The Outcasts The Outcasts

The Outcasts

The story of Art "Tappy" Larsen and Dick Savitt

    • 219,00 Kč
    • 219,00 Kč

Publisher Description

Oddness or quirkiness seems to be a fundamental career requirement for the modern tennis star. It wasn’t always this way: back in the 1940s and ’50s players were, for the most part, a level-headed, sober-minded bunch. Those who did not fit the mould of the ‘typical player’ in the highly constrained world of American tennis in the 1950s, were viewed, and treated, as outsiders. Richard Naughton’s meticulously researched tennis biography, The Outcasts tells the story of two such men, now considered among the most fascinating characters in the history of American tennis—the strangely glamorous, yet odd  figure of Art ‘Tappy’ Larsen, and the physically imposing, gruff Dick Savitt.


The two men were great champions. Larsen was the US National singles champion in 1950, and Savitt won the 1951 Wimbledon title.


By all appearances they had little in common. ‘Tappy’ was wild-living and free- thinking, while Savitt was serious, contemplative, seeming to be almost angst- ridden—he was also Jewish, which may have been an issue of contention for American tennis administrators of the time. The two men also played the game differently—the feathery touch of Larsen as he sped about the court, contrasted with the big booming ground strokes of Savitt, one of the hardest hitters of his era, or maybe any era. In spite of their differences, they shared a close friendship, bonding over their shared alienation from the inner processes and power circles of the United States tennis establishment. The Outcasts tells their story, and helps to untangle the broader picture of American tennis in the 1950s.

GENRE
Sports & Outdoors
RELEASED
2016
18 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
235
Pages
PUBLISHER
The Slattery Media Group
PROVIDER INFO
Slattery Media Group
SIZE
3.6
MB

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