Don Hyde (1926 – 1998)

Just 118 days earlier, Don had won the Men’s 70+ Nationals.

The “Hyde Cup” was anonymously gifted to the APTA in his memory.

He had been battling cancer for many years, but always found a way to bounce back after various operations to win nine Senior National titles in the 60+, 65+, and 70+ between 1988 and 1999.

He had been an outstanding athlete at Lawrenceville School and Princeton, and excelled at tennis.

He had been awarded the Bronze Star for heroism in the Battle of the Bulge in WW II.

Source: Platform Tennis News, Summer & Fall 1998

Second Annual Viking Cup, Junior/Senior Tournament

During October, local tournaments were held in six states at thirteen different clubs. The winners from each tournament—35 teams—arrived at Fox Meadow Tennis Club for the finals in November. Robin Fulton had conceived of the event and was the tournament chair.

Viking Athletics was the primary sponsor, and David Kjeldsen, CEO, spent the day at Fox Meadow supporting all the activities.

Carly Swain filed this report in the Mid-Winter edition of Platform Tennis News:

“The field was very strong on the ‘senior’ side, with many nationally ranked players in the draw, but it was the ‘juniors’ who were the stars. Twelve teams competed in the 12 and under category. The final four were Tim McAvoy/David Hissey, up against Phil/Tyler Gaffney. The final score was in favor of repeat winners, McAvoy/Hissey, 6-1, 6-1. The 15-and-under draw was the largest, with 15 teams and the “cliff-hanger” finals decided in a third set tiebreaker when Bob Considine/Anthony Nunziata prevailed over Patrick Nowlan Sr./Patrick Nowlan Jr. This match was a perfect example of both juniors staying calm and playing their best under extreme pressure. At match point, Anthony hit a winning forehand drive to clinch the title. The Nowlans were last year’s winners. The 18-and-under titIe went to Bill Saunders/Geoffrey Williams who defeated Jon/Ben Holskin, 6-2, 6-3 in the final. Geoffrey and Bill were last year’s finalists in the 15-and-under. Nick Swain, past junior national champion, and now a ‘senior’ at age 21, traveled the farthest to participate. He flew in from Oberlin, Ohio, to play with junior, Ann Louise Bigliani.”

Source: Platform Tennis News, Summer & Mid-Winter 1997

The game expands in Colorado and in Germany

Mike Dougherty reported from Colorado and Eric Stern from Gaeufelden, Germany.

Letter to Chuck Vasoll from Mike Dougherty:

“Chuck,
Things are moving forward on the paddle front out here (Colorado). I’ve placed a couple of ads for platform tennis courts, adult leagues and have a junior program January 24th at the Boulder courts. Viking is donating eight junior paddles. We hope to run 96 Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and other area youth……”

Letter from Eric Stern to Carolyn Tierney:

“Dear Carolyn:
My father, Harold Stern, has successfully installed the first two R.J. Reilly aluminum platform tennis courts in Gaeufelden, Germany. At the opening in 1996, we had some of the top U.S. players showing us how the game is being played on beginners’ and competitive levels.

George Zink did a terrific job in demonstrating this new sport. His enthusiasm infected a lot of players in our tennis club. For myself, I was always a fan of this sport ever since I played it during a visit in Sommers, N.Y. where my parents lived over a period of four years…….”

Source: Platform Tennis News, Mid-Winter 1997

Pros flock to Chicago for first Wilson Teaching Clinic

“Give us more” was the general opinion of the first platform tennis clinic conducted for teaching professionals by Wilson Sporting Goods in Chicago to kick off the 1997-98 season.

“It fits in with a lot of trends that we’re seeing in the game,” said John Embree, General Manager of Racquet Sports for Wilson, because “…..Chicago is a hotbed of the sport, as evidenced by this clinic, the annual Charities event, and this season’s National Championships being played here.”

What the 30 pros from seven states got was absolutely spotless weekend weather, expert advice on everything from drills to strategy to running programs, and the opportunity to hear two former National Champions and current teaching pros, Rich Maier and Hank Irvine, dispense a wealth of knowledge about what makes a teaching pro good.

Source: Platform Tennis News, Fall 1997

The summer edition of Platform Tennis News paid tribute to Charley as a man and as APTA President

Charley Stevens (1934 -1997)

One of paddle’s brightest lights, hardest workers and nicest guys, Charley Stevens, who had just resigned as APTA President after a three-year term, died of cancer at the age of 63.

During his term, the change in the rules to play net cord services was a controversial step, and he led the Association during an era of new competition in equipment. The Wilson Sporting Goods Corporation entering the market with new racquets, and acquired the Vitteret platform tennis ball line from the Hedstrom Corporation, and Viking Athletics, formerly A2Z Products, rose from the ashes of its purchase of the platform tennis business of the Marcraft Corporation to become a major player.

Howard Sipe remembered, “…. he used [his] strength and competitiveness to help build a strong foundation for platform. You could fault Charley for tact, but you could never fault him for passion, especially when it came to paddle. I liked that about Charley.”

Source: Platform Tennis News, Summer & Fall 1997

Platform Tennis News, Spring 1997

A historical review of the sport at its “home”

On a Sunday early in March, before a packed house of members and invited guests, the Fox Meadow Tennis Club in Scarsdale New York, affectionately known as the “Home of Platform Tennis,” presented a historical review of the sport.

Molly Ware, daughter of one of the founders of the game, Fessenden Blanchard, and her husband, John, narrated the photographic slide presentation. Also present was Do Deland, daughter of James Cogswell, also recognized as a founder of the game.

Of most interest to the Club’s members was the explanation of how the introduction of the game of platform tennis literally saved the Club from bankruptcy in 1932.

A question and answer session followed the slide presentation, with many of the Club members present adding their own recollections of the times when the game was begun and the Fox Meadow Tennis Club was the first club to have courts.

On display were many of the memorabilia of that earlier age, including the first racquets and balls, instruction books, and clothes worn when the game was born.

For those who had the opportunity to hear first hand about the creation of the sport from those who lived and breathed it from its beginnings, the afternoon was an extraordinary event that will not soon be forgotten.

Source: Platform Tennis News, Spring 1997

History of the game in Pittsburgh

Approximately 20 years after the first paddle court was installed at the Fox Meadow Club in Scarsdale, New York (November, 1931), a few newcomers to Sewickley, a suburb northwest of Pittsburgh, were planting the seeds for what was to become the first known paddle court in the Pittsburgh region.

The Ramsburgs had moved to Sewickley from New Canaan, where they had been members of the Country Club that housed one of the first few paddle courts in the country. In 1951, Chassie Ramsburg talked Henry Chalfant into allowing him to build a paddle court using the concrete base of a greenhouse that had been torn down.

Ramsburg ordered architectural plans from R.J. Reilly in Rye, New York then turned over those plans to a local contractor in Sewickley.

According to a report, the contractor used “reject pipe from the Spang Chalfant plant along with some sort of wire.” When Chassie asked for a more specific description of the kind of wire they used, he was told, “Any kind of wire we could get.”

Once the court was complete, the Ramsburgs and Chalfants played regularly on Sunday afternoons. Many other friends were swept onto the court by the popularity of the game, including Pam and Wooley Bermingham.

So enthusiastic were they that Milton Fenner, who was Edgeworth Club president at the time, claimed that if it hadn’t been for “the continual prodding, informing, and well-directed urging of the Berminghams, we wouldn’t be enjoying this foolproof remedy for the winter blahs known as platform tennis.”

A native of the birthplace of platform tennis, the Rye/Scarsdale area of New York, Wooley Bermingham saw fit to include the “1958 Standard Specifications for Paddle Tennis Courts” in his briefcase before leaving that area to move to Sewickley in the late 50’s. Through a close friend, who was vice president and racquets chairman at the time, the Berminghams engendered enough enthusiasm for the sport that the Edgeworth Club board approved plans for building a paddle court at the Club in February,1962. A second court was added by the fall of 1964 to accommodate the increasing popularity of the game.

Tournaments Begin
On April 7, 1963, Edgeworth Club held its first Women’s and Mixed Doubles Championships with Wooley Bermingham as tournament chairman. Pam Bermingham and Mary Fenner won the Ladies event, while Jan and Prill Meyer won the Mixed Doubles championship. Two years later, paddle enthusiasts were inviting friends to the first annual Sewickley Invitational Platform Tennis tournament, better known as SIPT, that occurs on the last full weekend of February and is still considered the highlight of the paddle season in the Sewickley area.

While the Berminghams were generating enthusiasm for paddle in Sewickley, Phil Osborne was creating his own melting pot in Fox Chapel. Phil and his wife, Pat, had been playing paddle at the Englewood Field Club in New Jersey before moving to Fox Chapel in 1960. “There was a time during the 30’s and 40’s,” said Phil, “when no one owned his or her own paddle.” Paddles were kept in a wooden box with balls outside the courts. Players returned their paddles and balls to the box after playing. Eventually, as players become more competent, they wanted to own their own paddles

Paddles cost $7 in those days, said Phil. And “balls were so cheap they weren’t any good,” he added. Through contacts he had established in Englewood, Phil enlisted R.J. Reilly to build two courts at Fox Chapel Racquet Club during the fall of 1964. After construction was completed, Phil made arrangements with Wooley Bermingham to set up an exhibition game whereby he and five other aspiring players from Fox Chapel could enjoy a demonstration of how to play the game. Phil continued to engender enthusiasm for paddle through his own teaching of the game. Awards that decorate his office recall how beloved he was as a teacher. One jokingly said, “Thanks for taking us from being abysmal beginners to miserable mediocrity.”

Innovations And Expansion
Affectionately dubbed “father of the aluminum court” by Dick Reilly of R.J. Reilly, Inc., Phil Osborne was singularly responsible for introducing the idea of using aluminum on the deck of a paddle court. Hesitant at first, Reilly eventually enlisted the help of two engineers from Princeton who spent a year designing and redesigning a complete aluminum court.

[Note: This account is not accurate see R.J. Reilly pioneers the aluminum court deck] ‎

Oakmont Country Club was the first to install two aluminum courts in 1971. Largely due to this innovation, in addition to his many other achievements as a player, coordinator, and administrator of paddle tennis tournaments and programs, Phil Osborne was recognized as the “APTA Honor Award Winner” in 1972.

By 1967, the beginnings of a paddle explosion began to take shape with the establishment of the Western Pennsylvania Platform Tennis Association. Founded by Wooley Bermingham, the organization served as a model for other associations which have formed since, such as the Middle Atlantic Platform Tennis Association for the eastern seaboard, and the Western Platform Association for the West coast.

The original members of WPPTA were Edgeworth Club, Allegheny Country Club, Fox Chapel Racquet Club, Fox Chapel Golf Club and Rolling Rock in Ligonier. Currently, there are 17 clubs and public parks participating in men’s and woman’s WPPTA interclub competition from September through March. There are seven divisions in the women’s league and four divisions in the men’s. An evening league, with two divisions, was added for the 1992-93 season to accommodate the increasing population of working women.

New Opportunities For Play
By the mid-70’s, platform tennis broke the barriers of being an exclusive game for country club members. Batty Weil, a sales associate with Precision Courts of Cincinnati at the time, remembers building six private courts in the early to mid-70’s, and through her employer, installed courts in North and South Parks, Upper St. Clair Township, Pennsylvania State, Indiana State University, and Chatham College of Pittsburgh. She also built the first court for an industrial firm, Beckwith Machinery in Murrysville. The court was later moved to Shadyside Academy in Fox Chapel.

In recalling the beginnings of paddle in Mt. Lebanon township, Gretchen Brown said she spent an entire year attending park commission meetings in Mt. Lebanon before the commission authorized the building of two paddle courts, which became part of a pre-existing tennis facility. By 1975, Mt. Lebanon had its first two paddle courts. By 1972, the Sewickley YMCA had built its first paddle court, largely due to the encouragement of Pam Bermingham. She offered to teach beginners and conduct clinics for anyone interested in learning how to play the game.

Under the pet name “Paddle Plus,” Pam and Jenny Scott, an accomplished player and sales associate with R.J. Reilly of New Canaan, Connecticut, at the time, took their paddles on the road to conduct beginning to advanced clinics in Birmingham and Detroit, Michigan; and Toledo and Cincinnati, Ohio. Eventually, Anne Jackson, a finalist and winner of a number of WPPTA tournaments with Pam, took Jenny’s place in teaching paddle.

Juniors On The Scene
At this point, the focus of their teaching revolved around their kids and their peers who had the time and talent to devote to improving their respective games. The results of their teaching, and David Schaff’s dedicated supervision had much to do with the Edgeworth Club hosting the first tournament for boys and girls in 1972. David was the first official referee for platform tennis in western Pennsylvania. As chairman of the junior division of WPPTA, David inspired young competitors like Diane Prine and Betty Ann Doyle of Sewickley, and many talented teams from Fox Chapel to compete in the National Junior championship at the Fox Meadow Tennis Club in Scarsdale, New York in 1974. Diane and Betty Ann surprised themselves by going all the way to the final and winning the championship. The indomitable combo of Harrison Lauer and Tom Bell from Fox Chapel won the National Boys Doubles Championships in both 1973 and 1974. Brent Baxter and Phil Osborne distinguished themselves in the senior competition by winning the National Veteran Doubles in 1976. Such achievements as these garnered the Edgeworth Club enough recognition to host the National Junior Championships in 1977. Approximately 250 boys and girls competed at clubs all over Pittsburgh. Kristen Kelhofer and Patty Koch of Fox Chapel won the junior nationals in the 15 and under category, which the latter’s Dad, Vern Koch, enjoyed watching as co-chairman of the tournament with David Schaff.

The Paddle Fever Spreads
Paddle fever reached epidemic proportions, spreading throughout the major suburbs of Pittsburgh. By 1968, Allegheny Country Club installed two wooden courts that were replaced by aluminum courts in 1984. After viewing a tape composed by R.J. Reilly, Roger Brown and Dave McCandless convinced the board of directors at St. Clair Country Club in the South Hills to approve the construction of two paddle courts in 1970. By the early to mid-70’s, other clubs followed suit, building their own courts, including Shannopin, Longue Vue, Edgewood, Churchill, Valleybrook, Peters Creek and Nemacolin Highlands in Ligonier. While Pam Bermingham and Anne Jackson were conducting paddle clinics in Sewickley, Fran Rollman of Sewickley was teaching in the South Hills, East Liverpool, Ohio, and on the newly constructed courts at Chatham College in Pittsburgh. Adopting the name “The Traveling Paddles,” Christi Hays joined Fran as a business partner in 1978. In addition to cultivating a large following of students in the Pittsburgh environs, Fran and Christi spent the first five to seven years teaching on the road in major suburbs of Maryland, Ohio, and Michigan. Time off from teaching meant time on the court for these two skilled paddle players, who achieved considerable local, regional and national recognition for themselves. In 1979-80, they were undefeated in 10 Division I matches in the Western Pennsylvania Women’s Interclub League, garnering a second consecutive Division I interclub championship in WPPTA. Fran and Christi dominated Midwestern region IV, ending the season with a No.1 ranking in the Midwest. Their most cherished “claim to fame” was in 1981-82, when they achieved the ranking of number four in the country. As former presidents and members of the WPPTA board, Fran and Christi have enlarged the arena of interclub competition to include a “B” tournament that attracted teams from Division II through IV to compete in January, and a “Spring Fling” tournament for Divisions II through IV in early March. According to Fran, this is one of the major accomplishments Pittsburgh has contributed to paddle, allowing everyone to compete within their own range of ability.

Source: Platform Tennis News, Winter 1997

Platform Tennis News covered the charity tournament hosted by Fox Meadow that supports The Children’s Village in Dobbs Ferry, NY.

Paddle makes a difference in the real world

The Children’s Village Platform Tennis Tournament was co-founded by Fox Meadow Tennis Club member Sally D. Rogers, and had been run at Fox Meadow since the early 1980s.

The beneficiary was the Sanctuary program at Children’s Village, which provides a safe haven for young people between the ages of 12-17 who felt they could not go home, or had no home to go to.

Besides food, shelter, and clothing, the program was designed to stabilize young people in crisis and help them take control of their lives.

The tournament covered a significant part of the Sanctuary’s annual operating budget.

A National Platform Tennis Center is proposed

Jack Randall, a long-time player, coach and supporter of the game had a dream: that a national platform tennis center could be developed.

His vision:

“I’m convinced people everywhere will love paddle once they have a chance to know what it is and have had a chance to play it. This cannot be done strictly through private clubs. The solution: A National Platform Tennis Center at a public facility is needed to accomplish this. A place important enough to the media to give it some exposure – especially on TV – along with an offer to come down to the center and try the game for free. We make it easy; newcomers try it ‘indoors’ and comfortably. Once they like it, they move with their friends outdoors. It seems natural to locate such a center in the heart of the area where the sport originated … a place with a large population, in a major media market and in an active area of play .. a place where players will talk about the center, tell others, and will come visit, assuring the center’s success and adding incentive to the media to cover this new sport phenomenon.”

Source: Platform Tennis News, Fall 1996 and APTA BOD May 1994 Meeting Minutes

Region V’s Jack Hogan

During his tenure as president of Region V, Hogan was a mover and shaker in growing participation in his home city of Indianapolis and throughout the Region. He saw his role as being “to develop a stronger and wider membership base and provide services to all players, at every level of the game.”

Hogan instituted creative tactics to grow the sport locally. Upon noticing that many area players were not APTA members, he incorporated APTA membership into the Indianapolis chapter membership program. The league he started in 1989 with 32 players had grown to more than 200 APTA/IPTA members by 1996. The building of several new courts at the Indianapolis Racquet Club had helped the boom in play.

Hogan noted, “Not only do we need to expose more people to the game, at the same time we must provide facilities on which they can play. All those players (especially young people) who can’t afford or decide not to join a private club need access to facilities. Inaccessibility and cost may be reasons we are losing members in the East. My goal is to make more courts available to the general public.”

Source: Platform Tennis News, Summer 1996