by RENALDO DORSETT
Sports Reporter
rdorsett@tribunemedia.net
Scores of young tennis enthusiasts turned Rawson Square into a temporary court Saturday morning as the Bahamas Lawn Tennis Association introduced its branch of the International Tennis Federation’s “Play and Stay” Programme.
The Programme represents a global shift in the rules governing youth tennis and is expected to have a direct impact on the development of the game locally, bringing a wider cross section of newcomers to the sport.
Bahamas Lawn Tennis Association president Derron Donaldson also announced at the event that the new facilities constructed to house the program will be named in honor of Bahamian tennis great, Mark Knowles.
The new initiative feature smaller rackets, smaller courts, and slower balls tailored to the skills of beginning tennis players.
Other rule changes to the game will include a one match tiebreak to 7 or 10, best-of-three match tiebreaks to seven, one short set (first to four games), best of three short sets (also first to four games), tiebreak instead of a third set and no ad scoring (play one game point at deuce).
Beginning in January, it will be mandatory for competition for players aged 10-and-Under to be played with slower red, orange and green balls on the appropriate sized courts, while the traditional yellow ball will no longer be permitted for 10-and-under competition.
According to Donaldson, the Programme will strengthen the feeder system of the Bahamas’ Junior Development Program.
“This will be the ticket to strengthening and developing an already strong junior development programme. In this format, tennis is at its easiest to learn, its inexpensive, can be played on a wide variety of surfaces so we can target an even greater number of kids and get them into the sport as fast as possible,” he said, “The goal is to bring them into the sport, have them experience relative success rather quickly and make the game as interesting and attractive as
possible to them at a young age. If we can bring about 50 kids to each free outing of mini tennis we host, there may be about 10-15 natural talents in that crowd that will stick with the game, hence the ‘Play and Stay’ theme coined by the ITF.”
The ITF’s Tennis Play and Stay campaign centers around the slogan “serve, rally and score” and the recommendation that starter players play the game outright from their first lesson.
The campaign is supported by the top ITF nations and professional players, including Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Justine Henin, as well as the equipment manufacturers.
The campaign aims to retain more starter children and adults in the sport by improving the way in which coaches worldwide introduce tennis to starter players, ensuring their first experience is both positive and enjoyable.
“This is our first major event and of course the goal is for massive support and attention as the first step, and eventually getting the mini tennis programme in schools. The BLTA hosted a ‘Play and Stay’ course for 25 teachers last November as the first step toward the inter-school competitions,” Donaldson said.
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