Quotations from P G Wodehouse are copyright of, and reprinted by permission of, the Trustees of the Wodehouse Estate © 2012 The P G Wodehouse Society (UK)
The Society's Real Tennis Team "The Nodders" is born!
Below is a report by Tony Ring of the Society's Real Tennis day at Hatfield House on June 7th 2008. It includes an interesting explanation of the game and even manages to describe the handicap rules. At the end of the article you will see how the Society's new Real Tennis team was born and why it is called The Nodders!
Although we do not know whether P G Wodehouse would ever have played real tennis
(or ‘tennis’ as it is correctly described, having preceded its upstart modern derivative
by some half a millennium or more), he was certainly familiar with the game. His
step-
We can be quite sure, though, that he would have both approved of, and been astounded
by, the Society’s latest venture – a tennis match against a delightful peripatetic
team named ‘The Brigands’, played at the beautifully presented court at Hatfield
House on June 7th. For in the team which bore his name, there were two sons of Dulwich
students with whom he corresponded for some time. Mike Griffith (whose full Christian
name really is the shortened version of Michael as he was named after Mike Jackson
from the early school stories and Psmith novels) is the son of the late England wicket-
For good measure, the Society’s team included two committee members – Tony Ring and
Paul Rush, the latter taking advantage of the offer for novices to receive some professional
instruction from Hatfield House senior professional Jon Dawes, and then to participate
in a friendly but competitive doubles match; two other long-
Real tennis is played by a sufficiently small number of aficionados that it is possible
for each individual to be assigned a personal handicap (and on occasion a separate
one for singles and doubles). Unlike golf, where players are handicapped against
the course, the handicaps in tennis are reflected in different starting scores applied
to each game in a match. While players of equal handicap start at love-
Each match was notionally assigned 45 minutes, so it was decided that we would play
first-
Mark, a left-
In each of the remaining four doubles, against a combination of male and female Brigands
(Oliver Harris, Isabelle Duncan, Malcolm Thorp and Clare Weatherill) the Society’s
team flattered to deceive. As with many sports, the result of at least two of the
matches turned on just a couple of important points, either lost by a mistake from
one of the deserving poor, or won by a master-
At the post-
The Nodders are most grateful to Richard Williams for having conceived the notion of the match, to Jonathan and Liz Fisher for competently managing our resources and providing lunchtime grazing, Hatfield House Tennis Club for their friendly welcome, and Jon Dawes for his informative and cheerful marking of the entire match.
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