OUTLOOK 2014 - Professional Tennis Registry
Transcription
OUTLOOK 2014 - Professional Tennis Registry
Teaching Pros USTA, PTR, USPTA collaborate on youth program Retailing The FUTURE is now for retailers Opinion WE NEED a national H.S. tennis coaches association February 2014 Volume 42 Number 2 $5.00 www.tennisindustrymag.com OUTLOOK 2014 • Racquets • Shoes • Apparel • String Award-Winning Tennis Facilities Babolat Play Pure Drive TennisIndustry FEBRUARY 2014 DEPARTMENTS p.23 4 Our Serve 7 Industry News 16 TIA news 18 Retailing Tip 20 Grassroots Game 34 Tips and Techniques p.22 52 Your Serve by Denny Schackter OUTLOOK 2014 22 Racquets: Finding What Fits The new frames are pretty much guaranteed to help your players lift their games. INDUSTRY NEWS 7 Groups combine to launch “Coach Youth Tennis” 26 Shoes: Kicking It Up! Prince, USPTA sign 7 multi-year agreement Promote programming with 8 Tennis Play Events 8 ASBA honors sports facilities 8 Head launches custommade racquets 8 Deadline nears for hosting NFTC event 9 PTR, Penn extend partnership 9 Tennis rules app available p.26 28 Apparel: Attention, Shoppers! The looks on court this year pop with eye-catching color and attention to details. p.28 STA awards $65K to wheel11 U chair programs Y-TEX string offer for USRSA 11 members FEATURES 32 Double Feature 12 Short Sets 2 TennisIndustry February 2014 30 Strings: Talking a Good Game Technology in strings continues to get better, while marketing is getting more focused. 10 People Watch 14 Americans set USTA Pro Circuit records Sensing good news afoot, tennis shoe manufacturers are offering more options for 2014. p.30 With the Outstanding Facility-of-the-Year Awards, TI and the ASBA bring you the best in tennis court construction and design. Our Serve Publishers David Bone Jeff Williams Editorial Director Peter Francesconi peter@racquettech.com Associate Editor Greg Raven Living Up To The Mission O ur Champions of Tennis issue in January brought out a number of people and organizations that are doing great things in this sport and for this business. One that I’d like to highlight is USTA Eastern, our Section of the Year. What the USTA Eastern board of directors did was, in reality, quite simple: It reaffirmed that the section’s mission is “To Promote and Develop the Growth of Tennis.” Simple, clear, direct—and, as the TIA and other industry groups know, incredibly necessary if this industry is to survive and thrive. But USTA Eastern went much further: “We take as axiomatic that an increase in USTA membership and in USTA program participation is a consequence of and not a cause of the growth of tennis. We believe it to be critical that we devote significant sectional financial and human resources to the game’s growth, without regard to any direct or immediate impact on USTA membership and programs.” Eastern put overall participation ahead of simply grubbing for more members. They want people to play this game, regardless of whether they’ve paid their dues. They realize that’s the only way this game will grow and more people of all ages can realize the benefits of the sport. USTA Eastern Executive Director Jill Fonte told me that in adopting this approach, the section is taking some risks, especially since section financial compensation is closely tied to membership and USTA-based programs. But the longer term benefit, for the section and the sport, is building the base of players. This attitude needs to spread throughout every section. The focus must be on building overall participation, and creating more frequent players. For that, the USTA at every level needs to listen more to what this industry has been trying to tell it for decades. And it needs to live up to its own mission. I’ve heard that many sections have on hand a rather large surplus of funds (in some cases, millions of dollars)—money they’ve taken in mostly from USTA national. How about these sections unlock some of that funding and put it toward overall tennis participation? Think of the good this money can do throughout the tennis economy. Right now, the USTA is undergoing a membership crisis, as paid memberships continue to fall. The talk is of freezing current membership-related section compensation for a few years to sort out this mess. Now is the perfect time for the sections to take the initiative and, like USTA Eastern, focus on growing overall participation. We throw around the mission statement of the USTA frequently, but do we really take it to heart? USTA Eastern does. Peter Francesconi, Editorial Director peter@racquettech.com 4 TennisIndustry February 2014 Design/Art Director Kristine Thom Special Projects Manager Bob Patterson Contributing Editors Robin Bateman Cynthia Cantrell Kent Oswald Cynthia Sherman Mary Helen Sprecher Tim Strawn Contributing Photographers Bob Kenas David Kenas RACQUET SPORTS INDUSTRY Corporate Offices PO Box 3392, Duluth, GA 30096 Phone: 760-536-1177 Fax: 760-536-1171 Email: TI@racquetTECH.com Website: www.racquetTECH.com Office Hours: Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Advertising Director John Hanna 770-650-1102, x.125 hanna@knowatlanta.com Apparel Advertising Cynthia Sherman 203-263-5243 cstennisindustry@earthlink.net Tennis Industry is published 10 times per year: monthly January through August and combined issues in September/October and November/ December by Tennis Industry and USRSA, PO Box 3392, Duluth, GA 30096. Periodcal postage paid at Duluth, GA and at additional mailing offices (USPS #004-354). February 2014, Volume 42, Number 2 © 2014 by USRSA and Tennis Industry. All rights reserved. Tennis Industry, TI and logo are trademarks of USRSA. Printed in the U.S.A. Phone advertising: 770-650-1102 x 125. Phone circulation and editorial: 760-536-1177. Yearly subscriptions $25 in the U.S., $40 elsewhere. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Tennis Industry, PO Box 3392, Duluth, GA 30096. TI is the official magazine of the USRSA, TIA,and ASBA. Looking for back issues of Tennis Industry/ Racquet Sports Industry? Visit the archives at our website at TennisIndustrymag.com for free digital versions back to 2004. IndustryNews Information to help you run your business Prince, USPTA Sign Multi-Year Agreement USTA, PTR, USPTA, USOC Launch ‘Coach Youth Tennis’ Curriculum W orking in collaboration, the USTA, PTR, USPTA and U.S. Olympic Committee will launch in February the educational curriculum program “Coach Youth Tennis,” to improve the quality and standards of teaching tennis to kids and enhance the long-term development of children in the sport. The program consists of a series of online courses and a hands-on workshop introducing participants to the fundamentals required for success in working with children ages 10 and under. “Elevating the quality and standards of teaching tennis to our youth will have lasting impact on our sport,” says USTA Player Development General Manager Patrick McEnroe. “‘Coach Youth Tennis’ provides tennis teachers of all levels with the tools necessary to teach the sport to children.” The curriculum serves as a pathway to professional certification through the PTR and USPTA. Beginning this year, all individuals who want to become a certified teaching professional will need to complete the “Coach Youth Tennis” curriculum, which establishes a set of standards for teachers and coaches to ensure children are taught the proper essentials of the game. “These educational resources will impact tennis teachers and coaches throughout the country, with information on how to best deliver the sport to kids, as well as on maximizing their business,” says Kurt Kamperman, the USTA’s chief executive of Community Tennis. The program consists of two stages of course work, which include six interactive online courses. The curriculum covers several topics, including appropriate methods on how to communicate, understanding characteristics of children, tennis activities suited for young children, effective ways to transition children through ability progressions, and group management. In addition, there’s a face-to-face workshop. “We are excited about the collaborative effort the USTA organized to expand 10 and Under education for tennis teachers,” says PTR CEO Dan Santorum, “and look forward to supporting the USTA’s efforts to enhance 10 and Under education that can lead to PTR certification.” “It is not too much to ask professionals who wish to become certified to take seven hours of education prior to certification that addresses our most important initiative, which is to grow our base of players starting with kids 6 to 10 years old,” says USPTA CEO John Embree. For more information, visit coachyouthtennis.com. • In September, shortly after the US Open, Prince introduced new product to key dealers at a two-day meeting in Newport, R.I. Now, the Bordentown, N.J.-based equipment manufacturer, which had declared bankruptcy in 2011 and went through an ownership change in 2012, just announced a multi-year agreement with the USPTA, in which the teaching pro organization will endorse Prince racquets, balls, strings, bags and accessories. The agreement re-introduces the two companies, which had been affiliated during the 1980s and through the early 1990s. Prince has actively been repositioning itself in the marketplace, including re-entering the ball market. USPTA CEO John Embree served as president of Prince Sports, The Americas from 2008 to 2010. “Having worked closely with [Prince Global Sports CEO] Mike Ballardie in the past, I know the commitment the company and its staff has to the tennis-teaching profession and the grassroots efforts to grow our sport,” said Embree. “Working with skilled, motivated and performance focused tennisteaching professionals is a critical factor in driving sales in this industry and Prince recognizes the significant value that an association with the USPTA brings to that equation,” said Ballardie. “A key part of our 2014 brand strategy is a focus on ensuring that all players are ‘fitted’ for the optimum equipment for their game. This partnership with the USPTA is a valued piece of that puzzle.” February 2014 TennisIndustry 7 IndustryNews Deadline Nears to Sign Up as NFTC Host Site Tennis facilities interested in becoming one of the 250 host sites for the 2014 National Family Tennis Championships have until February 1 to sign-up at familytennis.com/ sanction. Local events must be held from May through July 6. The tournament offers thousands of amateur players the opportunity to team up with a family member to earn the right to play for a national title in New York City during the 2014 US Open time period. There are no sanctioning fees for host sites, which receive a free tournament kit with everything they need to promote and run the event, including promotional posters, an NFTC banner, player premiums, finalist awards, balls, access to the NFTC online registration system; and the opportunity to earn a minimum of $612 in commissions based upon participation. “We encourage all tennis facilities to join our family and offer their families the chance to compete on a national stage,” said Kathleen Francis of the 2014 National Family Tennis Championships. "This program is a great way for facilities to excite and grow their Host a Tennis Play Event to Promote Your Programming I n celebration of World Tennis Day on March 3, the USTA and the tennis industry is expecting to host thousands of USTA Tennis Play Events. The events welcome kids and families of all skill levels to play tennis. World Tennis Day is a celebration of tennis around the world that includes professional tennis matches in New York City, Hong Kong, and London. According to the USTA, March is the No. 1 month nationally when parents begin registering their children for spring programs. By hosting a Tennis Play Event, tennis organizers—whether at facilities, parks or municipalities—have the opportunity to showcase their junior tennis programs and attract new players, and consumers, to the sport. Tennis Play Event hosts will receive a Celebration Pack that includes special giveaways for their attendees. Organizers will have access to customizable marketing materials and be featured in the searchable database on YouthTennis.com, the one-stop destination to register all year-round junior events and programs and where parents search for activities for their kids. Kids are learning to play faster than ever before through USTA’s Youth Tennis initiative, which is geared toward getting more kids to participate in tennis using modified equipment and courts tailored to a child’s size. Studies have shown that an early, positive experience in sports is vital and creates a lifelong commitment to an active lifestyle. “These events help support all of our other 10 and Under Tennis programming,” says Mike Woody of the Midland Community Tennis Center in Midland, Mich. “The reason to offer 10 and Under Tennis is to get kids playing, and these events encourage them to bring their friends from school, church groups and different youth organizations to just play. More kids become interested in tennis, and seek out ways to play through you!” To host an event, visit YouthTennis.com. • 8 TennisIndustry February 2014 customer base by offering family members and non-club members the chance to join in on the fun." Head Launches Custom-Made Racquets In December, Head introduced “Head Custom Made,” a website where players can customize a Head Graphene Speed (Pro, MP or S) or Black frame, then order it (for $400) and have it shipped to them. At custommade.head.com, players can customize the weight, length and balance of their racquet, along with choosing the stringing pattern and type of string, and the shape, size and type of grip. The frame can also be personalized with the player’s name. ASBA Honors Distinguished Sports Facilities The American Sports Builders Association (ASBA), the national organization for builders and suppliers of materials for athletic facilities, presented awards in its various categories at the organization’s annual Technical Meeting held Dec. 7-9 in San Antonio, Texas. Awards honoring construction excellence are presented for Tennis Courts, Running Tracks, Sports Fields and Track and Field Facilities. Within each category there are divisions; for example, the Tennis Court category recognizes facilities in Residential and Outdoor divisions. Additional honors are given in the “Green” competition, for award-winning athletic facilities that use the most eco-friendly design, construction and operating techniques. The Outstanding tennis projects appear on page 32 in this issue. For the complete list of winners, including the “Distinguished” facility awards, visit sportbuilders.org. Ashaway Introduces New PowerKill R-Ball String Ashaway’s new PowerKill racquetball string line feature Power Filament Technology (PFT), which the company says creates an entirely new surface element of Zyex filaments in the jacket of the string that increases durability and tension holding, and optimizes power. IndustryNews official answers provided. According to Wyatt, the app walks users through real-life on-court challenges, category by category. From “Serving & Receiving” to “Game Delays” to “Faults & Lets,” and more, users answer on-court situations, discovering how an official would rule on each challenge. Sealing the Deal With Ashaway I n December, PTR CEO Dan Santorum (left) and Ashaway Racket Strings Vice President Steve Crandall signed a deal naming Ashaway as the Official String of the PTR. Ashaway is the only U.S. manufacturer of string for squash, tennis, racquetball, and badminton. Operated by the Crandall family since 1824, Ashaway has been making racquet strings since 1949. • The new line will initially consist of two strings, PowerKill Pro, and PowerKill 17. Bright red in color, both are available in 40-foot sets and 360-foot reels. Visit ashawayusa.com. PTR, Penn Extend Ball Partnership In a new multi-year agreement, PTR has selected Penn to be its official endorsed tennis ball. The partnership builds on the more than 30-year Head endorsement with PTR, the longest lasting active sponsorship in the tennis teaching industry. Penn tennis balls, including the premium Pro Penn Marathon, will be the official balls for the PTR International Tennis Symposium and other PTR events. PTR members will receive discounts on all Penn balls, including the Pro Penn with PTR logo. Discounts will also be available on junior equipment from racquets to Red, Orange Green and foam balls, as well as on teaching tools like targets and throw-down lines. “This was an easy decision for us to make,” said Greg Mason, senior vice president of sales and marketing for Head Penn Racquet Sports. “PTR is growing and it’s a great way to send our message to the grassroots players through PTR professionals. We know the impact they have in the market as we’ve seen it first-hand on the racquet side. We couldn’t be more excited to expand our partnership.” “Pro Penn balls are the most durable balls on the market, which is a tremendous advantage for tennis teachers and coaches,” said PTR CEO Dan Santorum. Tennis Rules App Available at iTunes “I Know Tennis!” is a tennis rules app developed by recreational tennis player Barbara Wyatt of Tacoma, Wash., and available at the Apple Store for iPhone, iPad, and iTouch for 99 cents. The app is written for all players, whether experienced or just beginning in the sport. It entertains and educates through a series of questions, with the February 2014 TennisIndustry 9 IndustryNews People Watch Tennis champion Billie Jean King will be one of two openly gay athletes in the U.S. delegation for the opening and closing ceremonies at the Sochi Olympics in Russia, which begins Feb. 7. President Barack Obama chose King to represent the U.S. in what is widely seen as a message to Russia about its treatment of gays and lesbians. For the first time since 2000, the U.S. will not send a president, former president, first lady or vice president to the Games. Caroline Wozniacki 10 TennisIndustry February 2014 is back with Babolat, having signed with the company in December. The Dane played with Babolat when she reached World No. 1, but had switched to Yonex in 2011. Last spring, she started to play with a blacked-out frame. Boris Becker is the new head coach for World No. 2 Novak Djokovic. Longtime coach Marian Vajda remains a part of the Djokovic coaching team. Longtime USPTA general legal counsel Paul Waldman died in December. He served as the association’s attorney since 1974. Dunlop squash player Nick Matthew won the Hong Kong Open in December and recaptured the No. 1 ranking in the Professional Squash Association. Matthew plays with a Biomimetic Evolution 130 racquet. The U.S.’s Serena Williams and Novak Djokovic of Serbia were named the 2013 ITF World Champions in December, the fourth time for Williams and the third successive year for Djokovic. Americans Bob and Mike Bryan were named Men’s Doubles World Champions for the tenth time in 11 years, while Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci of Italy took the women’s doubles honor for the second successive year. Switzerland’s Belinda Bencic and Alexander Zverev of Germany were named ITF Junior World Champions, while the ITF Wheelchair World Champions are Aniek van Koot of Netherlands and Japan’s Shingo Kunieda. Former tennis champion Angela Buxton received the Ambassador Award from the UK’s LTA recently. In 1956, Buxton, who now runs a tennis consultancy, won the women’s doubles titles at Wimbledon and the French Championships, and also reached the Wimbledon singles final. The International Tennis Hall of Fame & Museum and the ITF have presented the 2014 Golden Achievement Award to David Jude, a longtime volunteer leader in the tennis community who served as Honorary Treasurer of the ITF for 37 years. IndustryNews Y-TEX String Offer for USRSA Members Y-TEX is offering all USRSA members wholesale prices on its sets and reels. Y-TEX is the newest brand on the market and its Quadro Twist was rated No. 1 for spin and No. 2 best string ever tested by USRSA’s playtest team and published in RSI magazine. Y-TEX was named Official String Sponsor of the 2013 Junior Orange Bowl. USRSA members are invited to e-mail ivor@ytexstrings.com, visit the website at ytexstrings.com or call 843-816-1440. BNP Paribas Showdown in NYC March 3 The 7th annual BNP Paribas Showdown will be Monday, March 3, in New York’s Madison Square Garden and will feature Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray, as well as, for the first time in its history, a unique brothers doubles match with John and Patrick McEnroe teaming up to take on Mike and Bob Bryan. The doubles match, which begins at 7 p.m., will be an eight-game pro set followed by a best-of-three sets for the singles match. The BNP Paribas Showdown is a part of “World Tennis Day,” a global tennis participation effort. The Showdown is produced by MSG Sports and StarGames. Tickets start at $50 and can be purchased at thegarden. com and at Ticketmaster outlets. For more information, visit worldtennisday.com. USTA Awards $65K to 18 Wheelchair Programs The USTA has awarded $65,000 in USTA Wheelchair Tennis Grassroots Grants to 18 wheelchair tennis programs across the country for the sixth consecutive year. Grants were awarded to local organizations that promote and develop the growth of wheelchair tennis and use the sport of tennis to build stronger, healthier communities. Since the inaugural grants in 2008, the total pool of USTA wheelchair tennis grant money has increased each year. Organizations interested in starting a wheelchair tennis program can email wheelchairinfo@usta.com. February 2014 TennisIndustry 11 IndustryNews Short Sets Hollywood talent mega-agency William Morris Endeavor Entertainment LLC bought rival talent and marketing agency IMG Worldwide for about $2.3 billion in December. The 2014 BNP Paribas World Team Cup, the ITF’s flagship wheelchair tennis team event, will be held in Alphen, Netherlands, May 26June 1 and hosted by the Dutch Tennis Federation at the Nieuwe Sloot Tennis Centre in Alphen. A total of 105 teams from 48 countries will take part. PHIT America says 150 companies have now pledged their support and are behind the national initiative to reverse America’s inactivity pandemic. For more information, visit phitamerica.org. Roger Federer and his agent, Tony Godsick, have formed their own management company, Team8. The BNP Paribas Open, held in March in Indian Wells, Calif., has renewed its TV broadcast agreement with Tennis Channel. NEC Corp. has renewed its title sponsorship with the ITF for the NEC Wheelchair Tennis Masters and will again be an Official Partner of the ITF Wheelchair Tennis Tour for 2014. The UK’s LTA has signed a five-year media rights deal with Eurosport and IMG Media that encompass LTA-run Read Tennis Industry on the World’s Digital Library Tennis Industry magazine is now available online through Scribd, the world’s digital library. This means that no matter whether you want to read TI on the web or on your mobile device, you’ll have complete access, either through your web browser or through the Scribd app on your iOS or Android smart phone or tablet. Past digital issues of Tennis Industry (and Racquet Sports Industry) are free. Simply go to TennisIndustrymag.com, click on Tennis Industry magazine archive in the top right, and find the year and month of the issue you’d like to read. The latest issue appears on Scribd the day after the printed issues go into the mail, and all issues back to 2004 are available. You can even search for keywords within issues. If you’re already a Scribd subscriber, you 12 TennisIndustry February 2014 ATP tournaments and the new WTA International event to be held in Nottingham starting in 2015. Austin, Texas, will be home to a new Mylan World TeamTennis team in 2014, with Austin resident Andy Roddick on the roster. Entrepreneur Lorne Abony purchased the Orange County franchise and will relocate the team, called the Austin Aces, for the 2014 season. Global sports and entertainment company Octagon announced it will donate $250,000 to USTA Serves, the national charitable foundation of the USTA, over the next five years. The Junior Tennis Champions Center in College Park, Md., was named USTA Mid-Atlantic Section 2013 Outstanding Member Organization of the Year. Peter Burwash International will direct the tennis programs for both The RitzCarlton, Naples and The Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, Naples. LPGA star Ryann O’Toole, USA Water Polo four-time Olympic medalist Heather Petri and USA Softball two-time Olympic gold medalist Michele Smith are celebrity ambassadors for PHIT America. The Grand Slam Tennis Club at Banksville, N.Y. has devel- can also check out a selection of USRSA books online, including “Technical Tennis,” “Biomechanical Principles of Tennis Technique,” “Tennis Training,” “Fit to Play Tennis,” and “The Winner’s Mind.” USTA Board of Directors Application Interested in serving on the USTA Board of Directors or USTA Nominating Committee? Applications for the 2015-2016 term are due Feb. 1. Visit usta. com/About-USTA/Organization/Committees/ApplicationInstructions/ Nominations Sought for TI Hall of Fame The Tennis Industry Association is accepting nominations for the Tennis Industry Hall oped a new 10 And Under Tennis program called IGNiTE, designed to “develop the entire child” through tennis. IGNiTE is the first step in Grand Slam’s Hitting Hot Junior Tennis Pathway, taught using a system founded by eight-time Grand Slam champion Ivan Lendl. The system teaches a complete understanding of how to hit all the shots, play from all positions and in all game situations, both offensively and defensively, says the club. France won its first Hopman Cup title with a 2-1 win over Poland in early January in Perth, Australia. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Alize Cornet led the French team. of Fame for 2014, which honors individuals who have made a significant impact on the sport of tennis. Nominations, which are due by June 21, can be in any of four categories: Inventors, Founders, Innovators or Contributors. The Tennis Industry Hall of Fame was created in 2008 and currently has eight inductees: Howard Head (2008), Dennis Van der Meer (2008), Alan Schwartz (2009), Billie Jean King (2010), Nick Bollettieri (2011), Howard Gill Jr. (2013), Walter Montenegro (2013) and Sheldon Westervelt (2013). Plaques of Tennis Industry Hall of Fame inductees are on permanent display at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, R.I. Criteria for nominating and a short nomination form are available at TennisIndustry.org/HOF. IndustryNews January 2014 TennisIndustry 13 IndustryNews Americans Set 2013 USTA Pro Circuit Records The 2013 season of the USTA Pro Circuit concluded in December with recordsetting results among American players. The 34th season of the USTA Pro Circuit, the largest developmental tennis circuit in the world, featured 89 events and awarded nearly $3 million in total prize money. The year included a record 35 tournaments held on clay. In conjunction with USTA Player Development, the USTA Pro Circuit continues to emphasize the importance of increased training and competition for younger players on clay, particularly at the $10,000/$25,000 level for women and $10,000/$15,000 level for men. Live streaming debuted this year for all 16 USTA Pro Circuit men’s Challengers (prize money of $50,000 and higher) at procircuit.usta.com. Ten of the 13 women’s tournaments with prize money of $50,000 or more were streamed live in 2013. Notable records included: • Bobby Reynolds now holds the record for career singles and doubles titles on the USTA Pro Circuit, with 31, surpassing Paul Goldstein. Reynolds won his first title in 2002. • Michael Russell became the oldest USTA Pro Circuit singles champion at 35 years, 6 months, and 2 days after winning the singles title in Charlottesville, Va., in November. • Former Stanford standout and 2010 NCAA champion Bradley Klahn was the 2013 USTA Pro Circuit prize money leader with $50,606 in earnings. Four of the top five men’s prize money leaders in 2013 were Americans. • Shelby Rogers was the 2013 USTA Pro Circuit women’s prize money leader, with $36,308 in earnings. • The U.S. men won more than half of the USTA Pro Circuit singles titles this year with 29. The U.S. women won the most singles titles of any country with 19. • Tornado Alicia Black was the youngest women’s singles champion of 2013 at 15 years, 4 months, and 17 days.• USRSA Announces New MRT Teymour Adham - Unionville, ON CANADA 14 TennisIndustry February 2014 ‘Future of Tennis Summit’ To Define Goals for Industry Tennis champion, Davis Cup captain and TV commentator Jim Courier will be a featured guest at the inaugural “TIA Future of Tennis Summit” March 11-12 in Indian Wells, Calif., during the BNP Paribas Open men’s and women’s pro tournament. Leaders from across the industry, as well as top executives from some of tennis’s key sponsors, will attend this two-day event, which will be held at the Renaissance Esmeralda Indian Wells Resort & Spa. The Future of Tennis Summit will help define the future landscape of tennis, chart a path to a profitable tennis marketplace, and discuss an image of tennis attractive to both recreational tennis players and tennis fans. To find out more and to register, visit futureoftennis.com. “We’re bringing together leaders and executives both inside and outside of the tennis industry to help us define pathways and strategic efforts to reaching our long-term goals, which include impacting significant growth at both the trade and consumer levels,” says TIA President Greg Mason. “As an industry, one of our main objectives is to increase the number of frequent players in the U.S. from its current 5.4 million to 10 million by the year 2020, which will add nearly $4 billion to the tennis economy.” TIA Partners with ‘Software as a Service’ Companies To help tennis providers manage and grow their businesses, the TIA is partnering with technology development companies that offer “software as a service” (SaaS). The newest partnership is with Play Your Court (PlayYourCourt.com), a mobile tennis business that helps make the sport more accessible and convenient to players. “In tennis, there are now many companies that offer business solutions, including software platforms designed for providers and facilities,” says TIA Executive Director Jolyn de Boer. “Our goal and opportunity is to research and highlight these companies and services so facilities and providers can determine which best fit their needs and hopefully save time and money in the process.” Approved TIA SaaS Business Partners will become part of the family of TIA Recommended Software and Business Solutions, and also receive membership benefits and services to help the facilities, retailers and providers using their specific product. The TIA maintains a network of thousands of facilities, retailers, and tennis businesses that can utilize SaaS products. A key component of the partnership will be the utilization of an API (application programming interface) that allows SaaS clients to select tennis information that can be published automatically on the PlayTennis.com website. For more information, contact TIA Business Manager Brian O’Donnell at (843) 473-4504 or brian@tennisindustry.org. Facility Owners, Managers to Meet in Charleston Tennis facility owners and club managers from across the country will gather April 3-4 in Charleston, S.C., for the 2014 “TIA Facility Owners and Managers Conference,” which will feature industry pioneer and popular tennis personality Cliff Drysdale as a special guest. The conference, held during the Family Circle Cup women’s tennis tournament, will also feature some of the industry’s leading experts in tennis facility operations and management, who will present sessions and highlight resources on a variety of business topics including staffing, retailing, programming, and technology. For more information and to register, visit the thetomconference.com. The goal of the Owners & Managers Conference is to provide its attendees with “takeaways” they can implement at their facilities to make them competitive and profitable in the evolving tennis marketplace. The event, held at the Charleston Marriott, will also provide attendees with a great networking opportunity and allow tennis facility owners and managers to share their experiences and best practices. “Providing this type of educational and business-enrichment opportunity for owners and managers is important to the longterm success of our industry,” says TIA Executive Director Jolyn de Boer. 16 TennisIndustry February 2014 Join the TIA . . . Increase Your Profits . . . Grow the Game . . . www.TennisIndustry.org TIA to Launch Industry Biz Directory in 2014 The TIA is in the process of developing a comprehensive guide of tennis industry businesses that will be launched on TennisIndustry.org in early 2014. The guide will serve as a business directory, allowing consumers and others within the industry to quickly and easily find tennis industry suppliers/vendors and learn more about their products and services. Visitors to the directory will be able to quickly locate tennis companies, products and services by keyword, location, and category (i.e. manufacturer) or subcategory (i.e. ball manufacturer). Opportunities will also exist for tennis industry businesses and organizations to upgrade their profile in the directory to a “premium profile,” which will allow for the import of existing web pages, including embedding video, images, and social media. These ry t s premium profiles give tennis vendors and brands the opportunity to provide more in-depth u d n I nis information on their products and services within the directory and allows for enhanced 2014 Ten irectory D s exposure in the directory’s search results and company listings. TIA members will also s e in s Bu receive enhanced exposure in the directory through custom search filters that can limit searches to “Members Only.” “We’re excited to launch this new resource to the trade,” says TIA Executive Director Jolyn de Boer. “As the go-to source of information within the industry, we are continuously looking for ways to increase the exposure for tennis. This directory will serve as a great tool for our members and other industry businesses to enhance their presence.” Stay tuned for more information regarding the directory. COMING SOON: An All-New CareersInTennis.com In the next few months, CareersInTennis.com, the industry’s largest job board, will reveal a revamped website that makes the user interface even easier. One of the key functionalities of the revamped site will be in its responsive design, so users on any type of device—smartphone, tablet, or computer—will be able to view content that is optimized for that particular device. With more than 40,000 job views annually, CareersInTennis.com helps connect those seeking careers in the industry with tennis employers. The services provided on the site, such as posting a résumé or posting open job positions, are completely free to both jobseekers and employers. Currently, there are nearly 3,000 registered jobseekers and more than 250 registered employers. “The new CareersInTennis.com will be particularly suited to helping recruit new, young talent into the industry,” says the TIA’s Ryan Melton, who manages the Careers In Tennis effort. “Our website revamp will be seamless, so current jobseekers and employers, and those wishing to join CareersInTennis.com, shouldn’t wait, but should continue to use the site and register on it.” 2014 Industry Planner Get your copy of the 2014 Tennis Industry Wall Planner. This 24x35 planner includes important industry event dates and allows space for you to include your important dates, too. Free for TIA members ($10 non-members). To order, visit TennisIndustry.org/calendar. Study Highlights Players’ Digital Device/Social Media Usage The 2013 TIA Tennis Consumer Study includes a new section that measures the social media and digital device usage trends of frequent players, who play tennis 21 or more times a year. Data tracks tennis consumers’ engagement with social media platforms, digital devices, and tennis websites, and how these various platforms and devices are being utilized by the frequent player base. “As technology and media trends continue to evolve, it’s important that we track and measure trends in media and digital device usage and their relevance to the industry’s consumer base, and the implications that has for industry businesses,” says TIA Executive Director Jolyn de Boer. “Providing timely market intelligence is a key TIA focus and this addition to the Consumer Study will help keep our members and the industry informed of the latest trends that may be impacting their businesses and strategic decisions.” The special section of this report is available now. It’s free to TIA members at the Participating Partner level, or $495 otherwise. Contact info@tennisindustry.org. Join the TIA . . . Increase Your Profits . . . Grow the Game . . . www.TennisIndustry.org February 2014 TennisIndustry 17 Retailing 127 ‘Complaining Is Not a Strategy!’ For specialty retailers, the internet isn’t happening to them, the future is happening to retailing. R ecently, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos got a lot of media attention for what he said about Amazon working on developing drones to deliver packages of 5 pounds or less to customers within 10 miles of its distribution centers. For some, this concept may be a bit far-fetched; for others, it’s an indication of innovation and progress. But something Bezos said resonated with Fred Clements, executive director of the National Bicycle Dealers Association, who wrote in his retail blog: “When asked about the disruption to traditional retailers from Amazon, Bezos was straightforward … ‘When you invent something new, if customers come to the party, it’s disruptive to the old way. The internet is disrupting every media industry … people can complain about that, but complaining is not a strategy. And Amazon is not happening to book selling; the future is happening to book selling.’” Whatever you may think of Bezos and Amazon, he is right about the impact of innovation on the “old way”— and the simple fact that “complaining is not a strategy.” The internet and online retailers aren’t happening to specialty tennis retailing…the future is happening to specialty tennis retailing. Understanding, accepting, embracing and leveraging the future is far more productive and profitable than fighting the inevitable and hoping it will go away. For instance, smartphones are omnipresent today. Ignoring or chasing away shoppers who use their smartphones as an integral part of their shopping experience is a bad idea; it will only result in unhappy shoppers who will probably speak badly about your store—and who will then shop elsewhere. As retail specialists, we’ve come to 18 TennisIndustry February 2014 the conclusion that it really doesn’t matter if shoppers are “showrooming” or “webrooming.” The best strategy for specialty tennis retailers is to welcome everyone into your store and help them shop with their hand-held devices as just a part of the process and experience. It’s about customer service, and serving the customer the way they want to be served. This goes hand-in-hand with your store having an internet presence through a website that is hand-held compatible, and your presence on selected social media. Part of your strategy is deciding if your website will be commerce-enabled or not, but a good to great website is a given in today’s consumer driven and dominated retail marketplace. The best strategy for specialty tennis retailers is to welcome everyone into your store. Here are other elements of your specialty tennis retail strategy: • Focus on people. Being “consumercentric” means serving customer in all ways, but also employing customer service naturals. You want sales associates who are hard-wired to serve and really enjoy helping shoppers find their individual tennis lifestyle solutions. Make sales associates a part of the experience your store provides, and a reason for customers to come back. • Create a comfortable, welcoming environment. This is an evolutionary process that will be constantly changing, but the bottom line is a neat, clean store that you’re always improving. You want, first, a warm and welcoming store that invites shoppers in, and second, a place where shoppers feel comfortable and want to stick around for a while, and want to come back to. This can be accomplished with any size store. • Get them playing tennis! While this might be easier for a pro shop that is part of a tennis facility, stand-alone tennis facilities can make this happen, too. For instance, get players of the same ability together and make arrangements to play at local faculties. Get active in promoting Youth Tennis and in helping get kids to play. Promote and facilitate beginner’s orientation and lessons. Getting more people to play tennis, more often, ensures your own customer base. • Choose the right vendors. Vendors need to work with you and be interested in helping grow your specialty retail brand and business. Vendor selection involves the quality and value of the product portfolio you will be able to offer your customers and the realized gross margins you will be able to consistently achieve. Select vendors that will make the best partners now and in the future. • Stringing and maintenance services. A brick-and-mortar specialty tennis retail strategy needs to not only include stringing, but also any other aspects, no matter how small they may seem, of maintaining, servicing and replacing racquets and gear. Create added value that differentiates your store from the competition. • For upcoming TIA retail webinars, and to view previous webinars, visit TennisIndustry.org/webinars. This is part of a series of retail tips presented by the Tennis Industry Association and written by the Gluskin Townley Group (www.gluskintownleygroup.com). Grassroots Game Game for All Ages A Massachusetts high school team spreads tennis’s message to the community. By Carol Feingold A s a lifelong sport with incredible benefits, tennis can be enjoyed by everyone, from preschoolers to seniors well past retirement age. In Amesbury, Mass., the members of the Amesbury High School Girls’ Tennis Team not only are well on their way to mastering the game, but they are teaching elementary school kids to enjoy it, too. They even hold a “Summer Moms Tennis Institute” open to all adults, male and female. Founded in the mid-1980s, the AHS girls’ team finished the 2013 season with team record wins. But most importantly, says Coach Brett Manoloff, the team won the Sportsmanship Award for the third year in a row. “That, to me, is a big deal,” he says. “It says these girls are top notch. They act professionally and their etiquette is excellent. It’s a great reflection on the kids in the program and how they conduct themselves.” Manoloff runs a no-cut tennis team. “Even if you’ve never picked up a racquet in your life, as long as you have the appropriate conduct and attitude, you’re on the team,” he says. “There are minimum academic requirements for all students to play sports and we keep an eye on our kids to make sure their grades are where they should be. They truly are student-athletes. They have a lot to do and they’re impressive.” Members of the AHS girls’ team run an after-school tennis program for students in grades 3 and 4 based on the USTA’s 10 and Under Tennis program. “We started it last year, and it’s been quite successful,” Manoloff says. “We had two classes with 15 kids that now at least know what tennis is and hopefully will continue to enjoy it. We plan to do it again and as demand in- 20 TennisIndustry February 2014 creases we may expand the age range.” The after-school tennis program is a fundraiser for the team. The money parents pay for their children to attend the program goes to the AHS Boosters Association and then directly to the girls’ tennis team to pay for supplies and equipment. “The big thing is to increase opportunities for the kids,” Manoloff notes. “Maybe they’ll love tennis and maybe not, but tennis is a lifelong sport. If some of these 9-year-olds enjoy it, regardless of whether or not they play for AHS, hopefully they’ll play it for the rest of their lives, and that’s healthy.” “It was great to see how much of an interest such young kids had developed after just a few fun tennis lessons,” says AHS senior Meghan Chines. “Not only was it a successful fundraiser for our team, it was a fun way to get involved with our community.” The Summer Moms Tennis Institute is another fundraiser for the team. “It started two years ago because the moms of the AHS kids wanted to learn tennis,” Manoloff says. “I said, ‘I’ll coach you and teach you,’ and at the end of the summer the moms donated money to the after-school program. It’s called ‘Summer Moms,’ but it’s open to all adults, male or female, who would like to play friendly tennis in the summer.” “I've seen people of all ages with only basic skills enjoying the game just as much as any experienced player,” says AHS senior Olivia King. “This is what the After School Enrichment program and the Summer Moms Tennis Institute are all about. Both have been extremely successful in spreading the love of tennis to children and adults.” “By teaching kids as well as adults how to play and enjoy tennis, we are also building our own knowledge on how to improve our skills,” adds AHS senior Melina Mavroforos. “I'm so glad I joined the tennis team. If I hadn’t, I would have missed out on making new friends, connecting with other players in the community, and having fun with the sport.”• OUTLOOK 2014: Racquets Finding What Fits The new racquets are pretty much guaranteed to help your players lift their games. By Kent Oswald I n terms of retail store square footage, retailers have been saying there are too many racquets for quite some time. Based on getting the perfect stick manufactured for each player, however, there can never be too many. Technology keeps improving and each player has a unique game—even if forehands look similar between hitters, for example, backhands and serves surely won’t. Susan DiBiase, marketing director for Babolat, puts it simply: “The role and experience of tennis is unique to the individual.” Each player, it seems, would best be served by a playing tool enhancing his or her strengths and covering over the weaknesses. Along with most other industries, tennis is creeping ever closer to an age of racquet customization—Head’s “Custom Made” option (which lets players select everything from length to string pattern) is only the splashiest, most recent manifestation. “[Customization] certainly seems to be something that different segments of players are interested in,” says Hunter Hines, Dunlop director of marketing and product develop- ment. “It’s become quite popular in golf clubs over the past several years, and I see it starting to trickle into tennis. There are a lot of factors that I think will be in play for determining how far it goes—cost, scale of player interest, etc., but I definitely see it being a bigger part of the future.” In that future, players will know exactly what fits their game from video breakdowns provided by teaching pros or other feedback, perhaps from racquets such as Babolat’s Play Pure Drive (above), with its built-in sensors. Instead of relying on aftermarket customizations of weight and balance, they’ll go shopping with even more information and among manufacturers with even more robust ways of matching their needs. We’re not there yet, but there continues to be leaps in applying the understanding of what players need with their racquets and, once again in 2014, the products being introduced are pretty much guaranteed to help players lift their games, with the only “disappointment” being how much they still have to practice on their own as racquets still can’t hit winners without a human connection, a future we hope we’ll never arrive at. BABOLAT babolat.com • 877-316-9435 The French company is hoping to connect players with their racquet in a more advanced manner using the information from sensors embedded within the Play Pure Drive (same 27-inch length and 100-square-inch head as the “regular” Pure Drive) that provide real-time data, including measurements of power, spin, and where the ball hit the string bed. Additionally, the information is easily sharable via the internet, suggesting new possibilities among players. Print, in-store video, television and, of course, social media marketing will support sales. For 2014, Babolat unveils a Pure Strike line. The 27-inch-long, 98-square-inch frame incorporates both square and elliptical elements into the graphite, with the racquet best paired with defenders expecting to use their opponent’s speed against them. There is a Tour version and three other options offering different string patterns, balances, weights and beam widths. They will also offer the new Pure Control line, with a heavier Tour version and a lighter version of the graphite/tungsten frames (with 98-square-inch heads and 27-inch-long bodies) for power players with long, fast strokes looking to gain extra command of their shots. Pure Strike 22 TennisIndustry February 2014 DUNLOP dunlop.com • 800-768-472 Expecting 2014 to be another year of gathering impact, Dunlop will introduce three racquets. The new F4.0 Tour, M4.0 and S4.0 Lite are all 27 inches long with 100-square-inch heads and graphite/biofiber composition. The new naming convention is designed to draw attention of the players, with “F” indicating designs that should be more appropriate for players with full or fast swings, “M” for medium/moderate swings and “S” for shorter/slower swings. Marketing and promotion efforts featuring the additions to the company’s Biomimetic line will be across all mediums and will include, of course, notice of the tour-level players who will be upgrading to the new racquets. F4.0 GAMMA gammasports.com • 800-333-0337 Gamma adds two new, all-court, carbon-composite frames to its thin-beam, aerodynamic RZR racquet line. The 27-inch RZR 100M (100-square-inch head) and less stiff RZR 98M (98-square-inch head) will replace the T Series racquets. The focus for both while in design was on achieving the right the balance to encourage maneuverability, allowing players to generate a little more head speed at the baseline and extra touch at the net. RZR HEAD head.com • 800-289-7366 Head has revised its Radical and Prestige racquet lines, adding Graphene, an extra-strong layered carbon material, to the shaft for additional stability and rebalancing the frames for improved maneuverability. Affected sticks include the heavy hitting Radical Pro (98-square-inch head; 27 inches long), Radical MP, also with a new 16/19 string pattern, (98, 27), Radical S (102, 27) and the lightweight Prestige Rev Pro (93, 27). In the Prestige line new racquets include the Prestige Pro (98, 27) with the new 16/19 string pattern, Prestige MP (98, 27), Prestige S (98, 27), Prestige PWR, (107, 27-1/3), and lightweight Radical Rev (98, 27). In addition, Head's new Custom Made program will offer customization services via the company's website for the Graphene Speed or inline Speed, which will allow players to personalize the weight, length and balance of their racquets. PACIFIC pacific.com • 800-892-5901 Prestige PWR Continuing to refine and enhance the technology it acquired from Fischer in 2009, Pacific is incorporating the next generation of basalt fibers, BX2, into its frames. The results are racquets that are slightly lighter, a bit firmer, vibrate less and generate more power than their forerunners, says the company. According to Tom Parry, global player services director, “If it is not ‘broken,’ then why fix it? The tennis court remains the same dimension, the ball is virtually the same, and so players still seek performance products that meet their own unique or specific personal requirements [and] we will continue to provide them with the same.” Among the featured models are the BX2 X Feel Pro.90 Vacuum (90-square-inch head, 27-inch length); BX2 X Feel Pro.95 (95, 27); BX2 X Force Pro (98, 27); BX2 X Force (98, 27); the lighter tour level racquet from Pacific, the BX2 X Force LT (98, 27); the BX2 X Feel Tour (100, 27); a racquet designed to complement the games of competitive women, the BX2 Finesse (102, 27); and the oversized, ultra light, extraforgiving BX2 Nexus (118, 27-3/4). BX2 XFeel Pro.90 PRINCE princetennis.com • 800-2TENNIS In re-establishing itself as a dominant force in the market, Prince is pursuing a number of different initiatives. It’s opened the Prince Innovation Center at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., as a home to Prince's new Racquet Services Team, which will handle equipment customization for high-performance juniors and tour-level players. It is also directing traffic to the microsite iamprincetennis.com for people interested in product videos, social content, technology information and help selecting a racquet. As for the racquets themselves, they feature ESP technology, which offers a high spin-generating string pattern and double-bridge vibration dampeners throughout the Premier (shorter, slower strokes), Warrior (moderate to full strokes) and Tour (longer, faster strokes) lines. Highlighted models include the 115L ESP (115-square-inch head, 27-inch length), 105 ESP (105, 27-1/4), Warrior 100 (100, 27) and lighter 100L, Tour 98 ESP (98, 27) and 100T ESP (100, 27). In addition, to reach out to all segments, particularly nostalgic boomers, Prince is focusing on racquets with a retro look and feel by leveraging the company’s history with graphite frames. Premier 115 ESP February 2014 TennisIndustry 23 OUTLOOK 2014: Racquets VOLKL volkltennis.com • 866-554-7872 Continuing to amplify the ball-striking efficiency and reduce vibration with its line of high-tech carbon nanotube frames, Volkl has upgraded the grommet system and handles in its latest models. The German company introduces Organix 1 (115-square-inch head, 27.8 inches long), Organix 3 (110, 27.8) and Organix 10 in a new mid-version (93, 27). Volkl also is highlighting the new Super Gs (racquets combining the new grommet system and a bio-sensor pin in the handle that improves feel), including the Organix 4 (105, 27.6), Organix 6 Super G (100, 27), shade heavier Organix 8 Super G (100, 27), and control-oriented Organix 9 Super G (98, 107). The junior market will receive the Super G technology in the form of the Organix 8 Super G Jr. (102, 25). Organix 4 Super G1 WILSON wilson.com • 773-714-6400 Wilson will continue to build its lines around the new Spin Effect Technology, with its tweaked frame geometry and open string pattern allowing the mains more snapback. It is technology for both World No. 1 Serena Williams, who wields her Blade (98-square-inch head, 27-inch length), and No. 2 Victoria Azarenka, who will be powering the new Wilson Juice 100S (100, 27), with its enhanced grommet system. Among the year’s promotions Wilson will be rolling out at all levels of the game will be announcements of additional changes among its top racquet endorsers. • Juice 100 24 TennisIndustry February 2014 OUTLOOK 2014: Shoes Kicking It Up! Sensing good news afoot, tennis shoe manufacturers are offering more options for 2014. I By Kent Oswald t’s a new year and time for optimism, at least in terms of the sales potential for tennis shoes. Sensing a change in consumer interest and spending, shoe manufacturers are offering more options in 2014— albeit still mostly within the stability/durability or lightweight/flexible parameters—and bumping up attempts to discover the sweetspot of fashion, function and feet (and finances). The trends of the past few seasons to make greater use of color splashes continue. Also, as with the basketball and running shoes that dominate the sports footwear market, manufacturers are increasingly telling a tennis shoe “story” with external highlighting intended to draw attention to its technological structure and features. Prices, too, seem to have settled into a range consumers find comfortable. The story is not black or white, and the clock isn’t turning back to the halcyon days of tennis shoes as the definition of fashion, but good news does look to be on the horizon. ADIDAS adidas.com • 971-234-2300 The German house is promoting the idea of technology and fashion with two new shoes in particular, the stable, durable and (naturally) stylish Stella McCartney Barricade ($125) and featherweight Adizero CC Tempaia ($120). Marketing support (in addition to being seen on the feet of Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Caroline Wozniacki) will include use of social media campaigns, particularly around the majors, and in-store promotions. Customers visiting the Adidas website can customize the cosmetics, as well as width, linings and outsole configurations. ASICS asicsamerica.com • 800-678-9435 Priding itself on finding the balance between proven consumer interest and solid bio-mechanical research, Asics expects to exceed retailer expectations it reports as already high by bolstering its line with the updated GEL-Solution Speed 2 ($130), the flagship of the Tennis Speed Collection. Created for a higher level of stability and responsiveness, the shoe will be promoted in print and with digital placements, by seeding the product with key influencers, as well as through in-store support. The SS2 will debut with distinctive color combinations, one for men and another for women; additional combos are planned for a third-quarter introduction. BABOLAT babolat.com • 877-316-9435 Tennis-only company Babolat begins the year featuring its expanded Propulse 4 line ($120). New color combinations are offered for both men and women, and while known for its low profile, grip and durability, the company is hopeful it will be able to gain more attention for the line’s flexibility that supports quick movement in all directions. Marketing support will be an aggressive mix of TV, print, sponsorship, events, in-store merchandising and continuing engagement via social media. 26 TennisIndustry February 2014 DIADORA diadora.com • 800-768-4727 Having been on the feet of such luminaries as Bjorn Borg and Gustavo Kuerten, Diadora has much to live up to. The Italian company re-launches a full shoe line (five models for men, four for women to be distributed via Dunlop) in the U.S. this year. Headlining are the performanceoriented, stylish Star K, and comfortable, durable Speed ProMe shoes. In addition to taking advantage of the brand equity created over the years, marketing will include tournament sponsorships, endorsements from top players, and aggressive dealer-incentive programs. FILA fila.com • 800-845-FILA Fila expects the new Sentinel ($100), with its four color combinations for men and three for women, to continue the positive sales trends of the last few years with its ambitious match of playability, comfort and style—the colors align with the company’s sportswear, allowing players not just shoes that play well but the opportunity for a fully coordinated look. Sales support will rely on the company’s online presence, road shows, a new tennis micro-website, and by continuing to enhance retail partnerships to create in-store awareness, events and promotions. HEAD head.com • 800-289-7366 Head’s new Sprint Pro ($130) for men and women—and a junior version ($80)—are lightweight shoes with durable outsoles, enhanced heel and midsole support, breathability and comfort. They are available in a choice of colorways and will be available for a cross-category promotion through July as $10 discount coupons will be included in cans of Pro Penn Marathon tennis balls. K-SWISS kswiss.com 800-768-4727 Taking a bit more than a page from the dominant sports footwear category, California sports company K-Swiss expands its portfolio with the Ultra Express ($110). The lightweight, flexible, cushioned and anti-microbially lined shoe is (again, inspired by running shoe design) available in neon colorings. NEW BALANCE newbalance.com • 800-253-7463 Boston-based New Balance launches its 1296 ($130) as an accompaniment to its current tennis standard-bearer, the 996 that Milos Raonic has been wearing. The new shoe will be available for both men and women in five different combinations and again incorporates the company’s vast experience with the demands of running shoes into a comfortable, durable fit for serious tennis players. PRINCE princetennis.com • 800-2TENNIS The best-selling T22 ($89) continues to serve as brand ambassador in the footwear category. New colorways will be available and the shoe will play a big role in the company’s social media outreach, as well as in promotions such as the partnership with the Bright Pink organization. Additional models, new and updated, hardcourt and clay, are planned for a rollout in time to hit the shelves prior to the summer season. WILSON wilson.com • 773-714-6400 The revamped, low-cut Rush Pro ($130) line has new colorways and more robust cushioning and durability; in its women’s version there is also additional support and stability features designed for differences with the female foot. Targeting a younger demo, the company will also be focusing marketing muscle on the lightweight, flexible and multi-hued Rush NGX ($100) series in junior sizes. • February 2014 TennisIndustry 27 OUTLOOK 2014: Apparel Attention, Shoppers! The looks on court this year pop with eye-catching color and attention to the details. H By Cynthia Sherman igh fashion, attention to detail and trim, and pops of bright colors are the signature looks of warmer weather for 2014. In the heat of summer, these pieces will keep your players mobile and comfortable on the court. TAIL tailactivewear.com • 800-876-8245 Head into the warmer months with yummy colors of papaya and navy in Tail’s Palmetto Dunes collection. Featured Rosalin skort in flippy layers of navy and papaya over white in a 13.5-inch length. It’s topped with the Frieda strappy top of moisture-wicking poly-spandex blend with plenty of support provided by a compression bra. The collection boasts an SPF treatment of 45+. ADIDAS adidas.com • 800-982-9337 Stella McCartney adds some pizzazz with a bright green Barricade seamless tank, sporting a rounded neckline and zip neck. Made of Climalite lightweight fabric, it boasts superior moisture management. The accompanying Barricade skort is an attention-grabbing, light-asair mini-pleat drop-waist piece featuring a yellow and green stripe-onwhite 1.5-inch elastic waistband. 28 TennisIndustry February 2014 BOLLE bolletenniswear.com • 301-362-0360 Bolle's winning combination of color-blocking with pink and navy makes these outfits stand out. The feminine cut of the tank with bands of navy across the middle is a combination of breathable poly/spandex. The skort features a layered hem, with contrast color peeking through the pleated top layer. The long sleeve top with thumb holes offers protection from the sun, and the pleated navy skort shows off a few flirty accent pleats to the right side. ANTIGUA antigua.com • 800-528-3133 Antigua’s bold Performance Collection shows off bright colors in a mix-and-match array of 11 pieces from T’s, to long sleeves, to match shorts which have mesh-lined pockets, spandex insets and adjustable waist cords. The polo pictured features fashion-forward chest stripe pattern on white (available in different color combinations), and each piece utilizes Antigua’s Desert Dry or Desert Dry Xtra Lite technical fabrics for optimal movement and performance. FILA fila.com 410-773-3000 Classic looks and today’s fashion trends are showcased in Fila’s reflection of the fashion runway in its quilted diamond jacquard Collezione Dress in Andean toucan green and black, sporting a scoop neck and back with piping at raglan seams and back inside bra. A comfortably sleek jersey of poly/spandex allows for freedom of movement and breathability. ELIZA AUDLEY elizaaudley.com 262-691-4770 Eliza Audley brings couture and function to the court with an invogue Paige purple Triple Loop Dress. The signature side detail emphasizes a stylishly slimming feminine silhouette and flattering curves. Three side-inset petal-like loops of white trimmed in vibrant greens and orange show off this flattering racer-back dress with built-in bra. PURE LIME purelime.com • 516-468-1722 Pure Lime shoots off sparks of color with its Zest collection. A tank in white and Brite lime pairs off with a knife-pleated 12.5-inch skort. The “Breathe-Dri” 87% polyamide 13% elastane blend allows for a soft feel in a mix of quick-drying breathability, a must for a heated match. • February 2014 TennisIndustry 29 OUTLOOK 2014: Strings Talking a Good Game Technology in strings continues to get better, while marketing is getting more focused. S By Kent Oswald trings continue to lack the name and feature recognition of racquets among the tennis-playing population. Players are, however, becoming—at least incrementally—more interested and knowledgeable regarding their choices. To drive that trend (and attempt to claim a bit more market share in the very crowded market), manufacturers are upping their advertising dollars and social media interactions in this niche. The increased focus dovetails with more discussion among television commentators about the influence and types of string the top-tier players use, as well as the Tennis Indus- try Association’s “Tennis Tune-Up” campaign to encourage players to drop into their local retailer and tune-up/restring their racquets. With discretionary spending picking up slowly in the economy at large, it seems unlikely this is the “year of string.” However, the technology is getting better, the marketing more focused, and, at least anecdotally, more players are talking about how much their game picks up for relatively few dollars spent on a good restring job. We could be just a year or maybe two from a big breakthrough in the market. In the meantime, manufacturers are shaping up their line and getting themselves in place to capture that wave. ASHAWAY ashawayusa.com • 800-556-7260 The American string manufacturer is expanding its line of PEEK hybrids in the new year. Crossfire ZX (17 gauge Kevlar +Plus Mains with MonoGut ZX Pro Crosses) is the synthetic equivalent of Andre Agassi's original hybrid on the pro tour and Crossfire ZX Tour (1.27 mm MonoGut Original co-polymer monofilament strings in the mains with 1.27 mm MonoGut ZX for the crosses) is the synthetic equivalent of the current tour hybrid Roger Federer popularized. Packaging was not available at press time. BABOLAT babolat.com • 877-316-9435 The French string pioneer unveils Origin. The monofilament string is created with the naturally sourced polyamide “Pure Combo,” for a comfortable, but powerful, feel, the company says. Available in white and 125, 130 and 135 gauges, the string is also part of a flashy multimedia campaign promoted as the “Endless Revolution,” and at events similar to last year’s Faster to the Ball Festival and the Summer of Love cross category promotion. DUNLOP dunlop.com • 800-768-472 Complementing the line that includes the well-received Silk and Black Widow strings, Dunlop rolls out its Pearl in both black and white, and in 16 and 17 gauge. Already on the racquets of some of their pros, the multifilament’s name is supposed to evoke something firm (powerful), but also luxurious (controlled). They will be reaching out to consumers via social media and television and have a promo running through the middle of February offering an $80 value mini-reel of Black Widow string (72m) free with the purchase of select Dunlop racquets. 30 TennisIndustry February 2014 GENESIS genesis-tennis.com • 888-750-1011 Riding a wave of success that has seen same-store sales of their string increase year-overyear as much as 750 percent, Genesis is releasing the co-polyester True Grit. The 10-sided, metallic blue string is created for spin and power generation and will be offered in 16 and 17 gauge. Promotion will take place at individual retailer locations and through the Facebook page with its continual audience engagement through company news, product giveaways, contests and information about retail partners. HEAD head.com • 800-289-7366 Getting a big push in stores and through social media in 2014 will be Head’s Hawk string. This monofilament, available in 16 or 17 gauge, and white or platinum, offers a string providing power, in addition to vibration dampening and an extra sense of touch, says Head. PRINCE princetennis.com • 800-2TENNIS The company will continue to promote through its various channels the initiative begun in the fall linking racquets and strings in the categories of “Premier,” “Warrior” and “Tour,” with strings further defined as featuring extra “touch,” “power,” or “control. TOURNA uniquesports.us • 800-554-3707 Promoting its line to the increasingly educated string consumer through social media, seedings and on-site promotions, Tourna launches three new strings in 2014. Big Hitter Black Zone, available in 16 and 17 gauge, is a durable, smooth, big-playing co-poly, that can also make for a nice pairing with softer strings. Quasi Gut Armor is a comfortable-playing multifilament, available in 16 and 17 gauge, whose blue spiral outside echoes the fiber wrappings within the string itself. The all-black Synthetic Gut Armor multifilament is available in 16 and 17 gauge and designed for exceptional touch. Y-TEX ytexstrings.com • 786-280-2138 As part of its growth strategy, Y-Tex ended 2013 reaching out to juniors with an Orange Bowl Sponsorship. It begins the new year launching three new products. Touch is a 16 gauge, responsive nylon multifilament in natural. Sintex is a mint, 16 gauge synthetic gut offering touch and comfort. Finally, Microfiber-X is a 16 gauge, black, gut-like string featuring both durability and control. WILSON wilson.com • 773-714-6400 New Year highlights from the Chicago sporting goods empire are two strings that are an integral part of the company’s push to dominate in any conversation about topspin. The co-poly RipSpin—available in both black and white, and 16 and 17 gauge—is coated to promote an ultralow friction surface promoting easy movement and snapback. The latest from the Luxilon series is the gold 16L gauge 4G Rough, which combines the line’s signature feel with an increased ability to maintain tension. • February 2014 TennisIndustry 31 Outstanding Facility-of-the-Year Awards Double Feature Tennis Industry and the ASBA bring you the best in tennis court construction and design. I n 2013, there were 21 tennis project winners in the Tennis Industry/American Sports Builders Association Facility-of-the-Year Awards program. Fourteen of those winning projects were multi-court outdoor facilities, about evenly split between private and public facilities. The other seven were excellent private residential courts. Each year, based on entries submitted by an ASBA member who designed or built the facility or court, the association selects outstanding tennis facilities that meet the standard of excellence in design and construction determined by the judging committee. For 2013, the panel of judges deemed 21 courts or facilities to be worthy of special recognition, but two of those winners were chosen for “Outstanding” honors: theridge Tennis Complex–Vande Poel-Heeringa Stadium •E Courts at Hope College in Holland, Mich. • Fairbanks Residence private court in Marshfield, Mass. Award plaques to the two Outstanding winners and recognition for the Distinguished winners were presented at the ASBA Technical Meeting held in December in San Antonio, Texas. For more information, visit sportsbuilders.org. Nominated by: GMB Architecture + Engineering Architect/Engineer: GMB Architecture + Engineering Specialty Contractor: Global Sports & Tennis Design Group Suppliers: Edwards/Roldri, Zurn Industries Number of Courts: 12 Completed: June 2012 Outdoor Tennis Facility-of-the-Year Award Etheridge Tennis Complex–Vande Poel-Heeringa Stadium Courts at Hope College Holland, Mich. The new Etheridge Tennis Complex at Hope College is a premier facility designed not only to maximize the ability to hold collegiate matches, but also to accommodate USTA tournaments and the tennis-playing community overall. The complex is on a narrow, tight site, between an existing stadium and wetlands that required extreme care to protect. The 12 courts are arranged six on a side, with an elevated central spine for spectators that doubles as a shelter for players and for storage. A trench drain system runs between pairs of courts, and rainwater collects into both an underground chamber system on the north end and a detention pond on the south side. The facility also includes restroom/locker rooms, player seating and spectator viewing areas. 32 TennisIndustry February 2014 Nominated by: Boston Tennis Court Construction Co. Inc. Specialty Contractor: Boston Tennis Court Construction Co. Inc. Suppliers: J.A. Cissel, LSI Lighting Surface: Nova Sports USA Completed: June 2012 Residential Tennis Facility-of-the-Year Award Fairbanks Residence Marshfield, Mass. The new tennis court at the Fairbanks residence also included drainage, retaining walls, lights and fencing. But first, the contractor had to figure out how to work in the tight site, which is surrounded by a right of way, property line, driveway and garage—and also had an 8-foot elevation change along with unsuitable subsoil. The contractor removed the bad subsoil, balanced the remaining native gravel, installed a retaining wall ranging from 1 foot to 8 feet above the perimeter grade, and installed and compacted more than 1,500 cubic yards of acceptable gravel base. The court is near the bottom of a long slope, so a French drain keeps water out. The ground surrounding the court was shaped with swales. Distinguished Tennis Facility Honors In addition to the Etheridge Tennis Complex–Vande Poel-Heeringa Stadium Courts at Hope College in Michigan and the Fairbanks residential court in Massachusetts, these 19 locations were chosen by the 2013 panel of judges for the ASBA as excellent examples of court construction, receiving Distinguished Facility-of-the-Year Awards. You’ll read more about them in upcoming issues of TI. (The nominating company is in parentheses.) • Belmont Recreational Center, Henrico County, Va. (Tennis Courts Inc.) • Boca Raton Residence, Boca Raton, Fla. (Fast-Dry Courts) • Cedarburg School District JV Complex, Cedarburg, Wis. (Fred Kolkmann Tennis & Sport Surfaces LLC) • Court Terese at Villa Terese, Bradenton, Fla. (Welch Tennis Courts Inc.) • DeBot Tennis Facility at University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point, Stevens Point, Wis. (Rettler Corp.) • European Tennis Academy Parkland Golf & Country Club, Parkland, Fla. (Welch Tennis Courts Inc.) • Executive Health & Sports Center, Manchester, N.H. (Boston Tennis Court Construction Co. Inc.) • Harrison Residence, Hobart, Wis. (Munson Inc.) • Holland Public Schools Tennis Complex, Holland, Mich. (GMB Architecture + Engineering) • Keith Residence, Cookeville, Tenn. (Baseline Sports Construction LLC) • Lake Jeanette Swim & Tennis Club, Greensboro, N.C. (Court One) • Memphis Country Club, Memphis, Tenn. (Welch Tennis Courts Inc.) • Montgomery Tennis Plex, Boyds, Md. (Bishop’s Tennis Inc.) • Oasis Tennis Center, Ave Maria, Fla. (Welch Tennis Courts Inc.) • Olympic Club Tennis Courts, San Francisco, Calif. (Vintage Contractors Inc.) • Players Club & Spa at Lely Resort, Naples, Fla. (Fast-Dry Courts) • Southwest Ranches Residence, Southwest Ranches, Fla. (Fast-Dry Courts) • Tenth Street Park, Altoona, Wis. (Fred Kolkmann Tennis & Sport Surfaces LLC) • Welch Residence, Scottsdale, Ariz. (General Acrylics Inc.) For details on the 2014 Outstanding Facility-of-the-Year Awards, contact the ASBA at 866-501-ASBA or info@sportsbuilders.org, or visit www.sportsbuilders.org. February 2014 TennisIndustry 33 Tips and Techniques Readers' Know-How in Action Specialty Tools I find it handy to include in my tool kit a couple of items that allow me to better manipulate string in tight places on the racquet while stringing. Drill a blind hole with a 2-inchdiameter hole saw in the side of your workbench. Place the butt of the racquet in the hole and the other end of the racquet against your body. Now you can hold the racquet while you turn and file the bevels. 5 sets of Dunlop Explosive 16 to: Ron Condio, Ashville, NY Preparing Grommets for Installation I found that rug hooks in relatively small sizes (I have 2.75 and 3.75 mm) are much more useful in extracting that piece of string that just doesn't want to cooperate and can't be handled by my ham-sized fingernails. The hooks are well polished and very smooth, and do not damage the string or racquet. I also keep a small knitting needle, also polished aluminum, for poking things. It is not as sharp as the awl in the kits, but much smoother and less likely to pierce my foot if dropped. Each of these items can be purchased at a local fabric or hobby store for a very low price. 5 sets of Wilson Super Spin 16 to: Dan Hannah, Gardnerville, NV Filing Pallets Did you ever try to file down the grip or handle of a racquet but had no way of holding the racquet while you were working? If you clamp it in a vise you could damage the pallet. Here is a simple solution. 34 TennisIndustry February 2014 In addition to heating grommets with a hair dryer or placing them in warm water, I have found placing the grommets in warm water with a rubber band around the two ends with the approximate curvature of the frame makes for an easier install. In the past I tried just heating them in water without the rubber band, but still struggled with some racquets. With the extra curvature, the process went very smoothly. I let the replacement grommets soak for the period of time it takes me to remove the old set. 5 sets of Babolat Revenge 16 to: Leigh C. Cherveny, Sheboygan Falls, WI racket and then use zip ties or string to tie the wound string set in the middle of the racquet face on both sides of the racquet. You can then move the string set toward the racquet handle or head and tie off opposite the previous ties if needed. The best racquet for this is an old wooden racquet or racquet with a small head size. This will minimize the size of your finished string set. Any racquet will work, however. 5 sets of Head Sonic Pro Edge 16 to: John Hempel, Tucson, AZ Checking Tension Drop All strings lose tension with time and playing hours. Special stringing techniques can decrease the rate of tension loss, but tension loss is a fact of life. The affluent string shops have instruments to measure string-bed stiffness, which is associated with tension, but these instruments can cost several thousand dollars. I have a technique that allows anyone to determine tension loss at home. Have a racquet strung, take a medium-length screwdriver with a round handle and tap the handle against the Rewinding String Rewinding string into full or half sets, especially stiff polyester strings, after they have been removed from a reel can be difficult and exasperating. This is a particularly good tip for those who trade string sets cut from reels. Simply wrap the string around the widest part of the face of a tennis strings, then record the sound of the vibrations. Now, on a piano or keyboard, play the sound back for comparison. When the sound drops by four whole notes, it is time for another string job. 5 sets of Luxilon Savage White 127 to: Dr. Carl Love, Albany, OR —Greg Raven • Tips and Techniques submitted since 1992 by USRSA members and appearing in this column have all been gathered into a searchable database on www. racquettech.com, the official member only website of the USRSA. Submit tips to: Greg Raven, USRSA, PO Box 3392, Duluth, GA 30096 or email greg @racquettech.com. Your Serve TennisIndustry Influence Peddlers This industry needs to embrace an organized, national group of high school tennis coaches. By Denny Schackter I n my long career in this industry, I had the privilege of coaching high school tennis when I was at the University of Wisconsin. Later, I became the college coach at Wisconsin and in the mid-1970s was part of a team of coaches that helped organize the Wisconsin High School Tennis Coaches Association, which is still going strong. Then, as the area rep for Wilson, I tried to embrace high school coaches by supporting their activities. I felt then, and still feel, high school tennis coaches are vitally important when it comes to starting students on a solid tennis pathway. Currently, as a volunteer member of the USTA’s national Tennis on Campus Committee, I see firsthand how our commitment to promoting tennis on college campuses is helping to bring more young professionals into this industry. While TOC students are a great breeding ground for industry leaders, we have an even larger base out there that can help move this industry forward—high school tennis players—and the key to this group is the large number of high school tennis coaches in the U.S. As an industry, we need to embrace high school coaches better. The USTA realizes the influence high school and middle school coaches have on creating more players, which is why the association has long been pushing school coaches to run no-cut teams. According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, in the 2011-2012 school year, there were 11,253 high schools providing tennis as an interscholastic sport, with about 340,600 students participating. I would guess there were probably 11,000 men and women coaching these teams. These coaches can be a great influence in the 52 TennisIndustry February 2014 lives of these young players. But not only that, these coaches can influence this industry in a big way, too, since their players need court time, balls, racquets, strings, shoes, apparel and accessories. High school tennis coaches are organized in some states, but not all, with annual meetings and clinics for coaches that promote, monitor and improve the high school tennis experience for student-athletes. What we need in this industry is a viable national organization of high school tennis coaches that can be embraced by the Tennis Industry Association—and therefore by this industry as a whole. Why should high school tennis coaches organize into their own nationwide trade group? Collectively, their influence would be vast—it would permeate virtually every aspect of this business and influence future generations of players. For instance: • Many high school coaches are lifelong mentors to their students and can steer them to give back to the game. They can, and should, be a huge factor in helping bring young people into the tennis industry and building for this sport’s future. • High school coaches are tennis advocates with a common goal, and they span the whole nation. • Their influence covers tennis players in season, in the classroom and out of season. Often, they can influence high school athletes in other sports to play tennis. • High school tennis coaches often are the pulse of tennis in a community. Many are part- or full-time tennis teachers at local facilities. Many are USTA volunteers or league officials. Many simply are the driving force for tennis in a community. • Their experience and leadership with all aspects of tennis, including building and maintaining courts and facilities, influences and drives the tennis infrastructure. • They can influence their players’ equipment purchases, including how often players need to “tune up” or restring their racquets. Yes, both the PTR and USPTA have certification programs for high school coaches, as does the USTA. But coaches themselves need to take the bull by the horns and realize the positive influence they can have collectively. And the TIA needs to get involved—realizing how important this group is to the future of the sport. We’re all concerned about the aging of tennis teachers in this country—but think about the fresh, young teaching talent we could have if we had a mechanism, through a high school coaches association, to influence passionate high school players to join the ranks of our professional tennis teaching groups. If tennis is going to grow—and grow with a solid “tennis teacher” foundation—all facets of the “influencers” should be involved in the overall trade group that governs the business of tennis. • Denny Schackter resides in Palatine, IL, where he is the owner of Tennis Priorities, a firm whose focus is recruiting young people into tennis teaching. Check out his website www. tennispriorities.com or email him at chibadger@aol.com. We welcome your opinions. Please email comments to TI@racquetTECH.com.