Grand Slam Tennis Tours lets you travel like the pros to the sport’s most iconic venues
It’s an American flag cake—blueberries as stars, strawberries as stripes—baked by one of England’s most renowned chefs. It’s John Isner’s agent hailing you a ride to your London hotel after a night out, like an old friend. It’s stepping into a Hospitality House on Princes Way, a short walk from the All England Club, with the freedom and comfort that it feels like your actual home. It’s at once familiar and foreign.
What Grand Slam Tennis Tours did for its clients at Wimbledon last year, and what it has done for more than 20 years at tennis tournaments around the world, is strike a balance between what people know they want, and what people never knew was possible. Wimbledon, itself a balance between old and new, is a bucket-list item for U.S. tennis fans. But attending Wimbledon with your own private courtyard, Pimm’s Cups and canapés at your beck and call— plus the opportunity to play tennis at Roehampton? It’s an unsurpassed experience that will make you wish, in some ways, that Wimbledon could be on your bucket list again.
Denne historien er fra Jan/Feb 2018-utgaven av Tennis.
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Denne historien er fra Jan/Feb 2018-utgaven av Tennis.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
The Tennis Conversation: Jenson Brooksby, a piano man
Billy Joel may be a New York City icon, but the fans in Queens should start getting to know this piano man
The Five-Step Sit-Down Plan
Don’t neglect the value of a smart changeover routine
MAKING THE TURN
Six years after saying goodbye to the protour grind, Mardy Fish may be more active than ever—on the court, on the course, and helping combat a struggle anyone can encounter
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Queens is known for its gastronomy as much as its tennis. Daniil Medvedev, equal parts sugar and spice, hopes to add a unique flavor to the borough as he vies for his first major
SUMMER IN THE CITIES
Broadway may not re-open until mid September, but tennis offers its own brand of live theatre in the preceding months
REOPEN SEASON
The pandemic halted tennis as an up-close experience— but is now giving way to pandemonium among crowds. As the pro game reopens this summer and fans gather again, we’re realizing what we’ve been missing for so long
Court of Appeals
Resolving Your Rules Questions&Quarrels
An Open Mind: New York's Slam has no shortage of history, but it always evolves
In the last decade, Arthur Ashe Stadium got a roof, and a new Grandstand and Louis Armstrong Stadium debuted.
Those Fall Feels
The end of summer may be bittersweet, but getting lost amid the backroads of NEW ENGLAND adds a silver—and golden—lining to the season change. Pack a few sweaters along with your tennis kit and prepare for leaf-peeping, scenic drives and delicious autumnal ingredients to pair with your forehands
Court of Appeals
Resolving Your Rules Questions & Quarrels