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LAWN , a very thin fabric made from level See also:linen or See also:cotton yarns. It is used for See also:light dresses and trimmings, also for handkerchiefs. The terms lawn and See also:cambric (q.v.) are often intended to indicate the same fabric. The word " lawn " was formerly derived from the See also:French name for the fabric linen, from See also:Tin, See also:flax, linen, but See also:Skeat (Etym. Dict., 1898, Addenda) and A. See also: Irish and See also:Breton lann, heathy ground, also enclosure, See also:land; Welsh Ilan, enclosure. It is cognate with " land," See also:common to See also:Teutonic See also:languages. In the See also:original sense of clearing in a forest, glade, See also:Lat. saltus, " lawn," still survives in the New Forest, where it is used of the feeding-places of See also:cattle. LAWN-See also:TENNIS, a See also:game played with racquet and See also:ball on a See also:court traversed by a See also:net, but without enclosing walls. It is a See also:modern adaptation of the See also:ancient game of tennis (q.v.), with which it is identical as regards the ,scoring of the game and " set." Lawn-tennis is essentially a summer game, played in the open See also:air, either on courts marked with whitewash on See also:close-cut grass like a See also:cricket See also:pitch, or on See also:asphalt, cinders, See also:gravel, See also:wood, See also:earth or other substance which can be so prepared as to afford a See also:firm, level and smooth See also:surface. In See also:winter, however, the game is often played on the See also:floor of gymnasiums, See also:drill sheds or other buildings, when it-is called " covered-court lawn-tennis"; but there is no difference in the game itself corresponding to these varieties of court. The lawn-tennis court for the single-handed game, one player against one (" singles "), is shown in fig. 1, and that See also:fox the four-handed game (" doubles ") in fig. 2. The net stretched across the See also:middle of the court is attached to the tops of two posts which stand 3 ft. outside the court on each See also:side. The height of the net is 3 ft. 6 in. at the posts and 3 ft. at the centre. The court is bisected longitudinally by the See also:half-court-See also:line, which, however, is marked only between the two service-lines and at the points of junction with the See also:base-lines. The divisions of the court on each side of the halfcourt-line are called respectively the right-See also:hand and See also:left-hand courts; and the portion of these divisions between the service-lines and the net are the right-hand service-court and left-hand service-court respectively. The balls, which are made of hollow See also:india-See also:rubber, tightly covered with See also: If in a serve, otherwise See also:good, the ball touches the net, it is a " let " whether the serve be " taken " or not by striker-out; a " let " does not annul a previous " See also:fault." (For the meaning of " let," " See also:rest," " striker-out " and other technical terms used in the game, see TENNIS and RACQUETS.) The serve is a fault (I) if it be not delivered by the server from the proper court, and from behind the base-line; (2) if the ball drops into the net or out-of-court, or into any See also:part of the court other than the proper service-court. The striker-out cannot, as in racquets, " take," and thereby condone, a fault. When a fault has been served, the server must serve again from the same court, unless it was a fault because served from the wrong court, in which See also:case the server crosses to the proper court before serving again. Two consecutive faults See also:score a point against the side of the server. Lawn-tennis differs from tennis and racquets in that the service may not be taken on the volley by striker-out. After the serve has been returned the play proceeds until the " rest " (or " rally ") ends by one side or the other failing to make a " good return "; a good return in lawn-tennis meaning a stroke by which the ball, having been See also:hit with the racquet before its second See also:bound, is sent over the net, even if it touches the net, so as to fall within the limits of the court on the opposite side. A point is scored by the player, or side, whose opponent fails to return the serve or to make a good return in the rest. A player also loses a point if the ball when in play touches him or his partner, or their clothes; or if he or his racquet touches the net or any of its supports while the ball is in play; or if he leaps over the net to avoid touching it; or if he volley the ball before it has passed the net. For him who would excel in lawn-tennis a strong fast service is hardly less necessary than a heavily " cut " service to the tennis player and the racquet player. High overhand service, by which alone any See also:great See also:pace can be obtained, was first perfected by the See also:brothers Renshaw between 188o and 189o, and is now universal even among players far below the first See also:rank. The service in See also:vogue among the best players in See also:America, and from this circumstance known as the " See also:American service," has less pace than the See also:English but is " cut " in such a way that it swerves in the air and " drags " off the ground, the See also:advantage being that it gives the server more See also:time to " run in " after his serve, so as to volley his opponent's return from a position within a yard or two of the net. Both in singles and- doubles the best players often make it their aim to get up comparatively near the net as soon as possible, whether they are serving or receiving the serve, the See also:object being to volley the ball whenever possible before it begins to fall. The server's partner, in doubles, stands about a yard and a half from the net, and rather nearer the side-line than the half-court-line; the See also:receiver of the service, not being allowed to volley the serve, must take his stand according to the nature of the service, which, if very fast, will require him to stand outside the base-line; the receiver's partner usually stands between the net and the service-line. All four players, if the rest lasts beyond a stroke or two, are generally found nearer to the net than the service-lines; and the game, assuming the players to be of the championship class, consists chiefly of rapid See also:low volleying, varied by attempts on one side or the other to See also:place the ball out of the opponents' reach by " lobbing " it over their heads into the back part of the court. Good " lobbing " demands great skill, to avoid on the one hand sending the ball out of court beyond the base-line, and on the other allowing it to drop See also:short enough for the adversary to kill it with a " smashing " volley. Of " lobbing " it has been laid down by the brothers Doherty that " the higher it is the better, so See also:long as the length is good and as regards returning lobs the same authorities say, " you must get them if you can before they drop, for it is usually fatal to let them drop when playing against a good pair." The See also:reason for this is that if thelob be allowed to drop before being returned, so much time is given to the striker of it to gain position that he is almost certain to be able to kill the return, unless the lob be returned by an equally good and very high lob, dropping within a See also:foot or so of the base-line in the opposite court, a stroke that requires the utmost accuracy of strength to accomplish safely. The game in the hands of first-class players consists largely In manoeuvring for favourable position in the court while See also:driving the opponent into a less favourable position on his side of the net; the player who gains the advantage of position in this way being generally able to finish the rest by a smashing volley impossible to return. Ability to play this " smash " stroke is essential to strong lawn-tennis. " To be good overhead," say the Dohertys, " is the sign of a first-class player, even if a few have managed to get on without it." The smash stroke is played very much in the same way as the over-hand service, except that it is not from a defined position of known distance from the net; and therefore when making it the player must realize almost instinctively what his precise position is in relation to the net and the side-lines, for it is of the last importance that he should not take his See also:eye off the ball " even for the hundredth part of a second." By See also:drawing the racquet across the ball at the moment of impact spin may be imparted to it as in tennis, or as " side " is imparted to a billiard ball, and the direction of this spin F ----27 feet-- _- 4. -88ffeeL --- N aIS feet A and the consequent behaviour of the ball after the stroke may be greatly varied by a skilful player. Perhaps the most generally useful form of spin, though by no means the only one commonly used, is that known as " See also:top " or " lift," a See also:vertical rotatory See also:motion of the ball in the same direction as its See also:flight, which is imparted to it by an upward draw of the racquet at the moment of making the stroke, and the effect of which is to make it drop more suddenly than it would ordinarily do, and in an unexpected See also:curve. A drive made with plenty of " top " can be hit much harder than would otherwise be possible without sending the ball out of court, and it is therefore extensively employed by the best players. While the volleying game is almost universally the practice of first-class players—A. W. See also:Gore, M. J. G. See also:Ritchie and S. H. See also: See also:History.—Lawn-tennis cannot be said to have existed See also:prior to the See also:year 1874. It is, indeed, true that outdoor games based on tennis were from time to time improvised by lovers of that game who found themselves out of reach of a tennis-court. See also:Lord See also:Arthur See also:Hervey, sometime See also:bishop of See also:Bath and See also:Wells, had thus devised a game which he and his See also:friends played on the lawn of his rectory in See also:Suffolk; and even. so early as the end of the 18th See also:century " See also: Heathcote to revise 'the M.C.C. code of rules; the result of their labours being the introduction of the tennis in place. of the racquets scoring, the substitution of a rectangular for the " hour-glass " court, and the enactmentof the modern See also:rule as regards the " fault." The height of the net, which under the M.C.C. rules had been 4 ft. in the centre, was reduced to 3 ft. 3 in.; and regulations as to the See also:size and weight of the ball were also made. Some controversy had already taken place in the columns of the Field as to whether volleying the ball, at all events within a certain distance of the net, should not be prohibited. See also:Spencer Gore, the first to win the championship in 1877, used the volley with great skill and See also:judgment, and in principle anticipated the See also:tactics afterwards brought to perfection by the Renshaws, which aimed at forcing the adversary back to the base-line and killing his return with a volley from a position near the net. P. F. Hadow, champion in 1878, showed how the volley might be defeated by skilful use of the lob; but the question of placing some check on the volley continued to be agitated among lovers of the game. The rapidly growing popularity of lawn-tennis was proved in 1879 by the inauguration at See also:Oxford of the four-handed championship, and at See also:Dublin of the Irish championship, and by the fact that there were See also:forty-five competitors for the All England single championship at Wimbledon, won by J. T. See also:Hartley, a player who chiefly relied on the accuracy of his return without frequent resort to the volley. It was in the autumn of the same year, in a See also:tournament at See also:Cheltenham, that W. Renshaw made his first successful See also:appearance in public. The year 188o saw the See also:foundation of the See also:Northern Lawn-Tennis Association, whose tournaments have long been regarded as inferior in importance only to the championship meetings at Wimbledon and Dublin, and a revision of the rules which substantially made them what they have ever since remained. This year is also memorable for the first championship doubles won by the twin brothers See also: One of the greatest performances at lawn-tennis was in the championship competition in 1886 when W. Renshaw See also:beat Lawford a love set in 91 minutes. The longest rest in first-class lawn-tennis occurred in a match between Lawford and E. Lubbock in 188o, when eighty-one strokes were played. Among players in the first class who were contemporaries of the Renshaws, mention should be made of E. de S. See also: Hartley, E. W. See also:Lewis, E L. See also:Williams, H. See also: The results of the All England championships have been as follows Year. Gentlemen's Singles. 1877 S. W. Gore 1878 P. F. Hadow 1879 J. T. Hartley 188o J. T. Hartley 1881 W. Renshaw 1882 W. Renshaw 1883 W. Renshaw 1884 W. Renshaw 1885 W. Renshaw 1886 W. Renshaw 1887 H. F. Lawford 1888 E. Renshaw 1889 W. Renshaw 1890 W. J. Hamilton 1891 W. See also:Baddeley 1892 W. Baddeley 1893 J. Pim Year. Gentlemen's Doubles. 1879 L. R. See also:Erskine and H. F. Lawford 188o W. Renshaw „ E. Renshaw 1881 W. Renshaw „ E. Renshaw 1882 J. T. Hartley „ R. T. Richardson 1883 C. W. Grinstead „ C. E. Welldon 1884 W. Renshaw „ E. Renshaw 1885 W. Renshaw „ E. Renshaw 1886 W. Renshaw „ E. Renshaw 1887 P. B. See also:Lyon „ H. W. W. See also:Wilberforce 1888 W. Renshaw E. Renshaw 1889 W. Renshaw E. Renshaw 1890 J. Pim „ F. O. Stoker 1891 W. Baddeley „ H. Baddeley 1892 H. S. Barlcw „ E. W. Lewis 1893 J. Pim „ F. O. Stoker 1894 W. Baddeley „ H. Baddeley 1895 W. Baddeley „ H. Baddeley 1896 W. Baddeley „ H. Baddeley 1897 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1898 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1899 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1900 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1901 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1902 S. H. Smith F. L. Riseiey 1903 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1904 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1905 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1906 S. H. Smith „ F. L. Riseley 1907 N. E. Brookes „ A. F. Wilding 1908 M. J. G. Ritchie „ A. F. Wilding 1909 A. W. Gore „ H. Roper See also:Barrett 1910 M. J. G. Ritchie „ A. F. Wilding
Year. Ladies' Singles. 1898 Miss C. See also: See also:Sutton 1906 Miss D. K. Douglass 1907 Miss M. Sutton 1908 Mrs Sterry 1909 Miss D. Boothby 1910 Mrs See also:Lambert See also:Chambers (Miss Douglass) Year. Ladies' and Gentlemen's Doubles. Miss C. Cooper Miss C. Cooper Miss C. Cooper Miss C. Cooper Miss Robb Miss C. Cooper Miss Martin Miss Martin Miss D. K. Douglass
Miss E. W. See also:Thompson
Miss E. W. Thompson
Miss D. K. Douglass
Mrs Hillyard
Mrs Lambert Chambers (Miss D. K. Douglass)
Miss See also:Morton
Mrs Lambert Chambers
In the See also:United States lawn-tennis was played at Nahant, near See also:Boston, within a year of its invention in England, Dr See also: Sears being mainly instrumental in making it known to their countrymen. In 1881 at a meeting in New See also:York of representatives of See also:thirty-three clubs the United States See also:National Lawn-Tennis Association was formed; and the See also:adoption of the English rules put an end to the See also:absence of uniformity in the size of the ball and height of the net which had hindered the progress of the game. The association decided to hold matches for championship of the United States at See also:Newport, Rhode See also:Island; and, by a curious coincidence, in the same year in which W. Renshaw first won the English championship, R. D. Sears won the first American championship by playing a volleying game at the net which entirely disconcerted his opponents, and he successfully defended his See also:title for the next six years, winning the doubles throughout the same period in See also:partnership with Dwight. In 1887, Sears being unable to play through See also:ill-See also:health, the championship went to H. W. See also:Slocum. Other prominent players of the period were the brothers C. M. and J. S. See also:Clark, who in 1883 came to England and were decisively beaten at Wimbledon by the two Renshaws. To a later See also:generation belong the strongest single players, M. D. See also:Whitman, Holcombe See also: C. See also:Wright, the latter being one of the finest players America has produced; and these two in partnership won the doubles for three years in succession, until they were displaced by F. B. See also: D. Wrenn M. D. Whitman M. D. Whitman M. D. Whitman W. A. Larned W. A. Larned H. L. Doherty H. Ward B. C. Wright W. J. See also:Clothier W. A. Larned W. A. Larned W. A. Larned \V. A. Lamed Gentlemen's Singles. J. Pim W. Baddeley H. S. See also:Mahony R. F. Doherty R. F. Doherty R. F. Doherty R. F. Doherty A. W. Gore H. L. Doherty H. L. Doherty H. L. Doherty H. L. Doherty H. L. Doherty N. E. Brookes A. W. Gore A. W. Gore A. F. Wilding Year. 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 190I 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 Year. Ladies' Singles. 1884 Miss M. Watson 1885 Miss M. Watson 1886 Miss Bingley 1887 Miss Dod 1888 Miss Dod 1889 Mrs Hillyard (Miss Bingley) 1890 Miss See also:Rice 1891 Miss Dod 1892 Miss Dod 1893 Miss Dod 1894 Mrs Hillyard 1845 Miss C. Cooper 1896 Miss C. Cooper 1897 Mrs Hillyard Year. Ladies' and Gentlemen's Doubles. 1888 E. Renshaw and Mrs Hillyard 1889 J. C. See also:Kay 1890 J. See also:Baldwin 1891 J. C. Kay 1892 A. Dod
1893 W. Baddeley 1894 H. S. Mahony
Miss Dod
„ Miss K. See also: Mahony 1897 H. S. Mahony 1898 H. S. Mahony 1899 C. H. L. Cazelet 1900 H. L. Doherty 1901 S. H. Smith 1902 S. H. Smith 1903 F. L. Riseley 1904 S. H. Smith 1905 S. H. Smith 1906 F. L. Riseley 1907 N. E. Brookes 1908 A. F. Wilding 1909 H. Roper Barrett 1910 S. N. Doust and „ Year. Gentlemen's Singles. Year. 1881 R. D. Sears 1896 1882 R. D. Sears 1897 1883 R. D. Sears 1898 1884 R. D. Sears 1899 1885 R. D. Sears 1900 1886 R. D. Sears 1901 1887 R. D. Sears 1902 1888 H. W. Slocum 1903 1889 H. W. Slocum 1904
1890 O. S. See also: H. Hovey 1910 " Year. Gentlemen's Doubles. 1882 J. Dwight and R. D. Sears 1883 J. Dwight ,, R. D. Sears 1884 J Dwight „ R. D. Sears 1885 J. S. Clark „ R. D. Sears
1886 J. Dwight „ R. D. Sears
1887 J. Dwight „ R. D. Sears
1888 V. G. See also: S. Campbell
1889 H. W. Slocum „ H. A. See also: See also:Huntingdon 1892 O. S. Campbell „ R. P. Huntingdon 1893 C. Hobart „ F. H. Hovey 1894 C. Hobart „ F. H. Hovey 1895 R. D. Wrenn „ M. G. See also:Chase 1896 C. B. Neel „ S. R. Neel L. E. See also:Ware „ G. P. See also:Sheldon 1898 L. E. Ware „ G. P. Sheldon 1899 D. F. Davis „ H. Ward 1900 D. F. Davis „ H. Ward 1901 D. F. Davis „ H. Ward 1902 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1903 R. F. Doherty „ H. L. Doherty 1904 H. Ward B. C. Wright 1905 H. Ward „ B. C. Wright 1906 H. Ward „ B. C. Wright 1907 F. B. Alexander „ H. H. Hackett 1908 F. B. Alexander „ H. H. Hackett
1909 F. B. Alexander „ H. H Hackett
1910 F. B. Alexander „ H. H. Hackett
Year. Ladies' Singles. 1900 Miss See also:Myrtle McAteer
1890 Miss E. C. See also:Roosevelt 1901 Miss See also: See also:Moore 1891 Miss Mabel E. Cahill 1902 Miss See also:Marion Jones 1892 Miss Mabel E. Cahill 1903 MISS Elizabeth H. Moore 1893 Miss Aline M. See also:Terry 1904 Miss May Sutton 1894 Miss See also:Helen R. Helwig 1905 Miss Elizabeth H. Moore 1895 Miss J. P. See also:Atkinson 1906 Miss Helen H. Homans 1896 Miss Elizabeth H. Moore 1907 Miss See also:Evelyn Sears 1897 Miss J. P. Atkinson 1908 Mrs Barger Wallach 1898 Miss J. P. Atkinson 1909 Miss See also:Hazel Hotchkiss 1899 Miss Marion Jones 1910 Miss Hazel Hotchkiss In 1900 an See also:international See also:challenge cup was presented by the American D. F. Davis, tobe competed for in the country of the holders. In the summer of that year a See also:British team, consisting of A. W. Gore, E. D. See also:Black and H. R. Barrett, challenged for the cup but were defeated by the Americans, Whitman, Larned, Davis and Ward. In 1902 a more representative British team, the two Dohertys and Pim, were again defeated by the same representatives of the United States; but in the following year the Dohertys brought the Davis cup to England by beating Larned and the brothers Wrenn at Longwood. In 1904 the cup was played for at Wimbledon, when representatives of See also:Belgium, See also:Austria and See also:France entered, but failed to defeat the Dohertys and F. L. Riseley, who represented Great See also:Britain. In 1905 the entries included France, Austria, See also:Australasia, Belgium and the United States; in 1906 the same countries, except Belgium, competed; See also:nut in both years the British players withstood the attack. In 1907, however, when the contest was confined to England, the United States and Australasia, the latter was successful in winning the cup, which was then for the first time taken to the colonies, where it was retained in the following year when the Australians N. E. Brookes and A. F.Wilding defeated the representatives of the United States, who had previously beaten the English challengers in America. In 1909 Englandwas not represented in the competition, and the Australians again retained the cup, beating the Americans McLoughlin and Long both in singles and doubles. See " The See also:Badminton Library," Tennis: Lawn-Tennis: Racquets: See also:Fives, new and revised edition (1903) ; R. F. and H. L. Doherty, On Lawn-Tennis (1903); E. H. See also:Miles, Lessons in Lawn-Tennis (1899); E. de See also:Nanteuil, La Paume et le lawn-tennis (1898); J. Dwight, " Form in Lawn-Tennis," in Scribner's Magazine, vol. vi. ; A. See also:Wallis See also:Myers, The See also:Complete Lawn-Tennis Player (1908). (R. J. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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