Features
Lo Espejo Escape
A tennis academy in a rough area of Santiago, Chile, has transformed its kids—along with the man who started it all
Anyone for Tennis? A CT Fall Classic
On a crisp late-October afternoon, a crew of 40 New Yorkers descended upon Old Greenwich Tennis Academy, a family-run tennis club quietly sitting on one of the best party hacks of all time: rent the whole place, bring your friends, and call it a “tennis party.”
Back on the Ranch
In 1957, John Gardiner raised the bar at a tennis resort in Carmel. There's no one left who can reach it.
Shanghai Masters Was a Mirror Held up to China
Between the brand activations and choreographed energy, it felt like modern China itself: futuristic and polished; still striving to assert its place on the world stage.
Have Padel will Travel
Padel has emerged as a more-approachable alternative to tennis, drawing in a vast customer base eager for a sport that eschews the traditional formality often associated with tennis clubs. This shift speaks to a broader opportunity in presenting a warm front door that’s wide open for newcomers; Tennis could stand to take note.
Roscoe Tanner’s Second Serve: The ’80s Bad Boy in Teeny Tacchinis
We talked with Grand Slam winner and former world no. 4 Roscoe Tanner—at one time everyone’s favorite bad boy—about his time on tour with Borg and Ashe, getting out on the Champions Tour [Jim Courier: please make it happen], and tiny shorts. His new book, Second Serve, reconciles past mistakes (and there were quite a few) with what he’s learned since.
Match Day: An Anxious Athlete’s Logbook
Wherein Randi Stern attempts her best performance as Calm Person while internally panicking that she's forgotten how to hit the ball and facing questions like “What if your partner’s on fire and you’re spinning in circles like the Roomba when it gets stuck in cords?”
Does China Care About Tennis? A lot.
Every fall, the professional tennis tours descend on China. And every fall, the same Western headlines surface: empty seats, muted atmospheres, and the inevitable question, “Does China really care about tennis?”









