Mark Fischl elected APTA President

At the annual APTA Board Meeting on Friday and Saturday, April 30 and May 1, 2004 new APTA Board Member Mark Fischl was elected APTA President succeeding John Horine.

Mark, a Long Island native was an enthusiastic promoter of the sport.

Marjorie Hodson elected APTA Executive Director

Marjorie brought a wealth of paddle experience to her new role, including: former APTA Board member, NJ Women’s League President, VP and Tournament Director and the 2001 APTA National Championships Co-Chair. In addition to her paddle background, Marjorie brought strong computer and administration skills to the job and a passion for our sport…this was more than just a job for Marjorie.

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 5, April, 2004

Mark Holtschneider on John Horine’s tenure as APTA President

Mark Holtschneider summed up Horine’s many accomplishments over 11 years of service.

In 1993, John Horine joined the APTA Board of Directors. In 1997, he became the President. This May, John’s term ends and he leaves the APTA as its longest serving President. He also leaves as one of its best.

Great progress was made during John’s tenure as President:
• The APTA’s internet site was created. The website allows members instant access to all tournaments, applications, rules, and other information, including on-line membership sign up.

• Platform Tennis News was replaced with Platform Tennis Magazine. The former newsletter was in black and white and focused primarily on tournament results. The new full-color, 32-page magazine includes tournament results, but is focused on instruction and player feature articles.

• The Professional Platform Tennis Association was created. This organization provides teacher certification and has united teaching professionals.

• The Platform Tennis Hall of Fame Foundation was created. The goal of the Foundation is to build a permanent home for platform tennis memorabilia and dedications to the members of the Hall of Fame.

• APTA membership grew from 3,500 to 8,300. Many leagues have joined the APTA and thus many players have become APTA members for the first time.

• The let rule was deleted. The NCAA plays tennis without the let rule and one day the rest of the tennis world may follow. The APTA was out front on this one.

• Numerous new national tournaments were added, including the Women’s 60+, the Men’s 70+, 75+ and 145+, the mixed masters, the husband-wife, seven new junior tournaments, and the Viking Cup.

• The APTA bylaws were amended to place term limits on directors. This amendment assured that the APTA will always have fresh ideas and energy to continue to grow the game.

• John hired two Executive Directors (Carolyn Tierney and Marjorie Hodson), got us through two deficits, moved the office, and left the APTA with a sufficient cash reserve to continue to operate normally.

In addition to being a great President, John is a great husband, father, businessman, and friend. Despite all the time he has put into the APTA, John always had time for his family and friends. John is also a great competitor and player. He has won numerous Region III tournaments and has played on championship President’s Cup teams.

The APTA will miss John and we thank him for his hard work and contributions.

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 5, April, 2004

Platform Tennis Magazine has a new look

Dollard Publishing Company (DPC), the publisher of PTM, was awarded a significant contract for publishing another magazine and this prompted DPC to seek additional publishing and design help which, in turn, lead to an update to the design of PTM.

Wayne Dollard, PTM editor, wrote in From the Editor…:

Why did we make the change now rather than at the beginning of next season? After seeing the preliminary designs, we simply couldn’t wait! My chief designer wanted to end the season on a high note and get everyone excited for next season. We agreed. We have also offered a new masthead and cover theme to kick off the new style. I hope you like it.

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 5, April, 2004

APTA President John Horine (1997-2004) bids adieu after 7 years at the helm

The following is an excerpt from John’s letter that appeared in Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 5

Dear Platform Tennis Fans,

Well, I guess this is it. My last letter “From the President” and the last of Wayne’s many calls saying “John, have you done your letter yet?”As I think back on my tenure on the Board and my sevenyear term as President, I remember all the people with whom I served and all the accomplishments we achieved. The website and the Platform Tennis Magazine are among the biggest legacies I am leaving behind. Thanks to Bill Cunningham for sharing the vision and helping design and host the early stages of the website. Thanks to David Kjeldsen and Viking for funding the site when the Board said it wasn’t worth the money. Once posted online, the Board saw the value of the web, our site and its possible benefits to our membership. We now have a sophisticated website, thanks to Pittsburgh’s Terri Gollinger, with access to almost anything one would want to know about platform tennis. [enlarge image to read complete letter]

Growing the game: Tom Dow makes the pitch for Municipal Paddle

PTM carried an article by Tom Dow on how to sell the idea of building more public courts and facilities. The article was written to provide the basis of a presentation that could be made by those wanting to expand the game in their area to potential supporters such as their local municipality, YMCA, foundation, and/or local “paddle angel.” The article was supported by various case studies of successful programs.

[please enlarge images to read the full report]

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 3, January, 2004

Junior Profiles: Scotty Safford and Ryan Hissey

The names Safford and Hissey may ring a bell for some of you because they are second and third generation paddle players out of the Philadelphia area. Scott’s parents, Tom and Leila, are accomplished players, as is Ryan’s mom, Laurie. Ryan’s uncle and grandmother are former national champs. Scotty and Ryan are following in their family’s footsteps by trying to make a name for themselves in the paddle world!

Between football, baseball and golf, it’s little wonder Scott and Ryan have any time to play paddle, but finding time and competing at a high level is something these two boys have been able to do quite well. They were the runners-up in the Junior National Championships in the 10- and-under age group last January. They also had success winning the Philadelphia Open 12s in 2001 and 2002, and in the Viking Cup lOs and 12s regional play.

Both boys follow the Phillies, Eagles and Sixers. They both say math is their favorite subject. Maybe that’s why they are so good at working out the angles and the geometry on the paddle court!

Platform Tennis News welcomes Carolyn Tierney

APTA Executive Director Carolyn Tierney retires

After eight years of great service to the APTA as Executive Director, Carolyn Tierney announced her retirement. During her tenure, Carolyn kept the organization running and was the number one goodwill ambassador. Carolyn’s retirement was effective December 31, 2003.

Marjorie Hodson, a member of the APTA Board of Directors, was to serve as the interim Executive Director until a permanent replacement was found.

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 3, January 2004

Results of National Championships and coverage of Men’s and Women’s Nationals

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“You’re gonna wanna be here!”That was the word coming out of Cleveland going into this year’s National Championship, and after the fact it’s hard to argue differently. If you weren’t there, you should have been.

After an absence of more than a decade, the Cleveland paddle world stepped up to the plate and delivered a national title tournament to remember – impeccably organized, offering a spectacular Saturday night party and oh, by the way, some unbelievable paddle.

Both the Men’s and Women’s draws delivered on the promise of tremendous play inside the cages, as well as the answer to some intriguing questions surrounding the game’s best players.

Can anyone beat David Ohlmuller and Chris Gambino? That had to be the question on the minds of many entering this year’s National Championship, as the defending champs entered the tournament having dominated the paddle scene the past two seasons. Then, when Mike Stulac [2003 finalist with Bill Anderson became a last minute scratch due toairport fog, one had to wonder if there was a team left in the draw who could unseat the East Coast tandem. Well now we have an answer, and that answer is yes.

Flip Goodspeed and Scott Mansager captured yet another national championship after a magical 3-set final that took away the breath of all that had the pleasure to watch, as well as some of the players on the court.

“I’m numb,” said Goodspeed right after the match. “I’m not sure how that [his finals victory] happened. What an unbelievable match.”

After the first set, it would not have been a stretch to say that the likelihood of another Goodspeed/Mansager championship was improbable. Gambino and
Ohlmuller, behind 20 minutes of flawless paddle, cruised through the first set, 6-1. In addition to the great play of the defending champs, however, the first set was marked by some inconsistent play by Goodspeed. A handful of loose shots was all Gambino and Ohlmuller needed to close out the first set and start off the second with all the confidence of a team that had yet to lose a set in the last two national championships.

If Goodspeed’s play had been somewhat sub-par going into the second set, however, that didn’t last long. Not only did he cease to make unforced errors, but he began to assert his will over the match with his uncanny speed and quick hands. That, and of course nearly flawless play and monster forehands by Mansager. Mansager and Goodspeed grabbed an early break in the second set and battled to make it stand up, which they did closing out the second set, 6-4, on a disputed service-line call.

If spectators were pleased with the quality of the first two sets, they were in for a real treat entering the third. Long points, mammoth ground-strokes and lightning quick hands set the tone for the set. Not wanting to see any more of Gambino’s forehand than was absolutely necessary, much of the play when Goodspeed and Mansager were at net focused on Ohlmuller’s ad-court. Ohlmuller played strong, making his opponents pay dearly at times, but Goodspeed and Mansager took over the net with a ferociousness not common to many players on the circuit, if any. Unforced errors virtually disappeared. Positioning holes would momentarily appear, only to be closed a split second later. And even rocket-like ground-strokes suddenly became fodder for pillow-soft drop shots.

“You have to play those guys like that,” Goodspeed said about his team’s net play. “Otherwise they’ll eat you alive up there.” When the third set ended, 6-3, Goodspeed and Mansager had finished off an awesome performance, and put the finishing touches on a terrific men’s draw.

Was last year’s national championship title by Mary Doten and Susie Keane a fluke? After taking last year’s championship title by storm, cruising through the draw as an unseeded dynamo, Doten and Keane entered this year’s draw eager to show that last year’s result was no one-time shot. Furthermore, unlike last year, this year’s draw contained Sue Aery and Gerri Viant, winners of eight national titles since 1990.

Returning after a one-year “retirement,” the presence of the unseeded Aery and Viant in this year’s draw presented a formidable challenge for more than just the defending champions. In fact, because of their unseeded status, the draw set up for them to meet the number one seeded team of Hilary Debbs and Patti Hogan in the quarter-finals. That turned out to be an unfortunate draw for the top seeds, as they fell to what has to be the best unseeded team ever to step inside the cages, 6-1. 6-1.

That set up a final that would see last year’s champ test their game against perhaps the best women’s team ever. Coming into the final match, each team was playing well, losing just one set throughout the deep women’s draw. The veteran team played well, but in the end Doten and Keane were too tough to handle. The defending champs won the final, 6-3, 6-4, proving once and for all that they are a team to be reckoned with in the years to come.

Off the court, this year’s nationals was a tremendous affair. Tournament Director Brian McCreary and his committee put together a well-oiled machine, that saw the entire draw run smoothly.”This was so much fun to be a part of,” McCreary said. “I’d like to do it all over again next year.”

Well that may be tough, as the tournament is booked up for the next nine years. But Cleveland certainly showed to the paddle community at large that paddle is alive and well in northeast Ohio, and that a decade away from Cleveland was a decade too long. Now the paddle world turns its attention to Pittsburgh, the site of next year’s national championship. If that tournament is anything like this year’s, it too will be an event you don’t want to miss.

Source: Platform Tennis Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 5, April, 2004