FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   >>  
New York Athletic Club's Harry F. Wolf reigned alone and supreme as the amateur champion during the ensuing decade. The professionals, however, "owned" the best of the amateurs. Walter Kinsella, Robert L. Cahill, Tommy Iannicelli, Johnny Jacobs, Frank Lafforgue, Rowland Dufton, were the outstanding "play for pay" performers. And, the unquestioned king of the Squash Tennis courts was the legendary Frank Ward, who never lost a match in tournament competition. Because of the desire by the expert Squash Tennis players for more and more speed and a higher pressurized ball, a novice quickly became discouraged with his initial efforts at playing the game. For many crucial years, therefore, the game was not adopted by new players and there was no broad base of tyros. Plainly and simply the avid duffers, which every sport must have if it is to survive and retain its popularity, took up a less frustrating, easier to master sport for their exercise. World War II saw the demise of this lightning fast webbed ball because of the shortage of rubber and the game all but died. Simultaneously Squash Racquets thrived during the War. Organized play and competition were established at service bases, colleges, schools and YMCAs. A new breed of young, active Americans became enamored with Squash Racquets and the pendulum swung away from Squash Tennis. After all, what is a racquet game without an appropriate ball? The now aging professionals saw the wave of interest in Squash Racquets and climbed aboard. After the war Frank Lafforgue, of the Yale Club, attempted to renew interest in Squash Tennis by utilizing a standard Lawn Tennis ball. While it was a far easier game for the novice to learn and a marvelous form of indoor exercise for the otherwise sedentary businessman, the "old timers," remembering the Golden Age of the 1920s and 1930s, became completely disenchanted with the slow, heavy, "make shift" orb. They left their love and were contented to talk wistfully about the "good old days." Competition, though comparatively limited, continued. Some of the outstanding players who competed right after the War in a dwindling number of tourneys were eight times national champion H. Robert Reeve, Barry Ryan, Frank Hanson, Joseph Sullivan, Howard Rose, (still very active in his sixties) J. Lennox Porter, and John Powers. Norman F. Torrance, Harvard Club, Secretary of the Association in 1919-1934 and the NSTA's President up
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   >>  



Top keywords:
Squash
 
Tennis
 
Racquets
 
players
 

competition

 

novice

 

active

 

interest

 

easier

 

exercise


outstanding

 

professionals

 

Robert

 

champion

 

Lafforgue

 

businessman

 

sedentary

 
marvelous
 
indoor
 

timers


disenchanted

 

completely

 
Golden
 

remembering

 

utilizing

 

racquet

 
Americans
 

enamored

 

pendulum

 
attempted

standard

 
aboard
 

climbed

 

contented

 
sixties
 

Lennox

 

Howard

 

Hanson

 

Joseph

 

Sullivan


Porter

 
President
 
Association
 

Secretary

 

Powers

 

Norman

 

Torrance

 

Harvard

 

Competition

 
comparatively