tennis, soccer and indoor soccer, racing with different tracks, a game of Go playe
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  • The University fields teams in [[basketball]], [[baseball]], [[soccer]], [[tennis]], [[softball]], [[volleyball]], [[golf]], and [[Cross country running|cros
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  • ...[running]]), ''group'' (e.g., two players may form a ''doubles'' team in [[tennis]]) or ''team'' (e.g., [[football]]). Individual sports, such as running and ...ll]], [[field hockey]], [[golf]], [[ice hockey]], [[rugby football]] and [[tennis]]. Most of them are team sports.
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  • ...t player in the history of the game. Because of the strict segregation of tennis into amateur and professional ranks during most of his career, however, as ...eatest player ever over a 20-year period.<ref>''Once a Champion: Legendary Tennis Stars Revisited,'' by Stan Hart, Dodd, Mead & Co., New York, 1985, page 428
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  • {{r|All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club|Wimbledon}}
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  • ...ayed during the Winter season include [[Rugby]], [[Hockey]], [[Soccer]], [[Tennis]] and [[Volleyball]].
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  • ...edit|{{Roger Federer.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}[[Roger Federer]], a professional tennis player, hitting a forehand against [[James Blake]] in the quarterfinals of ...ined remarkably unchanged since the 1890s. Millions of people also follow tennis as a spectator sport, especially the four Grand Slam tournaments.
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  • ...n their homes, from its inception in 2015 until 2021. He continues to play tennis (doubles), ski, kayak and hike local trails with Jane and Isla, their resid
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  • ...you can tap into the power of body maps to do almost anything better: play tennis, strum a guitar, ride a horse, dance a waltz, empathize with a friend, rais
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  • ...haps, 20 million or so Aussies. He was a really great doubles player. The Tennis Encyclopedia article about him frequently calls him "Quisty" -- Aleta, is t ...? I did a Google for 'Quisty' and the only hits I get are *all* from the ''Tennis Encyclopedia'', so I think it's something that the writer there invented."
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  • ..., is frequently called one of the two best of all time. Rosewall was the [[Tennis/Catalogs/World No. 1 male players|'''World No. 1''']] or the co-Number 1 pl Born into a family that played tennis and owned tennis courts, Rosewall was a natural left-hander but was taught by his father to
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  • * {{search link|tennisplayer||ns0|ns14|ns100}} (tennis player)
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  • ...region. A classical analogy would be to imagine a grain of sand inside a tennis ball; the grain is free to move anywhere inside but cannot pass through the
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  • **1876 First lawn tennis game
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  • ...ouses the smallest shrunken head in the world which is about the size of a tennis ball.
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  • ...gineering Guindy, Madras during which period he represented his college in Tennis, swimming and boxing was awarded the University blue in Boxing and swimming
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  • ...ental coin and wrote a much longer than expected article about an old-time tennis player named [[Wilmer Allison]] -- a pretty good player of the 1930s who is
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  • ...ayford Peirce, know just as much who is a candidate for being the greatest tennis player of all time as any credentialled expert you can find. And I think t ...arely hit the ball; she explain the grade was based on essays she wrote on tennis! My point is that someone who does not understand the nuances and complexi
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  • ...ept]] or a [[charismatic figure]]. The word love also denotes a score in [[tennis]] of zero.<ref name=twsMAR09c34/> There are many songs titled "love", and m ...goddess of sexual passion or desire, and not love per se. In addition, in tennis, "love" is a score meaning that no points have been won yet.<ref name=twsMA
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  • |Men's Tennis |Women's Tennis
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  • ...er foreign-rooted sports are popular in Japan, such as [[table tennis]], [[tennis]], [[volleyball]], [[basketball]], [[golf]], and [[rugby]].
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  • ...[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Image:Tennis_court_dimensions_image.jpg A tennis court image to replace the invalid one], [[Drinking game]], [[Cyberpunk]], ...ll as creating an article about his old tennis doubles partner [[Bob Lutz (tennis)|Bobby Lutz]], whom he could, with great difficulty, beat until the time Lu
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  • ...100 was an analog system. It did not use cartridges and played two games: Tennis and Hockey. A switch selected the games, and the system was either powered ...replaced by simple color graphics: two tennis players with their rackets (TENNIS game), two squash players (SQUASH), or two hockey players holding their sti
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  • ...-09-07 | url-status = live | quote = He was captain of Brasenose College's tennis team and a member of the Bullingdon dining club, famed for its hard drinkin
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  • {{rpr|Tennis}} (October 25)
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  • ...simulates the playing of traditional sports such as baseball, football or tennis. This does not include games that involve playing a fantasy sport that does
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  • ...ove pigs, but his usually mild-mannered uncle has just seen him bouncing a tennis ball on the back of his prize pig, the [[Empress of Blandings]], and is, of
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  • ...had to learn the drum parts quickly. His drum kit was set up in the table tennis room, rather than the studio as the band thought it would give them a bette
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  • * [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] began articles about the French tennis players, the [[Four Musketeers]], and the musical [[South Pacific]]. He als
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  • and at the difference between skill in chess and skill in tennis. Think
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  • ...his collection of [[orchid]]s, fires Fritz the chef, and goes out to play tennis twice a day and eat hamburgers would probably lose most of his following.
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  • ..."club-ball". Similar sports are [[baseball]], [[golf]], [[hockey]], and [[tennis]]. [[Arthur Haygarth]], writing in 1862, described cricket as a "direct off
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  • ...uigi Superstar Saga''), a long line of Mario sports games (including golf, tennis, soccer, baseball, basketball), and ''Mario Party''. Mario has filled in co
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  • ...August 2006, 10 more learning cottages were added on top of two of the six tennis courts in an effort not to lose any more parking spaces. ...teams have won medals at the prestigious Stotesbury and SRA regattas. The tennis team has won 13 district championships in twenty seasons and the crew, cros
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  • ...ould be spelled as he or she actually spelled it themselves, ie, the great tennis player of the 1950s, [[Pancho Gonzales]], who apparently was *born* with th
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  • | [[Tennis|Tennis, Boys]] || || || || | [[Tennis|Tennis, Girls]] || || || 2007 ||
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  • ...tennis]], [[squash (sport)|squash]], [[billiards]], [[badminton]], [[table tennis]] and [[golf]]. Mumbai also plays Rugby, one of the few cities to do so in
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  • ...resulting appearance under a microscope is often described as resembling a tennis racket or a collection of drumsticks. The organism is an obligate anaerobe
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  • ...nsibilities. Thus, in 1900, women were allowed to participate in golf and tennis and some swimming and diving events for women were allowed by 1912. But wom
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  • ...education and gymnastics training and coaching in sports such as football, tennis and sailing. All this was paid for by the DAF, to the tune of 29 million Re
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  • '''cåught''' ''catch'' = BrE '''cŏurt''' ''tennis, law '''cŏurt''' ''tennis, monarch, woo''; BrE = '''cåught''' ''catch
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  • ...r-round competition from endlessly televised football, basketball, hockey, tennis, and golf, all of which had, for the first part of the 20th century, been c
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  • ...-london], over twenty tennis courts[http://www.yelp.co.uk/search?find_desc=tennis+courts&find_loc=London], about twenty swimming pools[http://www.timeout.com
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  • *Former professional tennis player [[Pete Sampras]] is known to have Thalassemia minor.
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  • '''báckhand''' ''tennis''
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  • | quote = He was captain of Brasenose College's tennis team and a member of the Bullingdon dining club, famed for its hard drinkin
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  • ...[[Shea Stadium]], and annually hosts the [[U.S. Open (tennis)|U.S. Open]] tennis tournament. It is also the home to New York City's two major airports, [[La ...y events outside these sports. These include the [[U.S. Open (tennis)|U.S. Tennis Open]], the [[New York City Marathon]] and the Millrose Games, an annual tr
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  • ...for the new system called ''[[Ultra (company)|Ultra]] Football'', ''Ultra Tennis'', etc. So, in 1995 Nintendo changed the final name of the system to the '' ...fs including [[Mario Kart]], [[Mario Party]], [[Paper Mario]], and [[Mario Tennis]].
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  • ...up the EOC, while Captain Fred Lafemina set up the base of operations in a tennis court north of WTC, on Chambers Street.
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  • ...e; it can however be used for emphasis, meaning 'one', as for example of a tennis player trailing 4-6 2-0: '''At lêast hê lêads ín ''â'' sét.''' (The B
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  • ...ions such as addiction, stroke rehabilitation, headache, menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, fibromyalgia, myofascial pain, osteoarthritis, low back pain, carpal
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  • ...), while sports like [[boxing]], [[horse racing]], [[motor racing]], and [[tennis]] owe their modern popularity to British development and promotion. London ...n St Andrews, Fife. The Open is one of golf's four Major Tournaments. In [[tennis]], the [[Wimbledon Championships]] are held in June each year and this is o
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  • ...fe he had a prosthetic one, that did not keep him from being an able table tennis player. He also was a very good pianist.
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  • ...well. I was really, really jealous about Hayford and Milt and the famous tennis players as well (if you don't know what that means, you have to come by the
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  • ...some of the guys that some [[Martina Navratilova|FABULOUS WOMEN]] can play tennis, too! Don't think I'm done with causing trouble yet! [[User:Aleta Curry|Al
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  • ...obby on God's good earth, but clearly a sport and also a profession, as is tennis, etc. etc.
    39 KB (5,879 words) - 17:33, 11 March 2024
  • ...Goa]] and [[Kerala]], football is the more popular sport. In recent times, tennis has gained popularity. Chess, commonly held to have originated in India, is
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  • ...l sports court where residents can play [[football]], [[basketball]] and [[tennis]].
    48 KB (7,231 words) - 14:08, 2 February 2023
  • ...chool. He became disillusioned with cricket and developed a preference for tennis as a summer sport.<ref>Derlien, page 10.</ref>
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  • ...German and French. He learned to ride, shoot, row, and play polo and lawn tennis.
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  • ...[[rugby union]] and [[rugby league]], [[association football|football]], [[tennis]] and [[badminton]]. Of these, association football, rugby and cricket rema
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  • ...e strenuous life." To this end, he exercised regularly and took up boxing, tennis, hiking, rowing, polo, and horseback riding. He was an enthusiastic singles
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  • "Child of Virtue" ABC 11-10-59 A wealthy ex-gangster becomes irritated when a tennis bum romances his daughter. Yvonne Craig got this part when the show's produ
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