History of Tennis
For any future athlete who intends to begin a new activity, to know a little the history about the sport is always a good idea.
Plays of ball can be traced behind for hundreds and thousands of years. Usually played for the entertainment or during religious ceremonies, the plays of ball became in the whole world strongly popular in innumerable civilizations. The European monks probably created the play of tennis. The players quickly discovered that instead of striking the ball in addition to walls they had a better order using their hand. A leather glove was created soon, and not to wish ardently after, an adapted handle achieved the first racquet. While the racquets evolved/moved, thus made the balls which were employed. A type plus stuffed bouncier of the material of its replaced the first primitive balls out of wooden soon. The play became strongly popular among monasteries all around Europe during the 14th century. At the same time, the church considered to prohibit the play.
In 1874, Walter principal C Wingfield made patent in London the equipment and the rules for play rather similar to modern tennis. By same year, the first courses appeared in the United States. By the following year, the equipment place had been sold for the use in Russia, in India, in Canada, and in China.
The play of croquet was currently strongly popular, and the courses soft of play of croquet proved easily adaptable for tennis. The original court of Wingfield had the shape of a sand glass, narrowest with the net, and it was shorter than the modern court. Its rules were subjected to considerable criticism, and it updated soon on the left they in 1875, but him it later development of the play to others.
In 1877, the whole the club of England held the first tournament of Wimbledon, and its committee of tournament provided a rectangular court and a whole of rules which are primarily the play that we know today. The net was always five feet top on the sides, a transfer of the ancestor of interior of the game , and the boxes of service were 26 feet the deep ones, but from here 1882, the characteristics had evolved/moved with their current form.
The growth of tennis continued and the championship 1927 saw the first emission by radio of an event of tennis. This increased its popularity further and in the Thirties the play became strongly