Raaghu was and will always remain the first person with whom
I played tennis. This present year would be the time when we would have
celebrated our 20th year anniversary of playing tennis. The game of
tennis was a short lived affair and if my memory serves right, we played for
about 3-4 years. I continued with other friends for another four years into the
early years of this millennium. I loved cricket and equally I enjoyed playing
tennis, and Raaghu was equally excited about playing with me. He was my cousin
alright; my tennis mate was apt at that time.
We watched a lot of cricket and tennis together but when it
came to playing, he preferred tennis and I don’t know why. He resisted coming
to play cricket with us and was always game to play one of our versions of
Grand Slam tournaments. Soon this bug caught on with a lot of my friends and we
had to draw the ties, have a proper line umpire and what not.
There were two courts bang opposite to our respective homes;
both the court lines drawn manually by me and Raaghu. There were no different
grades of hard courts, clay was nowhere to be seen and grass? Well, let’s just
say it was meant for the cows to graze or to be adorned in the rectangular
empty plots. After having drawn the boundaries with accuracy, the space inside
those brick red lines became our playing world. We played Australian Open,
French Open, Wimbledon and US Open – all on the same surface; the tarred roads
of Bangalore and in our locality in particular.
This craze like I mentioned before caught on and attracted
my peers like ants to sugar blocks. It was an amazing piece of entertainment
and more importantly, an arena in which we felt we could play tennis with zero
investment. Mind you, traffic was alien to us at that time and so except for
few stares by pedestrians and fan gathering, the game went on regularly
uninterrupted. Flood lights in the form of bright street lights were a boon and
we played tennis under lights, just like Australian or the US Open.
There were three setters, five setters and doubles
tournament – the frenzy went on for months and a few years. It was not a
regular past time; it was seasonal which peaked with that of the professional tennis
season, namely the Grand Slams. I felt for Mary Joe Fernandez losing the French
Open to Steffi Graf in 1993 and immediately in the next tournament I can still
recall the teary eyes of Jana Novotna (Navrathna, as I used to call her) on
that Saturday evening of the Wimbledon finals. It is still etched in my memory.
One of the reasons being, we started playing tennis during that time.
When
Sergei Brugera won a five set thriller against Jim Courier in the French Open
finals, we also started to stretch our play and started playing five setters. The
triumph of Jensen brothers in the men’s doubles and with growing popularity of
our local tennis doubles game made its debut. We imitated many of the tennis
players and the serve of Pete Sampras became my style, or atleast I tried hard
to replicate. He won his first Wimbledon in that year and in the process went
on to become my favourite player. It was Jim Courier again who lost the finals
in consecutive tournaments.
I have won a Grand Slam; won many of the doubles matches and
at the same time have lost too. Raaghu had his share of victories too. And that
my dear friends, is how we consumed tennis outside of television - without
racquets, without tennis overalls and most importantly without tennis courts.
The only common equipment between the elite players and us were the use of
tennis balls, and most of it was locally made.
Wilson was the biggest brand we
aspired to have, and believe me twenty years ago if I were to be presented with
a set of Wilson tennis balls, I would have kept it safely without letting air
whistle through the vacuumed container and touch those precious tennis balls. However,
there was no shortage of seriousness and we played till the last drop of sweat
fell onto the ground. Yeah, there was no prize money, so what?
That was when I was nine years of age and I was hooked onto
tennis just like I was crazy about playing cricket. The hero of Indian tennis
back then was Leander Paes and Ramesh Krishnan. Krishnan retired few years
later while Paes has continued and recently won his 14th Grand Slam
title in doubles.
I don’t quite know what me remember this phase of our
childhood. Maybe it was a conversation I had in the morning which made me
realise how deeply I love sports and the short work I did with tennis. I have not
played a tennis match in a long time. It’s high time I played a game of tennis
on a proper court, holding a racquet with a hope of winning a game, a set and
probably a match.
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