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	<title>TennisGrandstand &#187; George Bush</title>
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		<title>Roger Federer: Setting Records Around The World</title>
		<link>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/4332</link>
		<comments>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/4332#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2009 16:09:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Randy Walker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roger Federer Excerpts - Rene Stauffer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andy Roddick]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Gaston Gaudio]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Tennis fans have been very amused at the new NetJets television advertisement featured Roger Federer pulled a luggage rack full of all of his Grand Slam tournament trophies to his private jet.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tennis fans have been very amused at the new NetJets  television advertisement featured Roger Federer pulled a luggage rack full of  all of his Grand Slam tournament trophies to his private jet. Federer indeed  leads a jet-set lifestyle that really began to take shape in 2004 – the first  year that he won the US Open. The following chapter from the Federer biography  THE ROGER FEDERER STORY: QUEST FOR PERFECTION by Rene Stauffer ($24.95, New  Chapter Press, <a href="http://www.rogerfedererbook.com/" target="_blank">www.RogerFedererBook.com</a>) –  entitled “Setting Records Around The World” – documents a bit of the high-life  of Federer and the tail end of his 2004 season.</p>
<p>Following his  triumph at the US Open, Roger Federer and his girlfriend Mirka Vavrinec  experienced four very exciting and diverse weeks. Arthur Cohn, an Academy  Award-winning producer and, like Federer, a native of Basel, invited his friend to celebrate his US Open victory  with him in Los  Angeles. Roger and Mirka got their first introduction to  Hollywood’s  glamorous world. They took up residence in a luxury suite in Beverly Hills, went  shopping on Rodeo  Drive, visited attractions such as the Walk of Fame  and met film greats such as Kirk Douglas and Danny de Vito. In between it all,  Federer treated his body to hours of relaxation in the spa. Another highlight of  this trip was an excur­sion in a private jet to Las Vegas to take in magician David  Copperfield’s show at the Hotel Bellagio. Following the show, Federer met with  Copperfield—a meeting of two magicians, one could  say.</p>
<p>The jet-set life  continued smoothly. Federer then jetted across the Pacific Ocean and the  International Date Line and made a stop-over in Hong  Kong, where he conducted a media day for the Asian press. The next  stop was Bangkok  and the Thailand Open. Traveling in a minivan from the tour­nament facilities to  his hotel through the humid, rain-soaked metropolis, Federer explained that he  enjoyed moving about in the world of the beautiful, the rich and the famous. “I  wouldn’t be doing this if I didn’t want to,” he said. “I find getting to know  show business exciting. I used to have trouble with the world of red carpets and  formal dinners but now I’m having fun. It’s also not difficult for me to talk to  other people. There’s always something to say.”</p>
<p>He particularly enjoyed  Asia’s hospitality and the enthusiasm of the  peo­ple—he was also enamored with Asian cuisine. In contrast to the other  players at the event, Federer stayed at the Oriental Hotel on the Chao Phraya River, a traditional,  colonial-styled structure and the best hotel in the city. Federer, in the  meantime, made the conscious decision to avoid the official tournament hotels.  He noticed that he could settle down quicker and relax better when he stayed  away from the tournament crowd. Hotel rooms were havens where he could  recuperate and escape—and he was willing to pay extra dollar for this extra  luxury, but as the king of the tennis world, he was still often offered special  rates to stay in the best suites in the best hotels. In Paris, it may have been the noble Hotel du Crillon, or the  seven star Burj al Arab in Dubai, or the  Peninsula in New  York.</p>
<p>Federer’s trip  to Bangkok ended in success—he won the Thailand Open with a 6-4, 6-0 win over  Andy Roddick in a sold-out final in front of 10,000-plus spectators. It was his  12th  consecutive  victory in a tournament final, tying the all-time record set by Björn Borg and  John McEnroe. He received the “Trophy of the King” at the award ceremony from  Princess Ubolratana Rajakanya and expressed his gratitude in the country’s  customary way, mak­ing a slight bow with hands folded over his chest. “I was  surprised at how attractive the Princess was. She looked 35,” he said later  after a long walk through many hallways accompanied by five bodyguards while  retiring to his plain and windowless single dressing room. “She’s supposed to be  55!”</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><img title="Roger Federer and his wife" src="http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/roger_federer_with_girlfriend.JPG" alt="Roger Federer and his wife" width="300" height="400" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Roger Federer and his wife</p></div>
<p>His “jet-set”  world tour was now in its sixth week but he did not return di­rectly home after  Bangkok. For the  third time during the 2004 calendar year, Federer went to Dubai. What nobody knew  was that the Australian coach Tony Roche was also in Dubai, on assignment to  spend a few days of training with Federer in the initial stages of what later  became their fascinating player-coach relationship.</p>
<p>By early October, Federer already  won ten titles in the 2004 season. His match record stood at 69-6 and there were  still four tournaments remaining on his schedule. Two more important ATP records  were within reach—most victories in a season (86) and most tournament titles in  a season (12), both set in 1995 by the left-handed Austrian clay courter Thomas  Muster. But then, the unexpected happened. Federer withdrew from the event in  Madrid because  he didn’t feel sufficiently rested after his world tour. He preferred to  concentrate his energies on winning the event that was as high on his wish-list  as the French Open—the Swiss Indoors. At the tournament’s Monday  opening  presentation in Basel’s town hall, Federer was in a fine mood,  upbeat and told all the assembled media how well prepared he was for the week.  However, just a few hours later, he was overtaken during a practice session by  what must have been the curse of Basel—he suddenly felt an unusual pain in his  left thigh. The pain persisted during his practice session on Tuesday. He  hastily underwent a magnetic resonance imaging examination, which re­vealed a  muscle fiber rupture—an injury common for tennis  players.</p>
<p>Instead of his  long-desired triumph in his hometown, the Swiss Indoors brought him some of the  bitterest hours of his career. He showed up at the St. Jakobshalle Tuesday evening—when he was scheduled to  make his tourna­ment start—wearing street clothes. He withdrew from the  tournament and explained to the media and the public what happened. “I never  imagined that it would turn out like this,” he said. “I had made perfect  preparations and had a good chance at winning the tournament.”</p>
<p>Federer  recovered just in time to travel to Houston in his attempt to de­fend his title at  the Tennis Masters Cup. However, the second year at the Westside Tennis Club was  completely different than the previous year. Jim McIngvale—“Mattress Mack”—took  last year’s criticisms by Federer and his fellow players to heart and  significantly improved the conditions of the tour­nament. Each of the eight  participants now had their own dressing room. The differences between Federer  and McIngvale were resolved and the tourna­ment promoter and his wife warmly  welcomed the world’s No. 1 player and congratulated him graciously for his  impressive 2004 season. Federer finally felt welcome and appreciated in  Texas.  McIngvale even facilitated for Federer a lunch with former American President  George Bush Sr., a self-confessed tennis fan, and his wife Barbara, both  residents of Houston. However, there was something that  McIngvale could not facilitate with his influence and his deep pocketbook—good  weather. Most of the week featured rainy and windy weather, spreading gloom  among fans, players and officials and causing long and persistent match  delays.</p>
<p>At least Federer was fully  recovered from his thigh injury. Six weeks went by since his last tournament  competition in Bangkok, but surprisingly, he had little  trouble immediately finding his rhythm. Federer negotiated round-robin wins over  Gaston Gaudio, Lleyton Hewitt and Carlos Moya to reach the semifinals,  where he faced Marat Safin, who was now tutored by Federer’s old coach Peter  Lundgren.</p>
<p>The  Federer-Safin semifinal was highlighted by the second-set tie-break that lasted  27 minutes and ended 20-18 in Federer’s favor. The 38 points matched the record  for the longest tie-break in tennis history—equaling the amount of points Björn  Borg and Premjit Lall played at Wimbledon in  1973 and that Goran Ivanisevic and Daniel Nestor played at the 1993 US Open.  “Too bad we didn’t break the record,” Federer joked. “We should have made an  arrangement to do this.” Federer was in a good mood because even though he blew  seven match points, he also fought off six set points and won the match 6-3, 7-6  (18). Interestingly enough, television replays showed that Federer actually won  the match on his third match point when leading 10-9, when the TV replay showed  Federer was the victim of a bad line call. “I even saw the mark Safin’s shot  made and it was out,” he stated. Almost any other player would have frantically  protested such an injustice, especially at such a critical point in the match.  Federer, however, reacted as if nothing had hap­pened, even though he would have  won the match on Safin’s mistake. He remained entrenched in the dog fight and  said he intentionally convinced himself that Safin’s stroke probably landed in.  “I would have gone nuts oth­erwise,” he said.</p>
<p>In the other  semifinal, Roddick’s game buckled against Hewitt as the American lost the last  20 points of the match, losing 6-3, 6-2. Some cynics actually offered that  Roddick may have welcomed defeat to avoid a fourth final-round loss to Federer  for the year. Instead, it was now Federer against Hewitt for the sixth time on  the season, and for the sixth time, Federer emerged the winner. The 6-3, 6-2 win  gave Federer his 13th  consecutive  vic­tory in a tournament final, breaking the record he previously shared with  McEnroe and Borg for most consecutive victories in tournament  finals.</p>
<p>As Federer toasted with  Champagne in  the player’s lounge after his post-match interview with the press, he seemed  like anybody who had just ended a normal work week. But on this day, a dream  year came to a close. Federer won 11 titles, three Grand Slam tournaments as  well as the Tennis Masters Cup. His won-loss record for the year stood at 74-6,  marking the best winning per­centage since John McEnroe went 82-3 in 1984. His  reward was lavish. Just in this week—like  the year before in Houston—he set a personal record in prize money  winning $1.52 million and raised his season earnings to  $6,357,547.</p>
<p>Since his  devastating loss to Berdych at the Olympic Games, Federer went undefeated for  the remainder of the year. He was now the champion of four Grand Slam  tournaments and finished the year as the No. 1 player in the world. Federer  still had one more wish before he and Mirka jetted off to the Maldive Islands  for some rest and relaxation—“I would like to make time stand still and just  enjoy this moment.” But nobody, of course, could fulfill this  wish.</p>
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		<title>U.S. Presidents and Connections To Tennis</title>
		<link>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/2208</link>
		<comments>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/2208#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 14:17:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Randy Walker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randy "Sky" Walker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andre Agassi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arthur Ashe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Clinton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Johnston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Larned]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Tilden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bjorn Borg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Kelleher]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bud Collins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Calvin Coolidge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chuck McKinley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Davis Cup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dennis Ralston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dick Williams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Don Budge]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Dwight Eisenhouwer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ed Turville]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elle Roosevelt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fabrice Santoro]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[George Bush]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gerald Ford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gottfried von Cramm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grace Roosevelt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harry Truman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Herbert Hoover]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Blake]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[John McEnroe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Newcombe]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Lyndon Johnson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Manliffe Goodbody]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[On This Day In Tennis History]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Richard Nixon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Wrenn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ronald Reagan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rough Riders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Secretary of War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Senator Barack Obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Senator John McCain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teddy Roosevelt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Todd Martin]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[As the Presidential campaign winds down in the United States, it is interesting to speculate whether Senator Barack Obama or Senator John McCain will be a "friend of tennis" in the Oval Office. Tennis players with high incomes may be partial to John McCain for tax purposes, while Barack Obama seems to be more engaged in the sport.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As the Presidential  campaign winds down in the United States, it is interesting to  speculate whether Senator Barack Obama or Senator John McCain will be a &#8220;friend  of tennis&#8221; in the Oval Office. Tennis players with high incomes may be partial  to John McCain for tax purposes, while Barack Obama seems to be more engaged in  the sport. Obama played tennis while growing up in Hawaii and follows the sport,  as witnessed by a friend of mine who works in political circles who, back 2007,  spoke with Obama, who gushed over watching the US Open on television the  previous night &#8211; in particular James Blake&#8217;s five-set win over Fabrice Santoro  (Blake&#8217;s first career five-set victory). As a working member of the tennis  industry, author of the new book <em>On This Day  In Tennis History</em> ($19.95, New Chapter Press, <a href="http://www.tennistomes.com/">www.tennistomes.com</a>) and as the great,  great, great nephew of James K. Polk, the 11<sup>th</sup> President of the  United States, I have a great  interest in tennis and in U.S. Presidential  history.</p>
<p>Who was the most tennis  friendly President? Teddy Roosevelt might warrant consideration as he was the  man responsible for creating the White House tennis court in 1902. Tennis was  part of his exercise regimen and had a group of Washingtonians who comprised of  what was called his &#8220;tennis cabinet&#8221; &#8211; a group of players with whom he would  talk policy between serves and forehands. Roosevelt may have been inspired in  his tennis pursuits by  two of the greatest American players of the time &#8211; Bill Larned and Robert Wrenn  &#8211; who were members of his famed &#8220;Rough Riders&#8221; that fought under his command in  the Spanish-American War in Cuba in 1898. Roosevelt in his book, <em>The Rough Riders</em>, bragged of the  enlistment of Wrenn and Larned along with &#8220;an eclectic group of eastern dudes  and western deadshots.&#8221; Roosevelt prided in the fact that on two occasions as  U.S. tennis champion, Wrenn had  &#8220;saved this championship from going to an Englishman&#8221; referencing Wrenn&#8217;s  final-round victories over Brits Manliffe Goodbody in 1894 and Wilberforce Eaves  in 1897. Larned won a record seven U.S. singles titles &#8211;  1901, 1902, 1907, 1908,  1909, 1910, 1911.</p>
<p>Warren Harding, the 29th  President, played tennis early in his life and became re-engaged in the game  when the United  States recaptured the Davis Cup in 1920. He  hosted the winning U.S. team and the Cup to the White  House on May 6, 1921 &#8211; the first time the famous trophy visited the home of the  President. U.S. team members Bill Tilden, Bill  Johnston, Dick Williams and Watson Washburn competed in exhibition matches  against each other on the White House court, with Harding enjoying the action  with his family and staff. President Harding, in fact, appointed Davis Cup  founder Dwight Davis as his Assistant Secretary of War in 1923. Davis was subsequently  elevated to Secretary of War (the modern day Secretary of State) in the next  administration of President Calvin Coolidge starting in 1923.</p>
<p>Coolidge,  the 30<sup>th</sup> President, was the first U.S. President to host and preside over the making of  the Davis Cup draw &#8211; no doubt at the urging of Davis himself &#8211; and hosted the  festivities on March 17, 1927. The draw was held on the front lawn of the White  House and Coolidge picked out of the Cup the card with Czechoslovakia on it &#8211; drawn against  Greece in the first round of the  European Zone. Wrote the <em>New York Times </em>of the event, &#8220;Surrounded by diplomats from the twenty-five nations  entered into the tournament, he drew the card bearing the name of  Czechoslovakia from the bowl of the  trophy. Joseph C. Grew, Under Secretary of State, then picked  Greece, which was paired with the  nation of the President&#8217;s choice. The various diplomats then formed in line and  each withdrew the name of one nation from the cup.&#8221;</p>
<p>Herbert Hoover, the  31<sup>st</sup> President, was also a fan of the game. When running against  Democrat Al Smith in 1928, Hoover received a  great tennis endorsement from all-time great Helen Wills, who made her public  announcement of her support of Hoover for  President the day before her win at the U.S. Championships at Forest Hills. In her press announcement in support of  Hoover, Wills  stated, &#8220;All youth can admire Herbert Hoover because of his sincerity,  intelligence and great industry. His achievements in the past have been marked  with success because of his ability for organization and his wonderful powers of  perservance.&#8221; During his administration (1929 to 1933), four U.S. Davis Cup  matches were played at the nearby Chevy Chase Country Club in Chevy Chase, Maryland &#8211;  1929 vs. Japan, 1930 vs.  Mexico, 1931 vs.  Argentina and 1932 vs.  Canada &#8211; with Hoover dispatching his  wife to represent him at the matches.</p>
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<p>Franklin Roosevelt&#8217;s  connections to tennis came from his cousins Grace and Ellen, who were both  U.S. champions &#8211; Ellen winning the  singles title in 1890 and the pairing with Grace to win the doubles &#8211; becoming  the first sisters to win a major title. It is interesting to note what President  Roosevelt did NOT do in one famous episode in tennis history. On July 20, 1937,  the United States Davis Cup team competed against Nazi Germany in the decisive  day of the Davis Cup Inter-zone Final at Wimbledon in what many call the most dramatic and  politically important Davis Cup match of all time. American Don Budge and  Germany&#8217;s Gottfried von Cramm played  the decisive fifth match where, famously, von Cramm received a pre-match phone  call from German dictator Adolf Hitler, who told von Cramm that winning the  match was of great political importance to the Fatherland. Budge, who won the  match when he came back from two-sets-to-love to win 6-8, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 8-6,  said later of Hitler&#8217;s phone call, &#8220;I thought why didn&#8217;t Franklin Roosevelt call  me? Didn&#8217;t he give a damn?&#8221;</p>
<p>Harry Truman, the  33<sup>rd</sup> President, was the second Commander in Chief to host the Davis  Cup draw as he presided over the ceremonies on February 3, 1947. Said Truman  shortly before reaching into the Davis Cup trophy to pull of the names of  nations in the second post-World War II staging of the competition, &#8220;I hope the  time will come when we can settle our international differences in courts, just  as we settle our tennis differences on a court.&#8221;</p>
<p>President Dwight Eisenhower  was more of a fan of golf and delegated &#8220;tennis duty&#8221; to his vice president  Richard Nixon, who gave out the winner&#8217;s trophy at the U.S. Championships at  Forest Hills and Davis Cup Challenge Rounds. In  1957, he famously presented Althea Gibson, the first black to win the  U.S. singles title, with her  winner&#8217;s trophy at Forest Hills. Two years  earlier, Nixon also presented the Australian Davis Cup team with the Davis Cup  trophy after the Aussies completed a 5-0 shutout of the United States at Forest  Hills. Nixon was told by Australian Davis Cup Harry Hopman that day  that he might someday be &#8220;the youngest president in American history.&#8221; Nixon  next touched the Davis Cup in 1969 when, as the 37th President, he welcomed the  victorious 1968 U.S. Davis Cup team that defeats Hopman&#8217;s Australian team in the  1968 Davis Cup final in Adelaide, Australia. That ceremony, that also  featured the challenging Romanian Davis Cup team, featured some awkward moments  as Bud Collins documented in his book <em>The  Bud Collins History of Tennis</em>. Wrote Collins; &#8220;P<em><em>resident Richard M.  Nixon, a bowler and golfer who secretly despised tennis, hosted both final-round  teams at a White House reception. This was a nice gesture, but the Chief  Executive caused a few awkward stares when, as a memento of the occasion, he  presented each player with a golf ball. Perhaps these were left over, some  speculated, from the golf-happy Eisenhower administration. &#8220;I&#8217;m a Republican,  but I&#8217;ll never vote for him again,&#8221; grumbled Cliff Richey. &#8220;Why he do this?&#8221;  said a puzzled Ion Tiriac. &#8220;No golf courses in Romania.&#8221;</em></em></p>
<p>Lyndon Johnson, Nixon&#8217;s  precedessor, was not a tennis enthusiast but did host the winning 1963 U.S.  Davis Cup team at the White House. On January 15, 1964, Johnson hosted the  victorious U.S. team at the  White House and spent 45 minutes with team members Dennis Ralston, Chuck  McKinley and Marty Riessen as well as U.S. captain Bob Kelleher and U.S.  Lawn Tennis Association President Ed Turville. As Johnson introduced the team to  his press secretary Pierre Salinger he said, &#8220;There&#8217;s my tennis player. If I can  teach Salinger to ride a horse, maybe he can teach me to play  tennis.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gerald Ford, the  38<sup>th</sup> President, was known as an avid player and used the White House  tennis court more than any President since Teddy Roosevelt. After watching  14-year-old Tracy Austin beat Virgina Ruzici in the fourth round of the 1977  U.S. Open on television, President Jimmy Carter placed a call to the pig-tailed  wunderkind to offer his best wishes and congratulations.</p>
<p>Ronald Reagan, the  40<sup>th</sup> President, played tennis in his youth and was known as perhaps  the biggest sports fan among U.S. chief executives. He hosted many  athletes and sports teams &#8211; including tennis stars such as John McEnroe, Bjorn  Borg, Arthur Ashe, Pam Shriver and others. On September 15, 1981, Reagan and his  wife Nancy hosted a U.S. Tennis Association contingent to the White House that  included U.S. Open champions McEnroe and Austin and the U.S. Davis Cup and  Wightman Cup teams. Said Reagan of the 1981 U.S. Open finals,  &#8220;Nancy and I watched the TV  Saturday and Sunday and the matches were so breathtaking I nearly turned blue.&#8221;  Stan Smith and Marty Riessen hit tennis balls for the assembled group on the  White House tennis court &#8211; highlighted by Smith hitting a ball that broke  through the flimsy, deteriorating net. &#8220;I don&#8217;t oversee the operation as closely  as my predecessor&#8221; said Reagan of the White House tennis operations.  Nineteen-year-old Shriver proudly told Reagan during the 90-minute visit, &#8220;This  was my first election and I voted for you, sir.&#8221; Ashe then chimed in to Reagan,  &#8220;Well I didn&#8217;t vote for you. But I&#8217;m all for you, and I hope your policies work,  Mr. President.&#8221;</p>
<p>Reagan left the tennis-playing to  his Vice President and successor George Bush, who not only had a strong penchant  for playing the game but came from a strong tennis bloodline. Bush&#8217;s great  uncles Joseph Wear and Arthur Wear were bronze medalists in tennis at the 1904  Olympic Games in St.  Louis &#8211; Joseph pairing with Allen West and Arthur pairing  with Clarence Gamble. Joseph Wear also went on to serve as U.S. Davis Cup  captain in 1928 and 1935 &#8211; having the opportunity to work with both Bill Tilden  and Don Budge. Bush, whose mother Dorothy was also a standout ranking junior  player, also entertained many tennis players during his term and remains an  active player, competing often at Chris Evert&#8217;s annual charity event and  frequented the U.S. Clay Court Championships, the Tennis Masters Cup and Davis  Cup as a fan when held at the Westside Tennis Club in his hometown of Houston,  Texas</p>
<p>Bush attended the U.S. Open  when he was Vice President under Reagan, but Bill Clinton was the first sitting  President to attend the U.S. Open when he took in the men&#8217;s semifinals on  September 9, 2000, watching Marat Safin beat Todd Martin and Pete Sampras beat  Lleyton Hewitt. He also called Venus Williams after she won the U.S. Open  women&#8217;s singles title that year and told her &#8220;You worked really hard&#8221; prompting  the witty Williams to ask Clinton for a tax cut on her hard-earned U.S. Open  prize money.</p>
<p>After leaving office,  Clinton again  created tennis headlines when he attended the French Open in 2001 and was, in  fact, jokingly blamed for Andre Agassi&#8217;s quarterfinal loss to Sebastien  Grosjean. Clinton sat to watch the match after Agassi won  the first set 6-1, but Agassi proceeded to lose 12 of the next 14 games to go  down two sets to one. The five-months-out-of-office Clinton then briefly left the court, as Agassi went up a  service break in the fourth set 2-1, but when Clinton returned to watch the match, Agassi  lost his service break and proceeded to win only one more game in the match,  losing 1-6, 6-1, 6-1, 6-3. &#8220;I was bad for him,&#8221; Clinton said afterward, referring to Agassi. &#8220;I  was bad luck. I left, and he won three games. I hated to come back.&#8221;</p>
<p>Like his  father, George W. Bush, the 43<sup>rd</sup> President, was a tennis player, but  later in life did not play the game as much as he resorted to jogging and  cycling for exercise. As governor of Texas in  1999, Bush penned a note of congratulations and good luck to U.S. player Alex O&#8217;Brien when named to the U.S.  Davis Cup team to face Britain in the Centennial year of the  competition, writing &#8220;All athletes should consider it an honor to represent  their country. Sadly, a number of America&#8217;s top tennis players do not  share this view. I commend you and your teammates for stepping forward when  asked by Captain Tom Gullikson and the USTA. Your patriotism, team spirit and  work ethic are inspirations for athletes of all ages.&#8221;<br />
His most infamous connection to tennis came just five  days before the 2000 Presidential election when it was revealed publicly for the  first time that he was arrested for drunken driving in Maine on Sept. 4 1976  with Aussie tennis legend John Newcombe in the car with the future president. “I  was drinking beers, yeah, with John Newcombe,” Bush said in a briefing with the  press. “I’m not proud of that. I made some mistakes. I occasionally drank too  much, and I did that night. I learned my lesson. I told the guy (the arresting  officer) I had been drinking, what do I need to do? He said, ‘here’s the fine.’  I paid the fine.” Newcombe didn’t comment on the incident for another two weeks  until after the election. “When it came out I just did the first thing that came  into my mind &#8211; I went underground mate. I didn’t put my head up,” Newcombe told  the Australian Associated Press of when news of the arrest first surfaced.  Newcombe described Bush as a “good bloke” who would make a “pretty good  president” and said the drunk-driving incident was a minor one in terms of how  far Bush was over the limit. “That’s something I’ve laughed about with George  for the last 24 years,” Newcombe said. “That’s something that just happened that  night. We were just a couple of young blokes going out and having a good time.  We didn’t do anything wrong, basically. We probably shouldn’t have been driving  at that stage but it wasn’t that anyone was badly  inebriated.”</p>
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		<title>George Bush’s DAVIS CUP Connection – A Strange Tale From 80 Years Ago</title>
		<link>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/773</link>
		<comments>http://www.tennisgrandstand.com/archives/773#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Apr 2008 11:11:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Randy Walker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randy "Sky" Walker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andy Roddick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob and Mike Bryan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Davis Cup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George Bush]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Henri Cochet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacques Brugnon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Blake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jean Borotra]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joseph Wear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Olympic Games]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patrick McEnroe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rene Lacoste]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States Lawn Tennis Association]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USTA]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.teamwta.com/george-bush%e2%80%99s-davis-cup-connection-%e2%80%93-a-strange-tale-from-80-years-ago/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The United States and France will renew their storied Davis Cup rivalry this week in the quarterfinals in Winston-Salem, N.C. as captain Patrick McEnroe’s U.S. squad will look to continue their run towards a second consecutive Davis Cup title against French captain Guy Forget.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The United States and France will renew their storied Davis Cup rivalry this week in the quarterfinals in Winston-Salem, N.C. as captain Patrick McEnroe’s U.S. squad – Andy Roddick, James Blake, Bob and Mike Bryan – will look to continue their run towards a second consecutive Davis Cup title against French captain Guy Forget and his nominated team of Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Richard Gasquet, Paul-Henri Mathieu and Michael Llodra.</p>
<p>Interestingly, this 15th meeting between the two Davis Cup superpowers (series tied 7-7) comes 80 years after one of the most famous and most-politically involved Davis Cup matches in the history of the competition, in which, perhaps appropriately enough, the great, great uncle of President George W. Bush – Joseph Wear – was a central figure.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1928, Wear, a former player who medaled in tennis at the 1904 Olympic Games, was the Davis Cup Committee Chairman for the United States Lawn Tennis Association &#8211; now the U.S. Tennis Association (USTA). The United States was, for the first time since 1919, not in possession of the Davis Cup after the four French Musketeers – Rene Lacoste, Henri Cochet, Jacques Brugnon and Jean Borotra – snatched the Cup from Bill Tilden and the U.S. team the previous year in Philadelphia – ending the U.S. record seven-year stranglehold on the Cup.</p>
<p>Wear met with USLTA President Sam Collom and the Davis Cup Selection Committee to decide which Americans would represent the United States in Davis Cup play. The United States were due to meet Italy in the Davis Cup Inter-zone Final in Paris, and presumably, in the Davis Cup Challenge Round against the French in what would be the christening event for its’ new tennis stadium, Stade Roland Garros (now the site of the French Championships). On the agenda of the Davis Cup Selection Committee and the USLTA Executive Committee was whether Tilden, regarded as one of the world’s most famous athletes at the time, had violated his amateur status when he filed newspaper reports from Wimbledon, for which he was paid. Wear, and USLTA President Sam Collom, reviewed the evidence at the USLTA Davis Cup Selection Committee and no suspension or discipline was discussed in depth.</p>
<p>Wear and Collom set sail on July 6 for Paris and the Davis Cup matches on the S.S. France. While on board, radio dispatches were sent to Colom and Wear of the meeting of the USLTA’s Advisory Committee, where charges were, in fact, filed against Tilden for a breach of his amateur status. Collom advised the USLTA’s Advisory Committee that no suspension would be issued until Collom would get to speak to Tilden in person. While Collom and Wear were on board the S.S. France, the USLTA’s Advisory, Davis Cup and Amateur Rule Committee met in New York – minus the USLTA President and Davis Cup Committee Chairman – and voted to suspend Tilden as the playing captain of the U.S. Davis Cup team. The Committees also voted to have Wear replace Tilden as captain of the U.S. team. Under USLTA rules, Collom and Wear were helpless to overrule the committee. Wear, upset at the committee members’ decision, cabled the USLTA in New York and resigned his post as USLTA Davis Cup Committee Chairman upon setting foot back on U.S. soil upon his return from France.</p>
<p>At the draw ceremony to announce the line-ups for the Inter-zone Final between the United States and Italy, Collom announced publicly Tilden’s suspension from the team. Headlines in the world press resulted as Tilden was regarded as one of the world’s most famous sports personalities. The story was particularly sensitive in France, where the French Tennis Federation had invested significant financial resources in the construction of Stade Roland Garros, expecting to reap a financial windfall  to help pay for the stadium’s construction with the match-up between the Tilden-lead U.S. team and their “Four Musketeers.” Without Tilden, the French Tennis Federation would not have its’ marquee match-up for the opening of its stadium and would face a severe financial crisis. Fans that already had purchased tickets for a potential U.S. vs. France Challenge Round had already requested refunds upon learning of Tilden’s suspension from the U.S. team.</p>
<p>The French Tennis Federation contacted the French Foreign Ministry to inquire whether the issue of Tilden’s suspension could be turned over to the American Ambassador to France, Myron Herrick. It is believed that Herrick brought the issue as far as the White House, where President Calvin Coolidge endorsed Tilden’s reinstatement. (Coolidge had an interest in the Davis Cup since his Secretary of War from 1923-1925 was none-other than Dwight Davis, the event’s founder). Herrick allowed the USLTA to devise some sort of punishment after the conclusion of the Davis Cup in exchange for re-instatement to the team “in the interest of international good feeling.”</p>
<p>While the diplomatic gears moved in full motion, Wear captained the Tilden-less U.S. team to a 4-1 win over Italy to advance the United States into the Davis Cup Challenge Round against France. Tilden rejoined the U.S. team for the Challenge Round, while Wear remained as U.S. Captain. The French went on to defeat Tilden and the U.S. by a 4-1 margin in front of overflowing and enthusiastic French crowds at Roland Garros.</p>
<p>Wear returned to the U.S. Davis Cup captaincy in 1935, when he steered the United States into the Davis Cup Challenge Round with a 4-1 victory over Germany. The United States would then lose to the Fred Perry-led British team 5-0 at Wimbledon, but Wear did have the opportunity to coach an up-and-coming young red-headed future champion by the name of Don Budge. Wear, in fact, is the only U.S. Davis Cup Captain to captain both Bill Tilden (1928) and Don Budge (1935). The uncle of George W. Bush’s grandmother Dorothy, was himself an accomplished tennis player himself having won a bronze medal in men’s doubles at the 1904 Olympic Games in St. Louis, Mo.</p>
<p>“No one in tennis is held in higher regard than the Philadelphian,” wrote Allison Danzig in The New York Times in 1931, who noted that Wear won the 1914 “Racquets” championship with Dwight Davis. (Racquets is a sport similar to court tennis or squash.) “His appointment as Davis Cup chairman in 1928 was hailed as the entry of one of the country’s most representative sportsmen into its lawn tennis councils and was forseen as a guarantee of the maintenance of the association’s international relations upon their high plane of noblesse oblige…From the beginning, he won the confidence of the candidates for the team and became their warm friend, and no one was ever a more welcome or respected figure in an American Davis Cup camp.”</p>
<p>We hope that the drama in this week’s United States vs. France Davis Cup series remains only on the court.</p>
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