Bob Bryan will serve as acting Captain for the U.S. Davis Cup Team for its Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals — Group Stage matches in Glasgow next week, as Captain Mardy Fish recovers from COVID-19. Bryan competed in 31 ties for the U.S. Davis Cup Team from 2003-20 and was part of the U.S. team that won its record 32nd Davis Cup title in 2007. Bryan also served in a coaching role under Fish and coach David Nainkin during the U.S. team’s Qualifying victory over Colombia in March. “I’m gutted to not be able to be there after putting a ton of work into this team and trying to win for the U.S.,” Fish said. “But I know that the team is in a great position to be successful. I trust and respect Bob as much as anyone in the tennis world. I trust that he and David Nainkin will do an outstanding job and the boys will play well.” The U.S. team is set to feature Taylor Fritz, Frances Tiafoe, Tommy Paul, Jack Sock and Rajeev Ram, and will play Group Stage ties against Great Britain, Kazakhstan and the Netherlands in Glasgow. The top two teams from the Group will advance to the knockout stage of the Finals in November in Malaga, Spain. Each tie will air on Tennis Channel in the U.S. Visit the Davis Cup website for the full schedule. |
mardy fish
Mardy Fish, USTA Announce U.S. Davis Cup Team To Play In Glasgow
The USTA and United States Davis Cup Captain Mardy Fish have announced that Taylor Fritz, Frances Tiafoe, Tommy Paul, Jack Sock and Rajeev Ram will represent the U.S. at the 2022 Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals – Group Stage September 13-18 in Glasgow, Scotland.
The Group Stage consists of four groups of four nations competing to advance to the eight-nation knockout stage that will crown this year’s Davis Cup champion November 22-27 in Malaga, Spain. The U.S. is competing in Group D in Glasgow and will play Great Britain, Kazakhstan and the Netherlands in a round-robin competition where the top two finishers in the Group advance to Malaga. Each matchup is a best-of-three tie featuring two singles and one doubles match. The dates and times of the Americans’ matches are below. The full schedule can be viewed on the Davis Cup website.
Group D (Glasgow):
United States vs. Great Britain; Wednesday, September 14; 4 p.m. local time
United States vs. Kazakhstan; Thursday, September 15; 4 p.m. local time
United States vs. Netherlands; Saturday, September 17; 2 p.m. local time
Fritz, 24, is the top-ranked American in singles at No. 13. He’s represented the U.S. in Davis Cup three times, owns a 3-1 record in singles and was part of the team that defeated Colombia in March to qualify for the Finals.
Tiafoe, 24, is ranked No. 25 and has been a part of the U.S. Davis Cup team since 2018. He last played Davis Cup for the U.S. in the 2021 Finals in Turin, Italy, where he defeated Colombian Nicolas Mejia for his first Davis Cup win.
Paul, 25, is ranked No. 31, and has represented the U.S. in Davis Cup twice before. He was also part of the team that defeated Colombia in Qualifying in March.
Sock, 29, is a career-high No. 2 in doubles and No. 8 in singles, and has played 11 Davis Cup ties for the U.S. since 2015. He owns a 10-4 total record in Davis Cup, including a 6-1 mark in doubles.
Ram, 38, is the current world No. 2 in doubles and will be making his third consecutive Davis Cup appearance since debuting at the 2021 Finals in Turin. He and Sock are 2-0 together in Davis Cup doubles and clinched victory for the U.S. against Colombia in Qualifying.
The U.S. holds an overall 222-75 record in Davis Cup competition and has won the title a record 32 times. For more information, including access to player and historical records, visit www.usta.com/daviscup or www.daviscup.com. Deloitte is the official team sponsor of the U.S. Davis Cup Team.
Mardy Fish Makes Tennis-Golf History But Misses Cut at PGA Tour’s 3M Open In Minnesota
by Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
Mardy Fish, the former top 10 tennis star, Olympic silver medalist and the current U.S. Davis Cup captain, made sports history at the 3M Open in Minnesota becoming the first player to play and event on both the ATP Tour in tennis and PGA Tour in golf.
Fish shot rounds of 81 and 74 for a total of 13 over par, which was 12 shots away from his goal of making the cut. However, he finished better than three established full-time PGA Tour pros, Kevin Stadler, who has a top 10 finish at The Masters and a win at the Phoenix Open on his resume, Wesley Bryan, who won the prestigious Heritage Classic five years ago, and former Korn Ferry Tour standout Brandon Matthews.
In Thursday’s first round, Fish struggled particularly on the par five holes, normally holes to take advantage on for scoring, making two bogeys and a double bogey on the course’s three five-stroke holes. He also made eight bogeys against no birdies in his opening round. Fish improved his score by seven shots in Friday’s second round, making five birdies against four bogeys, but made two costly double-bogeys, including on the par 5 18th hole. Fish averaged 304 yards off the tee in his two rounds, including a 341 yard drive on Friday.
Born in Edina, Minnesota and a rabid fan of Minnesota sports, Fish was given a sponsor’s exemption into the event, after six-time Masters champion Jack Nicklaus personally lobbied the tournament on his behalf three years ago.
After he finished his ATP Tour tennis career in 2015, Fish began to expand on his love and prowess at golf, playing competitive events in lower-level pro tours – the All-American Gateway Tour and the Golden State Tour with mixed success, but became the first alternate in U.S. Open local qualifying in 2014 and 2015.
He soon became part of the celebrity golf tour, where he found resounding success. He has won the two most prestigious celebrity golf events, the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions three times and the 2020 American Century Celebrity Golf Championship at Lake Tahoe, shooting a 63 en route, breaking the course record set by Lee Trevino. He also beat former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo earlier this year at a new ClubCorp Celebrity pro event in Dallas.
During a charity event in 2018, he had a chance to play nine holes with Nicklaus, who was amazed at the raw talent of Fish, calling him “The best non-professional golfer I’ve ever seen play” (Read the full article here: http://www.worldtennismagazine.com/archives/16360)
Although he jokingly labeled himself as a “Country Club Bo Jackson,” Fish actually learned both sports at public facilities, on the tennis courts at Riverside Park and the Sandridge public golf course in Vero Beach, Florida. He returns annually to Vero Beach in January to host his Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Golf Fundraiser at The Windsor Club, where his father Tom is the head tennis pro. The 2023 date for the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Golf Fundraise at Windsor in Monday, January 16, 2023.
While Fish is the first tennis player to play on the ATP Tour (ATP started in 1973 and modern-day ATP Tour started in 1990) and the PGA Tour, he is not the only tennis standout to play on the highest levels of pro golf. The most successful top-flight tennis player to also play professional golf was Ellsworth Vines. Vines holds the distinction – along with a man named Frank Conner – of being the only men to play in the modern-day U.S. Open (or the U.S. Nationals pre-1968) and the golf U.S. Open. Vines abandoned his tennis career in 1940 to turn his attention to competitive golf. He not only was a competitor at the golf U.S. Open, but in the Masters and the PGA Championship as well. His best finish in the golf majors being a tie for third at the 1951 PGA (he was a losing semifinalist in the match-play format.) In stroke-play majors, his best finish was a tie for 14th at the U.S. Open in 1948 and 1949. His best finish at the Masters was a tie for 24th in 1947.
Frank Conner was a standout American tennis player in the amateur era, competing in the U.S. National in 1965, 1966 and 1967, reaching the second round in 1967. He went on to become a tennis All-American at Trinity University in Texas, one of the top tennis schools at the time. However, he had also picked up and excelled at golf as well and, realizing he could make more money in pro golf than tennis, turned into a golf professional, qualifying for the PGA Tour in 1975. His best finish at a major came at the 1981 U.S. Open at Merion where he finished tied for sixth. He never won an official PGA Tour title, but lost in a playoff to Tom Watson at the 1982 Heritage Classic on Hilton Head Island, S.C. and to Dave Barr at the 1981 Quad Cities Open.
Former world No. 42 Scott Draper of Australia also played professional golf in Australia from 2005 to 2008. He won a “lower-tour” event, the New South Wales PGA Championship, in 2007.
Sherwood Stewart won 52 ATP doubles titles, including three major doubles titles as well as two mixed doubles majors. He has excelled in competitive golf after his tennis career, competing in five British Senior Open championships.
Althea Gibson, the two-time U.S. and Wimbledon champion, is credited of not only breaking the color barrier in tennis in 1950, but in professional women’s golf as well in 1964 when she joined the LPGA Tour. Gibson played professional golf until 1978 and, despite being one of the top 50 money winners for five years, her career earnings did not exceed $25,000. Her best finish was a tie for second, losing in a three-way playoff at the Len Immke Buick Open in Dublin, Ohio. “Althea might have been a real player of consequence had she started when she was young,” legendary golf player and commentator Judy Rankin once said of Gibson. “She came along during a difficult time in golf, gained the support of a lot of people, and quietly made a difference.”
Mardy Fish, The Self-Described “Country Club Bo Jackson,” Ready For PGA Tour Debut
By Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
Mardy Fish, the former top 10 tennis star, Olympic silver medalist and current U.S. Davis Cup captain, is set to make some sports and tennis history on the PGA golf tour.
Fish will make his debut on the professional golf tour at the PGA Tour’s 3M Classic in Minnesota July 21-24 becoming a rare athlete to play professionally in more than one sport.
“I’m kind of a country club Bo Jackson” Fish said to Tennis.com last year of his excellence in both tennis and golf, referring to the former Heisman Trophy winning football player Bo Jackson who played for the National Football League’s Los Angeles Raiders and Major League Baseball’s Kansas City Royals.
Fish was born in Edina, Minnesota and while he grew up in Vero Beach, Florida, he always maintained his allegiance to Minnesota and Minnesota sports teams. As I wrote in January of 2021 in the story “Mardy Fish Deserves “Wild Cards” But Not In Tennis” here http://www.worldtennismagazine.com/archives/19495 “Fish was born in Minnesota and, as you can see from his @MardyFish Twitter profile, is a die-hard Minnesota sports fans. Thus an invite into the state’s PGA Tour event, the 3M Championship would be appropriate and receive significant local attention.”
Hollis Cavner, the 3M Championship Tournament Director, agreed when he announced that Fish would receive a “wild card” (or sponsor’s exemption as it is known in the golf industry) into the event. “This guy can play. He will not embarrass himself,” said Cavner. “He’s a great golfer and it provides an interesting storyline as we get closer to the tournament.”
After he finished his ATP Tour tennis career in 2015, Fish began to expand on his love and prowess at golf, playing competitive events in lower-level pro tours – the All-American Gateway Tour and the Golden State Tour with mixed success, but became the first alternate in U.S. Open local qualifying in 2014 and 2015.
He soon became part of the celebrity golf tour, where he found resounding success. He has won the two most prestigious celebrity golf events, the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions three times and the 2020 American Century Celebrity Golf Championship at Lake Tahoe, shooting a 63 en route, breaking the course record set by Lee Trevino. He also beat former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo earlier this year at a new ClubCorp Celebrity pro event in Dallas.
During a charity event in 2018, he had a chance to play nine holes with Jack Nicklaus, who was amazed at the raw talent of Fish, calling him “The best non-professional golfer I’ve ever seen play” (Read the full article here: http://www.worldtennismagazine.com/archives/16360)
Although he labels himself as the “Country Club Bo Jackson” Fish actually learned both sports at public facilities, on the tennis courts at Riverside Park and the Sandridge public golf course in Vero Beach, Florida. He returns annually to Vero Beach in January to host his Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Golf Fundraiser at The Windsor Club, where his father Tom is the head tennis pro.
While Fish won’t be the first pro athlete from another sport to play a pro tour golf event, he will join a very select number of former top tennis players to also play mainstream pro tour level golf. The most successful top-flight tennis player to also play professional golf was Ellsworth Vines. Vines holds the distinction – along with a man named Frank Conner – of being the only men to play in the modern-day U.S. Open (or the U.S. Nationals pre-1968) and the golf U.S. Open. Vines abandoned his tennis career in 1940 to turn his attention to competitive golf. He not only was a competitor at the golf U.S. Open, but in the Masters and the PGA Championship as well. His best finish in the golf majors being a tie for third at the 1951 PGA (he was a losing semifinalist in the match-play format.) In stroke-play majors, his best finish was a tie for 14th at the U.S. Open in 1948 and 1949. His best finish at the Masters was a tie for 24th in 1947.
Frank Conner was a standout American tennis player in the amateur era, competing in the U.S. National in 1965, 1966 and 1967, reaching the second round in 1967. He went on to become a tennis All-American at Trinity University in Texas, one of the top tennis schools at the time. However, he had also picked up and excelled at golf as well and, realizing he could make more money in pro golf than tennis, turned into a golf professional, qualifying for the PGA Tour in 1975. His best finish at a major came at the 1981 U.S. Open at Merion where he finished tied for sixth. He never won an official PGA Tour title, but lost in a playoff to Tom Watson at the 1982 Heritage Classic on Hilton Head Island, S.C. and to Dave Barr at the 1981 Quad Cities Open.
Former world No. 42 Scott Draper of Australia also played professional golf in Australia from 2005 to 2008. He won a “lower-tour” event, the New South Wales PGA Championship, in 2007.
Sherwood Stewart won 52 ATP doubles titles, including three major doubles titles as well as two mixed doubles majors. He has excelled in competitive golf after his tennis career, competing in five British Senior Open championships.
Althea Gibson, the two-time U.S. and Wimbledon champion, is credited of not only breaking the color barrier in tennis in 1950, but in professional women’s golf as well in 1964 when she joined the LPGA Tour. Gibson played professional golf until 1978 and, despite being one of the top 50 money winners for five years, her career earnings did not exceed $25,000. Her best finish was a tie for second, losing in a three-way playoff at the Len Immke Buick Open in Dublin, Ohio. “Althea might have been a real player of consequence had she started when she was young,” legendary golf player and commentator Judy Rankin once said of Gibson. “She came along during a difficult time in golf, gained the support of a lot of people, and quietly made a difference.”
Response To Silly Reno Davis Cup Criticism
by Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
So a fellow named Rich Neher runs a newsletter called “Tennis Club Business” that lands in my inbox every few weeks or so. A recent edition discussed critically the U.S. Tennis Association’s decision to host the USA vs. Colombia Davis Cup series in Reno, Nevada, which attracted my attention not only because of my fondness for Davis Cup, but because I was there! The Tennis Club Business content veers heavily toward a glass half empty approach to the USTA and this story – which you can read here https://www.tennisclubbusiness.com/feature-rn-0422?utm_campaign=23fd5cbf-c4f8-480c-988d-043d13b95d01&utm_source=so&utm_medium=mail&cid=8a134d2b-bffb-49d1-b6e5-6a970f4e7c90 was no different. The article was a wee-bit off base and a wee-bit illogical, so I decided to respond to the article and have posted the letter below
Rich,
I just read your article about Davis Cup in Reno and I feel compelled to respond. When I saw that the USA vs. Colombia Davis Cup tie was in Reno, I was so excited that I booked a plane ticket and went!
I had not been to a U.S. Davis Cup match in 10 years and had never been to the Reno-Lake Tahoe area. One of the great aspects of Davis Cup, I have always felt, is that it takes you to places that you otherwise might not visit! Of course, for background, I was the U.S. Davis Cup team press officer for the USTA from 1997 to 2005 and now run Vero Beach, Florida $15,000 USTA Pro Circuit Futures event that benefits the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation.
The top objective for the USTA in a Davis Cup match is… TO WIN! (You play to win the game! Hello!) A fast indoor court provides for a good environment to beat Colombia and advance, which is what they did by a 4-0 margin. You suggest for a site Miami, which would be presumably slower conditions outdoors which would give Colombia more of a chance. You said Colombians would come and wave their flags in Miami, but it is a USA HOME TIE. Team USA wants to play in front of a pro-American crowd, not a pro-Colombia crowd. You say “Tens of thousands” of Colombians would attend in Miami? When you say “TENS” of thousands, you mean at least 20,000 fans, which would be the minimum plural amount of 10,000 fans. There are not even 20,000 fans going daily to the stadium court at the Miami Open, featuring the world’s top men’s and women’s players, let alone a two-day match featuring not even one top 10 player and one team whose highest ranked player is No. 250 in the world. A Davis Cup match in Colombia wouldn’t attract tens of thousands of Colombians. Davis Cup has only attracted more than 20,000 daily fans a handful of times in its over 100-year history. When the teams next play and it is in Colombia, they can bring out the flags in Bogota.
The atmosphere in Reno was great in the arena with USA Cheerleaders, the U.S. Davis Cup team mascot “Ace” the bald eagle, the University of Nevada band and the famed “Netheads” U.S. Davis Cup cheer squad. The American players loved it and it had the feel of the “old” Davis Cup again.
The next objectives for the USTA with home Davis Cup matches is not lose money (and/or make money) and use the matches to further promote tennis and Davis Cup. You mention the “site bid fees” that cities put up to host the match and I’m sure Reno put in an attractive bid. Reno has not been shy that they want to attract more sporting events to its city for economic and promotional reasons so Davis Cup fit the bill. Hotel rooms were likely part of the deal and an attractive arena deal (rental). Everything was relatively inexpensive in Reno (except gas) but the hotel was a short walk to the arena! Super easy! I went out for a walk around downtown and saw Rajeev Ram walking down the street to the arena.
You say “Miami” blindly but do you also know how much hotel room nights are in Miami? Well, $400 a night is a bargain this time of year! Not fan friendly! (Great hotels in Reno were barely $100 a night) Is the venue for free? Is there a bid fee? Who gets the parking revenue and food and beverage revenue? What is the venue in Miami? Crandon Park? (A lot of politics to get tennis there, apparently and has it been properly maintained for a world class event since the Miami Open left in 2018? I’m not so sure.) What other venue is there in Miami? Hard Rock Stadium certainly don’t want to “spoil their party” before the Miami Open starts two weeks later. It’s not so easy as just saying “Let’s play it in Miami!” Also, is it really good for the game to oversaturate a market (Miami) with so much tennis in a short period of time? Not smart!
You write, “Similar to the San Diego debacle a few years ago, where some braindead Poobah decided on bringing Italian clay into Petco Stadium, they had to build a court inside the Events Center and laid it out with carpet. Who does that?” Well, you know builds tennis courts where tennis courts are organically? Try Madison Square Garden in New York City for many events including the year-end men’s and women’s events for decades, the O2 Arena in London for the year-end championships and the upcoming Laver Cup, the Houston Astrodome for the “Battle of the Sexes,” I could go on and on because it is done ALL. THE. TIME. The Petco Park Davis Cup was also awesome, to host tennis in a non-traditional tennis environment (like the Houston Astrodome for the “Battle of the Sexes” again, for example.) The only bad element to that tie for the USTA was bad luck that Team USA’s top player John Isner was injured and didn’t play and the USA lost.
Davis Cup has never been played in Reno and there is no big time tennis there. So it was a good choice to introduce big-time pro tennis to that market. The Saturday crowd was about capacity and loud (The first day was Friday, by ITF Rules, so problematic for people to get off work or school to come out and it was a bit light that day, as was kind of expected.)The crowd was enthusiastic and diverse and many probably had never been to a big time tennis event before. Davis Cup (and the women’s equivalent Billie Jean King Cup) works best in small to medium-size cities. Until the U.S. has a team with multiple super-star Grand Slam tournament champions again, teams with players ranked No. 20 to 50 is not going to penetrate or make a big buzz in big market cities with NBA, NHL, MLB and NFL teams among other entertainment attractions to compete with, like Miami. Davis Cup over the last 15 years has flourished in cities like Winston-Salem, N.C. and Austin, Texas and Boise, Idaho and Portland, Oregon.
To boot, U.S. Davis Cup captain Mardy Fish wanted to find a venue that was also in the same time zone and near Indian Wells to make it easier for the U.S. players to travel and adapt there for the tournament the next week. And look what happened? U.S. team member Taylor Fritz, buoyed by his Davis Cup week in Reno, was the unexpected and much-celebrated singles winner in Indian Wells in what was the biggest tournament victory in singles by and American man in 15 years. That’s amazing news for American tennis!
So in my book, Davis Cup in Reno was a win-win!
-Randy Walker
Vero Beach Public Park Courts Where Mardy Fish Learned To Play Needs Improvements, Programming, Attention
The Riverside Park tennis complex in Vero Beach, Florida is most famous for being the location where U.S. Davis Cup hero and 2004 Olympic silver medalist Mardy Fish first learned to play tennis. The public park facility also was where Angela Lettiere, the 1994 NCAA singles champion for the University of Georgia, and Robert Kowalczyk, two-time USTA National Boys’ 18 Clay Court Championships winner, played as young juniors. Even famed country music singer Jake Owen played tennis at Riverside Park as a junior before trading in his racquet for a guitar.
Since those glory days, the facility has fallen on hard times with a lack of organized programs and clinics and a deterioration of infrastructure. Tom Fish, the father of Mardy Fish and the President Emeritus of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, discussed this here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0BIDbPuaww&t=134s The city tennis courts barely escaped a bid by local pickleball enthusiasts to take over half the courts. In an effort to revitalize the Riverside facility, the USTA Florida section was contacted to help interject financial and logistical support in the form of their facility management program. The potential partnership between the City of Vero Beach and USTA Florida, surprisingly, has been met with some resistance from some of the few remaining local tennis players who play consistently at Riverside Park.The USTA’s facility management program was created in 2017, aimed at helping improve public tennis facilities across the state and focuses on working with municipalities that are struggling to maintain quality public tennis facilities and programs. Read more about it here https://www.ustaflorida.com/in-the-community/tennis-management/
Laura Bowen, the executive director of the USTA Florida section, participated in a question and answer session with TennisVeroBeach.com to discuss the specific situation with regard to USTA Florida potentially taking over the management of the tennis facility at Riverside Park in Vero Beach that can be read below:
Tell us a bit about the USTA Florida Facility Management Program?
LAURA BOWEN: Our Board of Directors started looking at tennis management services in early 2017. Several of our Board members have spent decades managing public tennis centers in Florida. Unfortunately, budget pressures on cities had led some municipalities in the state to consider eliminating tennis courts when they are not being used. Several public parks had reached out to us over the years and asked if USTA Florida would help manage their public tennis facilities. We decided to get into the management business to help prevent facilities from closing AND to learn more about why public tennis centers were struggling to bring in new players.
It’s important to share that, although direct management is something we can offer, it’s not all that we do, and not all facilities are a fit for us. More often than not, we provide different levels of advice and guidance to cities who request it. This can be as simple as answering questions about clay court maintenance or getting bids on projects and as complicated as a full facility evaluation and transformation. We will provide guidance and professional assessments to any city that requests it – for free.
What communities are currently part of this program and how has it been received?
LAURA BOWEN: Our first location was Racquet Club of Cocoa Beach, which we started managing in December of 2017. We added Fort Walton Beach Tennis Center and the city-owned courts in Gainesville in 2019. In all three instances, we met with the community before we took on the location to listen to what the residents and players wanted. We then tailored our programs and services around their needs. In all three cases, programs have expanded, revenues have increased, and we now have strong relationships with the communities.
It’s common for residents to view USTA Florida as an outsider who is coming in to change everything. It’s also common for people to view USTA Florida as just leagues and tournaments. In reality, we are an organization of volunteers, staff and players who play and deliver tennis all over the state. We see ourselves as a community partner that is willing to take our resources and expertise and apply them to bring more tennis play opportunities to the community. We understand that it takes a little bit of a leap of faith on both sides to go into a partnership, but the outcome has universally been positive.
What is USTA Florida paid by communities to run this management program? How do the financials work?
LAURA BOWEN: We are a 501c4 not-for-profit organization. When we take on a facility, we are not interested in making money. Same goes for our programs. We exist to grow the game of tennis. We are willing to absorb extra costs of programs in order to get more people playing tennis locally.
Our goals with tennis management are first and foremost to keep tennis courts from being eliminated due to lack of use, and second, to provide as many tennis programs and play opportunities to the community as possible. We are not paid anything from the cities for our services. Quite the opposite. To date, we have invested more than $2 million in the three facilities we manage. Every dime we have collected in revenue has gone into programs, play and facility improvements. When/if the facility is profitable, we put that money back into the facility. We also provide clear and transparent financial reports to our city partners. The city sees exactly what we spend and what we bring in.
People in Vero Beach are worried that if the USTA Florida comes in to manage its Riverside Park public courts that fees will be increased. Will they?
LAURA BOWEN: Let me start by stating clearly that USTA Florida has not presented any contract for management services to the city. We have provided an assessment of the current services and our recommendations for growth, which I personally promised to the Recreation Commission at its February meeting.
We have been asked questions and have provided information on the types of contracts we normally do. That doesn’t mean we would do the same thing in a contract with the City of Vero Beach. Every situation is different. We made a decision not to enter contract negotiations with the City of Vero Beach without the council and community supporting those efforts.
Reports that we approached the city initially to “take over” the facility are also inaccurate. I personally received a request from tennis advocates in the summer of 2021 to come to Vero and discuss the possibility of managing the location. This request came immediately after a separate group offered to convert four of the courts to pickleball and manage those courts under a proposed agreement with the city.
We have recommended in our assessment that the daily court fees be reduced. The current drop-in rates are high compared to other public tennis facilities in the State of Florida. The membership rates are also out of line with best practices in the state of Florida. Some are low and some are reasonable, but they do not align. Again, we explain this in our assessment. Ultimately, the city council determines the fees at the tennis center, not USTA Florida.
Another concern is that people who have their normal everyday morning games will now have their court time taken away. Could this happen?
LAURA BOWEN: No. We want to expand programs, not replace them. Morning round-robin play seems to be vibrant and should continue.
Will there still be free court time offered at Riverside Park if the USTA Florida takes over its management?
LAURA BOWEN: We offer free court time at all of our facilities for various reasons. This is a common practice.
What will happen to the current staff at Riverside Park Tennis if the USTA Florida comes in?
LAURA BOWEN: The current staff are employees of the City of Vero Beach. That is a question for the city. We do not comment on what another entity should do with its employees.
USTA Florida is an equal opportunity employer. We create jobs based on needs at each location and grade them appropriately. All of our job openings are posted publicly on Indeed and they include pay rates. We also have an independent compensation consultant that audits all positions and pay to ensure equity and fairness.
We have not created any job descriptions for Riverside. That would only occur if we entered into a contract negotiation. As mentioned previously, we are not at that point.
What happens to the freelance tennis pros who currently teach at Riverside Park?
LAURA BOWEN: Tennis professionals who have a contract with the city would need to discuss their contract terms with the city. We have provided recommendations in our assessment regarding best practices that many cities apply in their contracts with tennis professionals who teach on city-owned courts. The City of Vero Beach is welcome to follow those recommendations or not.
USTA Florida directly employs all of our teaching professionals. We do this for a variety of reasons, mainly to ensure all teaching professionals are certified, trained, Safe Play approved, and background checked. We provide all training and professional development and support for those employees at our cost.
Will the USTA have a tennis pro shop at Riverside Park that could potentially compete with other tennis stores in Vero Beach?
LAURA BOWEN: We have not assessed this portion of the existing operation, but the building appears too small for an operation that would compete with a local tennis shop. The typical things we offer at our other locations are balls and stringing services. We do not typically offer merchandise in the way that a private club or local tennis shop does.
Will the USTA still allow St. Edwards to have its varsity, junior varsity and middle school tennis matches and programming at Riverside Park?
LAURA BOWEN: Yes. We do this at our other locations. It’s usually written into our contracts with the cities.
What kind of programs would you be implementing that locals can perhaps participate in and look forward to?
LAURA BOWEN: As noted in our assessment, youth programs seem to be a missing piece. We first visited Riverside in August of 2021 and asked if there were weekly summer camps being provided. We were told there were not. That is a big entry point for kids of all ages. It’s also important for any tennis center to have regular after-school programs for youth of all ages. Those generally happen from 3-6pm. Adaptive (Special Olympics), wheelchair tennis, and adult beginner programs are also areas of opportunity that we are seeing thrive at other public tennis centers.
Would local residents have to join the USTA to play at the courts? To play in clinics or play in tournaments or round-robins or leagues?
LAURA BOWEN: No. You are only required to be a USTA member to play in USTA Adult Leagues and Sanctioned Tournaments. USTA Membership requirements and pricing is set by the USTA (national) board.
What kind of facility upgrades would the USTA Florida implement and who would pay for it? New nets? Windscreens? Court resurfacing?
LAURA BOWEN: Our understanding is the city has already purchased new windscreens. We have offered to resurface the four remaining courts and provide nets, at our expense.
It’s important for the city and the residents to understand that USTA Florida and USTA offer grants for things like court improvements, equipment and programs. These funds are available to public tennis centers across the state. We have advised the city to use these grants to help cover some of these costs in the future.
What else would you like to share?
LAURA BOWEN: Tennis is booming in Florida. According to the Tennis Industry Association’s annual participation report, Florida saw a 26% increase in play in 2020, and another 8% increase in 2021. The majority of that play is happening on public tennis courts. Public tennis centers across the state are seeing tremendous growth. To reinvigorate the courts at Riverside to be a place for new players to come and participate with the existing residents would be fantastic for tennis and for the city.
Whatever the residents and city decide in terms of management of the facility, USTA Florida will continue to provide our support to all tennis facilities in Vero Beach.
We are looking forward to having a more direct dialog with residents, and are hopeful that we can schedule a public town hall in the coming weeks.
John Isner Has Now Won As Many ATP Singles Titles As James Blake And Mardy Fish Combined
by Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
John Isner defeated fellow American Brandon Nakashima, 7-6 (8), 7-5 in just under two hours to win the Truist Atlanta Open singles title for a sixth time. The win for the 36-year-old former University of Georgia star marks his 16th career ATP singles title, which, for perspective for the sometimes overlooked American star, is the same amount of ATP singles titles won by former American tennis stars James Blake and Mardy Fish COMBINED. Blake won 10 singles titles in his ATP career while Fish garnered six singles titles. Since the end of the John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors era of American tennis in 1992, Isner ranks No. 5 among American tennis players as far as ATP singles titles won, trailing only Pete Sampras (64 titles), Andre Agassi (60 titles), Michael Chang (34 titles), Andy Roddick (33 titles) and Jim Courier (23 titles).
With his sixth title in Atlanta, Isner joins Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal as the only active men’s players to win six or more singles titles at a tour-level event. Isner’s six Atlanta titles are second only to Federer’s seven Cincinnati victories in terms of US Open Series events.
Nakashima, from San Diego, was bidding to become the youngest American singles champion at an ATP event since Andy Roddick in 2002 in Houston. He was also a singles finalist a week earlier in Los Cabos, Mexico.
Coached by Dusan Vemic, Nakashima, who played one season at the University of Virginia before turning pro, spent two weeks training with former USTA Player Development director of coaching Jose Higueras prior to this hard-court swing and is projected to rise to a career-high No. 89 in the world on Monday. Nakashima is the second rising American to reach an ATP singles final in as many US Open Series events thus far in 2021, after 20-year-old Jenson Brooksby reached the final in Newport two weeks ago.
About the US Open Series
The US Open Series serves as a true “regular season” of summer tennis in North America, linking nine WTA and ATP Tour tournaments to the US Open. Featuring a cohesive weekly viewing schedule, as well as comprehensive outreach and grassroots engagement initiatives, the Series serves as a vital platform to promote and grow the game of tennis in person and at home. Fans can follow along all summer as today’s top champions go head-to-head with tomorrow’s emerging stars, while each tournament engages its local community with a variety of programs geared toward showcasing and promoting the game to new and existing fans.
Mardy Fish’s Foundation Tennis Tournament Pivots From ITF World Tennis Tour Event To UTR For 2020
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation has announced that the 2020 edition of its annual Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships pro tennis tournament will be held October 19-25 at the Boulevard tennis club.
The popular annual tournament, Vero Beach’s leading international sporting event, was originally scheduled for April, but was rescheduled due to the COVID-19 global pandemic.
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships is regarded as one of the best entry-level professional tennis tournaments in the world. Proceeds from the event benefit the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, the non-profit organization named for Vero Beach native son Mardy Fish, former top 10 tennis star and current U.S. Davis Cup caption, benefits at risk children in Indian River County.
“After many challenging months, we are so relieved to finally be able to host this popular tournament, the biggest annual fundraiser for the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, which helps at-risk children in Indian River County lead active and healthy lives, which is now even more important where health and improving one’s immune system is critically important,” said Tom Fish, President Emeritus of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation and the father of Mardy Fish. “Vero Beach is one of the leading tennis towns in the country and we are so thrilled to continue this annual tennis tradition in as normal a circumstance as we safely can.”
The event will be for the first time staged on the Universal Tennis Rating (UTR) platform rather than as an International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Tennis Tour event on the U.S. Tennis Association (USTA) Pro Circuit. Players from around the world will compete for $10,000 in total prize money in singles and doubles, with an increased first prize payout of $3,000 in singles and $1,500 per team winner’s check in doubles. However, ATP Tour ranking points will not be awarded at this year’s event.
While the tournament is popular with many of Vero Beach’s robust tennis community, the event will only accommodate about 35 percent of full capacity for social distancing purposes. No daily tickets will be sold to the event this year, with only sponsors, season-ticket holders and randomly-drawn members of The Boulevard allowed to attend. The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation also asks all attending fans to wear masks while attending the event. For more tournament information, fans can email co-tournament director Randy Walker at Rwalker@NewChapter.com or go to www.MardyFishChidlrensFoundation.org
This year’s tournament, under the UTR platform, is “open” for any aspiring player to enter in singles and doubles. Entry information can be found on the MyUTR.com website here: https://app.myutr.com/events/30593?_ref=randywal270
Some of the past competitors at the USTA Vero Beach Futures have gone on to succeed at the highest levels of professional tennis, winning major singles and doubles titles, Olympic medals and Davis Cup championships and earning No. 1 world rankings. Andy Roddick, the 2003 U.S. Open champion who attained the world No. 1 ranking and helped the United States win the Davis Cup in 2007, competed in Vero Beach in 1999. Thomas Johansson of Sweden, who reached the second round of the Vero Beach Futures in 1995, won the Australian Open seven years later in 2002. Nicolas Massu, the 1998 singles runner-up in Vero Beach, won the singles and doubles gold medals at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, beating Fish in the gold medal singles match. Kyle Edmund, the 2013 champion in Vero Beach, helped Great Britain to the Davis Cup title in 2015. Other notable former competitors in Vero Beach include former world No. 2 Magnus Norman, former world No. 4 Tim Henman, 2016 Wimbledon finalist Milos Raonic and most recently new top 10 start Denis Shapovalov, who played in Vero Beach in 2016. Former Vero Beach competitors have combined to win 19 titles in singles, doubles and mixed doubles at Grand Slam tournaments. Eight former Vero Beach players have gone on to play Davis Cup for the United States – Roddick, Fish, Taylor Dent, Jared Palmer, Donald Young, Ryan Harrison, Frances Tiafoe and Tommy Paul.
Founded in 2007, the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation (www.MardyFishChildrensFoundation.org and @MardyFishFound on Twitter) currently supports over 2,400 children in 15 elementary schools, six middle schools, and several other community organizations in Indian River County, Florida by funding after-school exercise, nutritional and enrichment programs in a safe environment to prepare them for healthy, productive and successful lives. The Foundation introduced the “Six Healthy Habits” in 2012 which are Get Sleep; Drink Water; Exercise Daily, Eat Healthy; Brush and Floss; Make Friends.
Leading tournament sponsors for 2020 include Presenting Sponsor: PNC Bank, Grand Slam Sponsors: Boston Barricade, George E. Warren Corporation, The Jake Owen Foundation, Tom Collins Insurance, Cabana/Box Seat Sponsors: Michael and Kathleen Pierce, Gene Simonsen, John and Charlotte Klein, Peter and Maureen Lee, John’s Island Real Estate, Wilmington Trust, Bob and Lace Milligan, Micky and Rob Stein, Lynn Southerly, John and Sara Marshall, John and Marie McConnell, Shirley Becker, Hadleigh Investments and Supporting Sponsors: Syde Hurdus Foundation, Mike and Meg Hickey/The M&M Group, Nalzarro Music, Coastal Van Lines, Diamond Resorts, Center Court Outfitters, Foglia Contracting, Offfutt, Barton, Schlitt, Inc, Vero Fitness, Treasure Coast Financial, Willem and Marion DeVogel, Ron Chesley, Dr. Collin Kitchell and Minuteman Press.
Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation’s “Six Healthy Habits” Will Serve You Well In This COVID-19 Era
by Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
When the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation was founded in 2007 the main mantra of the non-profit organization helping at-risk children in Indian River Country was Mardy’s “Six Healthy Habits.” With the current heightened focus on personal health in this era of coronavirus / COVID-19, these healthy habits become even more important to children, and people of all ages.
“Fighting disease and viruses starts with having a good immune system and you build that up by having a healthy lifestyle,” said Tom Fish, the President Emeritus of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation and Mardy’s father. “We want to teach children, early in their life, the importance of starting to live a healthy life. It’s not just good advice for children but for everyone.”
Mardy’s Six Healthy Habits are as follows:
- Get Sleep
- Drink Water
- Eat Healthy
- Exercise Daily
- Brush and Floss
- Make Friends
Sleep
Sleep performs a range of vital functions, including restoring damaged tissues, boosting learning and memory, and flushing toxins from the brain. Sleeping too little can have serious long-term health consequences, increasing the risk of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
“Sleep is an important behavior and routine because that’s when your body regenerates and cures itself,” said Fish. “If you are sick or injured, one of the best things you can do to get rid of germs and illness is to sleep. It’s important to get about eight hours of sleep a night. Roger Federer recently posted that ideally he likes to get ten hours of sleep each night. That’s 10 pm to eight in the morning. Naps are also good if you can do it. Getting enough sleep keeps you alert, gives you more energy and allows you to learn more.
Drink Water
Being hydrated flushes out your system and gets any bad elements in your system out. It flushes out waste and helps your digestive system. Having properly moisturized skin, nostrils and mouth also prevents viruses and bacteria from infecting you and getting into your body. It also helps you have the proper blood pressure. It is recommended that you drink about two to three liters of water per day and to have at least a swig of a drink every 15 minutes, even when you do not feel thirsty.
“It’s good to have a water bottle with you and certainly drink during and after physical activity,” said Fish. “Water is the best liquid to drink and if you don’t like the taste, squeeze a little lemon in it for some extra flavor. It’s amazing the wonders your body will do when it is properly hydrated.”
Eat Healthy
Your body needs healthy food and a balanced diet to get all the vitamins it needs to grow and maintain strong muscles, bones and fight off sickness. Overeating and eating poorly – especially too much sugar – can cause conditions such as diabetes and heart disease. Studies show that when people, especially children, are well nourished, they perform better in at work and school and they have positive learning experiences. Healthy foods give you energy and keep your body feeling great.
“Food is fuel and you want to put ‘good gasoline’ in your tank and not bad,” said Fish. “Get a good balance of fruits, vegetables, proteins, carbohydrates and don’t eat too late in the evening and give your body a chance to fast and digest. Also make sure you don’t eat too much and avoid junk food and fast food.”
Exercise Daily
Exercise and moving your body is an essential every day activity. Exercise or physical activity is very important because it strengthens your heart, muscles, and bones. Exercise also helps your brain work and puts you in a great mood. It helps keep your mind active and alert throughout the day. When you exercise your body, you are also exercising the mind. It stimulates blood flow and brings oxygen to the brain to enhance its function. You are testing and conditioning your body and your lungs for stressful situations and when an unexpected stressful situation occurs, you are prepared and can endure.
“Your body is full of moving parts and you have to keep them moving to keep them functioning and strong,” said Fish. “Exercising creates a strong body that creates a strong person and a strong immune system. You can do powerful things when you are strong and in shape.”
Brush and Floss
Taking care of your teeth is essential, brushing and flossing your teeth twice daily is recommended. Tooth decay and gum disease can develop when plaque is allowed to build up on and between teeth, thus the need to brush and floss daily. Plaque is full of bacteria that you need to extract from your body. Healthy teeth allow you to chew thoroughly, which is important for digestion and also to allow you to speak clearly and look good when you smile. It also cleans your mouth and prevents you from having bad breath, which can also hurt you socially.
“Brushing and flossing your teeth in the morning and at night before you go to bed should be part of your every-day routine,” said Fish.
Make Friends
Social interaction is a vital part of daily mental health. Friends help you make better lifestyle choices and contribute to an overall state of well-being. Spending time with friends gives you a more positive disposition. You are also using your brain more when you interact with people. By contrast, loneliness is adverse to your health and contributes to a mental and physical decline.
“Personal relationships are important for mental health and promote your sense of general well-being,” said Fish. “Being with people, especially friends, creates improved mental sharpness. It helps create a more positive outlook on life a creates long, happier and more meaningful lives with the joyful interaction of friends and family.”
For more information on the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, go to www.MardyFishChildrensFoundation.org
Former Ryder Cup Star Luke Donald To Join U.S. Davis Cup Captain Mardy Fish’s Golf Fundraiser
Former world No. 1 golfer Luke Donald, a winner of 17 pro tournaments around the world, will join U.S. Davis Cup captain and Vero Beach native son Mardy Fish as one of the special guest competitors at the 2020 Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Golf Fundraiser Monday, January 13 at the Windsor Club in Vero Beach, Florida.
The annual event, hosted by Fish, is one of the major fundraisers for the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, the non-profit foundation that benefits at-risk children in Indian River County. Donald will be competing with and against patrons in this special team “shamable”- format event at the Windsor golf course.
In 2011, Donald was the first player to ever win the year-long PGA Tour money list and European Race to Dubai in the same year, also being named the PGA Player of the Year and the European Tour Golfer of the Year. A four-time member of the European Ryder Cup team, Donald first ascended to the world No. 1 golf ranking in May of 2011 after winning the BMW PGA Championships at Wentworth and buoyed by his win earlier in the year at the WGC-Accenture Match-Play Championship. He has won five titles on the PGA Tour, including the Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida in 2006. Donald has finished in the top 10 at all four major championships with his best finish coming with third-place showings at The Masters in 2005 and the PGA Championship in 2006
Also participating in the event will be part-time Vero Beach resident, former European Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley, standout Major League Baseball pitcher and celebrity golf tour standout Rick Rhoden of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Yankees, famous knuckle-ball pitcher Tim Wakefield of the Boston Red Sox, Vero Beach resident and former Los Angeles Dodger Rick Monday, former tennis star, two-U.S. Open semifinalist and two-time Davis Cup champion Cliff Richey and former ATP-ranked tennis player and All-American from Harvard Thomas Blake.
Fish was recently described by six-time Masters champion Jack Nicklaus as “the best non-professional golfer that I have ever seen play.” Said Nicklaus to Steve Flink of Tennis.com after playing nine holes in December of 2018 with Fish, “I have never seen anybody with as nice a golf swing and as good a golf game that doesn’t play it professionally, or as a top amateur. I was flabbergasted how good Mardy was.” While Fish ended his professional ATP tennis career at the 2015 U.S. Open, he has excelled playing competitive golf since his retirement. He has won two tournaments on the celebrity golf tour at the Diamond Resorts Invitational in Orlando, Florida in 2016 and 2018 and will try to win the event for the third time in five years just days after his appearance in Vero Beach at Windsor. In his professional tennis career, Fish won six ATP singles titles and eight ATP doubles titles in his career while also reaching a career-high singles ranking of No. 7 and winning the silver medal at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece. A long-time member of the U.S. Davis Cup team as a player, Fish was named captain of the team in 2019, replacing Jim Courier, and skippered the U.S. team in November in Madrid, Spain, where the team lost to Canada and beat Italy while not advancing out of the round-robin stage of the event.
Golfers interested in participating in the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Golf Fundraiser should email Mardy Fish’s father, Tom, the President of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, at Tfish@aol.com. Paid positions for a tax deductible contribution of $500 are available as well as course signage for $300. Registration and breakfast begin at 8 am with an 9 am shot-gun start, followed by a 1 pm luncheon and awards presentation. PNC Bank, a long-time supporter of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, is the presenting sponsor of the event. Other sponsors include Boston Barricade, Chelsea’s Gourmet Market, Sailfish Brewing Company and Alimentari Gourmet Market.
Designed by Robert Trent Jones Jr., the 18-hole links style course at Windsor is a masterpiece in traditional golf course architecture. The par 72 course features an undulating panorama of native trees that border gentle rolling fairways, unobstructed by houses.
Founded in 2007, the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation (www.MardyFishChildrensFoundation.org and @MardyFishFound on Twitter) currently supports over 2,400 children in conjunction with several other nonprofit organization as well as 15 elementary schools and six middle schools in Indian River County, Florida by funding after-school exercise, nutritional and enrichment programs in a safe environment to prepare them for healthy, productive and successful lives. The Foundation introduced the “Six Healthy Habits” in 2012 which are Get Sleep; Drink Water; Exercise Daily, Eat Healthy; Brush and Floss; Make Friends. The Foundation’s story can also be seen here in the following video: https://www.mardyfishchildrensfoundation.org/a-message-from-mardy/ The Foundation also hosts an annual $15,000 USTA Pro Circuit tennis tournament, the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships, to be held this year April 23-May 3 at The Boulevard tennis club.
Vero Beach’s Boulevard Tennis Club In Florida To Host Mardy Fish USTA Pro Circuit Event Through 2022
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships, Vero Beach’s long-time annual U.S. Tennis Association Pro Circuit tennis tournament, will be held at The Boulevard Tennis Club through 2022, the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation announced today.
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation and Vero Beach’s premier tennis club signed a three-year agreement last week where The Boulevard will host the men’s professional event in 2020, 2021 and 2022. The 2020 event will be held April 26 – May 3 and will be a $15,000-level event on the International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Tennis Tour. The event benefits the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, the non-profit organization the benefits at-risk children in Indian River County founded by Vero Beach native son Mardy Fish, the former top 10 tennis star and the current U.S. Davis Cup captain. As part of the agreement, The Boulevard will house and showcase the event’s perpetual trophy, the Rahaley Cup, named for the event founder Mike Rahaley, who passed away earlier this year. The Boulevard will also include the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation in its promotions, including television commercials seen throughout Indian River County.
“We are excited to enter into a multi-year agreement with The Boulevard, which is the epicenter for tennis in Vero Beach,” said Tom Fish, President-emeritus of the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation and the father of Mardy Fish. “We are grateful to The Boulevard and its staff for their support of this Vero Beach sporting tradition that serves as our major fundraiser for the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation, which benefits at-risk children in Indian River County.”
The Boulevard has hosted the event eight times since 2010 and has seen such current ATP Tour standout players such as Frances Tiafoe, Denis Shapovalov and Kyle Edmund compete in the event there. A 48-player qualifying tournament will start Sunday, April 26 with main-draw play starting Tuesday, April 28 concluding with the singles final on Sunday, May 3.
Founded in 2007, the Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation currently supports over 2,400 children in conjunction with several other nonprofit organization as well as 15 elementary schools and six middle schools in Indian River County, Florida by funding after-school exercise, nutritional and enrichment programs in a safe environment to prepare them for healthy, productive and successful lives. The Foundation introduced the “Six Healthy Habits” in 2012 which are Get Sleep; Drink Water; Exercise Daily, Eat Healthy; Brush and Floss; Make Friends. The Foundation’s story can also be seen in a video here: https://www.mardyfishchildrensfoundation.org/a-message-from-mardy/
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships has been played in Vero Beach since 1995 and regarded as one of the best entry-level professional tennis tournaments in the world. Some of the past competitors have gone on to succeed at the highest levels of professional tennis, winning major singles and doubles titles, Olympic medals and Davis Cup championships and earning No. 1 world rankings. Andy Roddick, the 2003 U.S. Open champion who attained the world No. 1 ranking and helped the United States win the Davis Cup in 2007, competed in Vero Beach in 1999. Thomas Johansson of Sweden, who reached the second round of the Vero Beach Futures in 1995, won the Australian Open seven years later in 2002. Nicolas Massu, the 1998 singles runner-up in Vero Beach, won the singles and doubles gold medals at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, beating Fish in the gold medal singles match. Kyle Edmund, the 2013 champion in Vero Beach, helped Great Britain to the Davis Cup title in 2015. Other notable former competitors in Vero Beach include former world No. 2 Magnus Norman, former world No. 4 Tim Henman, 2016 Wimbledon finalist Milos Raonic and most recently world No. 50 player and teen sensation Denis Shapovalov, who played in Vero Beach in 2016. Former Vero Beach competitors have combined to win 19 titles in singles, doubles and mixed doubles at Grand Slam tournaments. Seven former Vero Beach players have gone on to play Davis Cup for the United States – Roddick, Fish, Taylor Dent, Jared Palmer, Donald Young, Ryan Harrison and Frances Tiafoe.
For more information on the event, including ticket and sponsor information, go to www.MardyFishChildrensFoundation.org. Admission for children 18 and under is free. Sponsorships are available by contacting Treasurer/Executive Director Lynn Southerly at LSouth1072@gmail.com or co-tournament directors Tom Fish (Tfish@aol.com) and Randy Walker at (Rwalker@NewChapterMedia.com). Fans can follow news and developments on the tournament on Facebook and on Twitter at @VeroFutures.
The Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships have an annual economic impact of approximately $500,000 per year on the Vero Beach local economy. Approximately 3,000 fans annually attend the event, which is seen as one of the best-attended events entry-level events in the world.
Dmitry Popko of Kazakhstan and the Kazakhstan Davis Cup team won the 2019 Mardy Fish Children’s Foundation Tennis Championships at the Boulevard beating Sekou Bangoura of the United States in the final. Sixteen-year-old Zach Svajda of San Diego, who advanced into the main draw of the 2019 event at The Boulevard via the qualifying rounds, jump-started an incredible summer of tennis in Vero Beach in 2019, winning the USTA National Boy’s 18s Championships in Kalamazoo, Michigan and earned a main draw spot at the U.S. Open, becoming one of the youngest men ever to compete in the U.S. Championships. He lost in the first-round to Paolo Lorenzi of Italy in five sets after leading two sets to love.
The Boulevard Tennis Club, located in Central Vero Beach on Indian River Boulevard, is the fastest-growing tennis club in Vero Beach, featuring 13 clay tennis courts and world-class tennis instruction and programming for all levels of players. The club is also the home of the highly-regarded restaurant and bar Counter Culture, which is open to the public six days a week. For more information, go to www.BlvdTennisClub.com
Records Set In Late-Night U.S. Davis Cup Victory
By Randy Walker
@TennisPublisher
It was not a banner season for the U.S. Davis Cup team in 2019, but it was one for the record books.
U.S. team members Sam Querrey and Jack Sock defeated Fabio Fognini and Simone Bolelli 6-7(4), 7-6(2), 6-4 to clinch a 2-1 round-robin victory over Italy in a match that ended at 4:04 am local time in Madrid, the latest finish in the history of Davis Cup and the second-latest finish on record ever in pro tennis.
The U.S.- Italy match spanned eight hours in total and was delayed by two hours based on the length of the Germany vs. Argentina match that ended with a match the ended with a doubles match with a scoreline of 6-7(4) 7-6(2) 7-6(18). The previous latest finish to a pro tennis match on record came at 4:34 a.m. when Lleyton Hewitt beat Marcos Baghdatis at the 2008 Australian Open.
Quipped U.S. Davis Cup Captain Mardy Fish in the early hours of the morning after the Querrey-Sock victory, “I don’t where we are we, what time it is, what day it is but that was pretty special from these guys.”
The previous latest for a U.S. Davis Cup tie was at 2:35 on March 16, 1987, as documented in my “On This Day in Tennis History” book below:
March 16, 1987 – In a match completed at 2:35 am, Victor Pecci of Paraguay defeats Aaron Krickstein 6-2, 8-6, 9-7 to give Paraguay a startling 3-2 upset of the United States in the Davis Cup first round in Asuncion, Paraguay. Pecci’s win comes after 285th-ranked Hugo Chapacu upsets Jimmy Arias 6-4, 6-1, 5-7, 3-6, 9-7 – saving three match points – in 5 hours, 5 minutes to pull Paraguay even with the United States at 2-2. Pecci’s win creates a melee on court as fans envelop the court following match point and carry Pecci – along with teammates Chapacu and Francisco Gonzalez – around the court. Says U.S. Davis Cup Captain Tom Gorman, “I think the world of tennis must recognize that Paraguay is tough to beat playing in Asuncion. I don’t know what we could have done more than we did. Naturally, I have a tremendous feeling of disappointment.”
The doubles win capped an amazing comeback victory for the U.S. team, who were points from elimination after being down 0-1, American No. 1 Taylor Fritz was points from the U.S. being defeated by scraped out a win over world No. 8 Matteo Berrettini 5-7, 7-6 (5), 6-2 to tie the match at 1-1 after fellow Davis Cup rookie Reilly Opelka was defeated by No. 12-ranked Fabio Fognini 6-4, 6-7(4), 6-3 to put the U.S. in the early 0-1 hole in the first match.
Unfortunately for the United States, the epic U.S. victory over Italy was not enough for the team to advance into the Davis Cup quarterfinals with a 1-1 round robin record. The U.S. was not able to advance through a complicated tiebreaker system of percentage of sets and games won that is too difficult to easily explain with other nations with 1-1 round-robin records. In their opening round-robin match, the United States was defeated by Canada 2-1.
A comprehensive list of all of the latest finishing matches in tennis history can be found in the book “The Bud Collins History of Tennis” book here: https://www.amazon.com/Bud-Collins-History-Tennis/dp/1937559386/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=Bud+Collins+History+of+Tennis&qid=1574347218&sr=8-1