After Floods Damaged Court, Greenbrier to Host Tennis Event

The Greenbrier is ready to host its annual tennis classic after floods badly damaged its stadium court in June.

The Beckley Register-Herald reports that the fifth annual Greenbrier Champions Tennis Classic is taking place this Saturday and Sunday. It features Venus Williams, Madison Keys, John McEnroe and Pete Sampras.

The Greenbrier’s 2,500-seat tennis stadium was damaged during the June floods, which killed 23 people statewide. The clay playing surface was ruined, and The Greenbrier replaced it with a hard court.

Terry Deremer, the resort’s director of tennis, said flood waters were 20 feet high into the lower level seating the morning after the floods.

Despite Floods, Greenbrier Tennis Exhibition Will Be Held

A two-day tennis exhibition will be held as scheduled in September at The Greenbrier resort despite recent floods.

The resort announced Monday that the 2,500-seat tennis stadium in White Sulphur Springs will be cleaned up before the exhibition on Sept. 17 and 18.

The event includes singles and doubles matches involving Venus Williams, Madison Keys, Pete Sampras and John McEnroe.

The resort, including the year-old stadium, was flooded following heavy rains on June 23. Fifteen people died in Greenbrier County and 23 were killed statewide.

Charleston Native Causes Sensation at Wimbledon 30 Years Ago

Thirty years ago this week, a Charleston native caused a sensation when she played her first round at the Wimbledon Championships at the All England Club near London.  In 1985, the 24 year old White wore a body suit.

Now living in Los Angeles, White explains that it all began because she liked to wear runners tights when she practiced and played. They kept her legs warm and her muscles from tightening up. 

She and some friends who worked at Nike came up with the idea of the body suit.  It arrived from Italy in time to play her first round match against Pam Shriver. 

Tennis Great Tracy Austin Returns to West Virginia

Tennis Pro Tracy Austin returned to Charleston this week. It was her first visit since winning a tournament in West Virginia’s capital city in 1978.

The U.S. Open champ returned to stadium court at the Charleston Tennis Club.  She remembers being here as a teenager playing the Sweet 16 National Junior Women’s Tennis tournament.

“I remember the club, you know, just coming in I’m feeling a bit nostalgic,” Austin said.

“I remember this clubhouse and I remember the center court obviously and I remember certain other courts I played matches on and its great to be back to see all the names that are on the list of all the champions that have been here.  It’s got a great history at the Charleston Tennis Club.”

From 1970 to 1988, the club hosted the Sweet 16’s. Austin says it was the tournament to win in this teenage division.

“It was special here.  It was the tournament of the year. It was the national so it was the one to win and everybody knew about Charleston, West Virginia because it had such a terrific history and if you were seeded, if you were in the top 16 then you got the use of a car,” she explained.

“I think it was a red convertible for the week.  Obviously we couldn’t drive but our parents were here and they could drive.  So it was a big deal and the logo was on the side of the door and they
made you feel really special.”

The first winner of this national tournament was Chris Evert in 1970. After winning here in 1978,  Austin turned pro at the age of sweet 16.

Herd Tennis Player Grew Up in Sochi

One Marshall University athlete has a unique perspective on the home of the 2014 Winter Olympics.

When Anna Pomyatinskaya talks about Sochi, Russia she reflecting on a place she calls home. The freshman Marshall University tennis player just arrived on campus in January after spending the last few years at IMG Academy in Florida. She says she’s not been back to Sochi since winter break of the 2012-2013 school year. She said her home looks completely different.

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“It’s really exciting, but at the same time unbelievable, maybe a year ago I was there and walking down all the streets and now I see it on TV and people see all the beauty that our people just built,” Pomyatinskaya said.

She said since officials in Russia found out in 2007 that they’d host this year’s games, work has been underway to change a sleepy small town on the black sea into a Winter Olympics mecca. She said work immediately began to turn a diverse area with beaches near the black sea, but an abundance of snow in the mountains into a place that millions of people would see.

“It was a resort town, it was a place where people use to go in the summer or early autumn. It was a perfect place to get in the sea, but now it is changed and is an all four seasons resort and now people go there and ski in the winter and swim in the summer,” Pomyatinskaya said.

Pomyatinskaya said her reaction to what she sees on TV and what she hears from her family are equal to the pride she felt when the Olympic Committee originally announced the games would be in Sochi. She’s excited about what the transformation could mean for her hometown.

“I remember the first time that I heard Olympics 2014 were going to be in Sochi and I was wow this is really cool, this is going to take a lot of time and energy and money and effort, but in the end it is going to be great,” Pomyatinskaya said.

She said it’s just as exciting to think what the games and all the development will mean for the area once the Olympics are over.

“It will make Sochi a better place and obviously there will be more space for jobs and people can go there and start and making their future and especially for students and everybody it’s a really good opportunity for Russian citizens,” Pomyatinskaya said.

She hopes to be able to go home this coming summer and looks forward to that first site of what her home will look like.

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“I will be so excited because I can imagine what kind of view I’ll get when I’m on a plane, because from the plane you can see all of the sea and the buildings and it will be awesome,” Pomyatinskaya said.

Pomyatinskaya said she could not be prouder of her hometown.

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