FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   >>  
ip_, 1909) [Illustration: Mrs. Larcombe] [Illustration: Mrs. Lamplough] [Illustration: Miss A.M. Morton] [Illustration: Miss A.N.G. Greene] I feel I owe an apology to Mrs. Luard for writing about a match in which I happened to beat her, as she is, and was then, a player altogether a class above me. No doubt it became "memorable," as I certainly never expected to win at the outset, and still less so when I was undergoing one of those ghastly "creep-ups" in the final set. It happened in 1904 at Wimbledon, on the centre court, in the semi-final of the Championship. Miss Wilson (as she then was) started well and won the first set 6/3, the second went to me at 6/4, and the third set seemed as if it would go to either of us in turn. Everything went well for me till I actually got to 5/1 and it was 15/40 on her service; then I lost two points quite easily--those winning shots are so hard to make! And at deuce we had a tremendous rally, which ended in a good side-line shot by my opponent that I couldn't get to and didn't even try. The linesman called "out," which I contradicted, and general confusion took place, the spectators joining in the fray--and it all arose through the ball being given "out" in the middle of the long rally when a train was passing, and we neither of us heard it. I never knew the explanation till after the match and was quite convinced I had "sneaked" the point, and somehow I went all to pieces, and everything went as badly as it had gone well before, till Miss Wilson crept up to 6/5. Then I made an expiring effort just in time. I dare say she was tired, for I won that game fairly easily. We had a great fight for the thirteenth, which I fortunately won, and finished the match with a love game. And no one was more surprised than I. [Signature: A.M. Morton.] MISS A.N.G. GREENE _(East of England Champion_, 1903, 1905) It is difficult to decide on the most memorable match one has ever played. Each in turn seems at the time to be the most important. One which I found very exciting at the time was against Mrs. Luard in the final for the Cup at Felixstowe. I won the first set 6/3, and led 5/1 and 40/30 in the next, when Mrs. Luard sent me a short easy ball--a certain "kill" at any other time. I sent it out. Four times after that I was within a point of the match, but could not quite pull it off, and Mrs. Luard, playing up brilliantly, not only won that set, but led 5/2 in the third. Then I
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   >>  



Top keywords:

Illustration

 

easily

 

Wilson

 

memorable

 

Morton

 
happened
 

effort

 

expiring

 

Felixstowe

 

fairly


explanation
 

brilliantly

 

passing

 

convinced

 

sneaked

 

exciting

 

playing

 
pieces
 

thirteenth

 

difficult


decide

 

Champion

 

England

 

fortunately

 

finished

 

surprised

 
GREENE
 
important
 

Signature

 
played

Wimbledon

 

centre

 

ghastly

 
undergoing
 

Championship

 

started

 

outset

 

apology

 
writing
 

Greene


Lamplough

 

Larcombe

 

expected

 

player

 

altogether

 

Everything

 
linesman
 
called
 

contradicted

 

general