World TeamTennis returning to Newport Beach?
Richard Dunn
After an eight-year hiatus, World TeamTennis may return to Newport
Beach in the summer of 2003 with Lindsay Davenport as a player and
part owner of a team that would play its home matches at the
Palisades Tennis Club.
The facility at the Palisades Club, known as the John Wayne Tennis
Club until 1995, played host to the Newport Beach Dukes from 1990
through ’94. It was a highly successful franchise, mostly under Coach
Greg Patton, the former UC Irvine men’s tennis coach.
Palisades Club owner Ken Stuart met Friday with WTT co-founder and
director Billie Jean King, WTT president and chief executive officer
Ilana Kloss, Davenport and a Palisades Club member, Don Evans, who
reportedly is lining up Bank of the West as a title sponsor. Robert
Van’t Hof, Davenport’s coach and the Palisades Club’s tennis director
emeritus, was also part of the meeting.
“I’m pretty excited,” said Stuart, whose club hosted a U.S. Davis
Cup tie in 1997 and senior tennis exhibitions in 1998 and 2001.
“Billie Jean King really loved the club and loved the facility. She
signed a lot of autographs and talked with some members, and also had
a good chance to visit with Lindsay (a member of the U.S. Fed Cup
team, of which King is captain) ... Billie Jean was very clear. If
there’s a sponsor, we do it, and if this thing goes through, Lindsay
will definitely play for us and be a part owner of the franchise.”
Stuart said he did not know what the potential team’s nickname
would be, but indicated a community-wide contest is a possibility in
selecting one.
Earlier this week, Stuart said his desire for the new Newport
Beach franchise would be to fill the four roster spots with players
with local ties -- Davenport, Rick Leach (a Palisades member),
Natasha Zvereva (formerly of Newport Beach and Palisades) and Taylor
Dent, the 1996 CIF Southern Section singles champion as a Corona del
Mar High freshman. Davenport lives in Laguna Beach and is a longtime
Palisades member.
King told Stuart that WTT is poised to return to Southern
California and about a dozen other sites are being considered by the
league, which started in 1974. Jimmy Connors played for the former
Los Angeles Strings for several years. Sacramento has had the
league’s only California-based franchise for about the past six
years.
“My sense is that (Newport Beach) has a good chance (of being
selected by WTT),” Stuart said. “I told my secretary that I had a
similar feeling in my gut when I was talking to (promoter) Russ Cline
about the Davis Cup (when the U.S. hosted the Netherlands in a world
quarterfinal).”
Stuart said no courts will be lost due to bleacher construction
for the WTT team, and that center court at the Palisades Club will
feature about 2,000 seats. Grandstands were built to seat about 5,000
for the Davis Cup.
World TeamTennis signs all of its players in January and conducts
a draft for non-marquee players in April. The league will inform
Stuart of its decision in about two weeks.
The Newport Beach Dukes, owned by Fred Lieberman, reached the WTT
championship match in 1992 and ‘93, losing to Atlanta and Wichita,
respectively. In ‘93, the Dukes finished the regular season 14-0,
becoming the first WTT franchise in 22 years to go unbeaten. The
Dukes were Western Division champions three straight years, including
their final year, 1994, when their former coach, Patton, guided his
new team, the Idaho Sneakers, to an upset victory in the WTT
semifinals.
The Dukes played mostly to sparse crowds at the old Wayne Club,
but sold out each time a marquee player was in town, like Connors or
Martina Navratilova.
Andre Agassi, John McEnroe , Andy Roddick, James Blake and Mark
Philippoussis are among the WTT players, while the league is still
trying to lure Pete Sampras.
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