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         Tennis Olympic History:     more detail
  1. Tennis (The Summer Olympics) by Steve Dimeglio, 1995-08
  2. From Bound Feet to Olympic Gold in China: The Case of Women's Table Tennis by Deng Yaping, 2002

101. Toscana Agriturismo, La Tenuta Quarrata - Holidays Tuscany, Pisa Turistic Farm,
Old Tuscan house between Pisa and Florence, converted into apartments, with olympic swimming pool and tennis court. Map, photographs and details.
http://www.tenutaquarrata.com/
Tenuta Quarrata - Loc. Quarrata
S. Pietro Belvedere 56038 - Capannoli (PI)
Tel e Fax: +39 0587 607302
E-mail: tenutaquarrata@tenutaquarrata.com
credits
Hosting by ObiettivoWeb Powered by: Sinergiepercomunicare.it Progettouno.net Anyweb.it Italiasearch.info ... PisaOnline.it

102. Holiday Inn Daytona Beach Hotel
Located near Speedway features tennis courts, olympic pool, full exercise facility.
http://daytonaspeedwayholidayinn.com
Holiday Inn Express Speedway at I-95 Hotel
The Holiday Inn Express Speedway at I-95 offers the best of all possible worlds. Stay here and you'll discover unparalleled convenience , service and value in a beautifully landscaped resort-style setting. Whether you are traveling on business or visiting Daytona Beach for its world famous attractions, stay with us and enjoy our 8 all-weather lighted tennis courts, full exercise facility, Olympic size pool, and the Indigo Lakes 18 hole championship golf course. We are right where you want to be, close to Daytona's high-speed action directly off I-95 and only an hour away from Orlando's renowned attractions. We also have 5 banquet rooms available for all your business needs. For business or pleasure, the Holiday Inn Express Speedway at I-95 is the smart choice.
Reservations
Guest Rooms Amenities Accolades ... Home Holiday Inn Express at I-95, Daytona Beach
2620 W. International Speedway Blvd.
Daytona Beach, Florida 32114
This hotel is independently owned and operated by SandCastles Hotels Holiday Inn Express
Privacy Notice/Service Marks
Compucast Web Design

103. R Ranch In The Georgia Mountains Of Dahlonega
Member owned 1000 acre private ranch resort in the North Georgia mountains with a beautiful lodge, olympic size swimming pool, horses, horse corral with miles of riding trails, cabins in the woods or on a fishing lake, RV sites, tennis courts. You can become an owner for less than the cost of a 2week family vacation.
http://www.r-ranchinthemountains.com/
CONTINUE HERE
info@rranchga.com
CONTINUE HERE
info@rranchga.com

R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort is a unique vacation property in the North Georgia Mountain town of Dahlonega. Located approximately 70 miles from Atlanta and a mere 15 minutes from historic downtown Dahlonega, R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort, is THE weekend getaway in the southeast. Here, you and your family can enjoy horseback riding, swimming, fishing, hiking, tennis and rustic cabin and/or RV camping. RV enthusiasts can enjoy unparalleled mountain views as well as plenty of green space between 140 sites. R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort’s cozy mountain cabins provide the ideal anecdote for the hectic pace of everyday life. Horseback riding at the Ranch is free and unlimited to our owners, as is the pool, fishing lakes, and trails. Surrounded by Chattahoochee National Forest, any outdoor lover is sure to appreciate our large expanse of mountain, lake, and pasture land. Overlooking this breathtaking property is the R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort Lodge. R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort’s lodge is an amazing venue for any special event, including weddings and corporate meetings. All of this can be yours, just call R-Ranch in the Mountains Resort today to make R-Ranch, your Ranch and stake your claim in the North Georgia Mountains.

104. Fabulous Fountain Hills, Arizona Vacation Condo Rental
Fully furnished two bedroom, two bathroom, secondfloor, end condo sleeps 6 and is located in a resort setting in Rental includes use of a Jr. olympic-size heated swimming pool, jacuzzi, health club, 5 tennis courts, basketball and volleyball. Complimentary on-site day care available.
http://www.arizona-condo.com/
Fabulous Fountain Hills, Arizona Vacation Condo Rental Located east of Scottsdale, and just 30 minutes from Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport, this fully furnished two bedroom, two bathroom, second floor end-unit condo sleeps six. Furnishings include a queen size bed in the master bedroom, a full/twin bed in the second bedroom as well as a wood-burning fireplace, dishwasher, washer/dryer, 2 digital cable TV's, VCR, AM-FM Stereo, CD player, tape deck, sleeper/sofa, dishes, utensils, all linens and reserved covered parking. Enjoy great rates while our pool and health club are being remodeled!! Rental includes all utilities including local phone calls.
All amounts are US dollars Weekly Monthly January - March No weekly rentals during these 3 months April May - October November - December
Contact us for discounts on multi-month or multi-week rentals!
For more information call toll free:
Chuck or Paula

105. Treyburn
Luxurious golf course community with Tom Fazio designed golf course, tennis courts, olympic size swimming pool, and a clubhouse.
http://www.treyburn.com/
fax 919.620.0007 1 fairwoods drive durham, nc 27712 info@treyburn.com site map

106. South Bend Table Tennis Club
Table tennis tournaments, news, clinics, directions. Home of 2000 olympic coach and 4 star tournament.
http://www.sbttc.org
Sanctioned by
South Bend Table Tennis Center
SBTTC

Home of North American 2000 Olympic coach Dan Seemiller
Please note: New Phone Number: 574-261-4545
Hours/Rates

Contact SBTTC

US Nationals Results

Thursday RR Results
...
Did you know?

Club Highlights SBTTC is a large club with activities from beginners to seasoned Loopers and Choppers with 14 profession tables. The club is ranked 7th in the nation by tabletennis.about.com . Among the well organized activities are: You'll find SBTTC a group of friendly people from all walks-of-life who have fun playing Table Tennis and who enjoy helping others learn and improve their games. More.... 46th World Championships (Includes Hazinski) 2001 USA Nat Team Trials San Diego Summary By Jordan Lynch (Haz makes team!) Sponsors: Table Tennis Equipment SJVO Sponsors and Advertising...

107. Athens Olympics 2004. ABC Sport.
Through the prism of history, the Athens Olympics may come to be seen as the Games tennis. Alicia Molik showed her promise with a bronze medal in the
http://www.abc.net.au/olympics/default.htm
@import "/olympics/2004/css/main.css"; Skip navigation ABC Home Radio Television ... News
Athens Olympics 2004. ABC Sport.
Search this site
Farewell to Athens
Every Olympic Games provides us with defining moments. Some are obvious - like Cathy Freeman's golden run in Sydney and Muhammad Ali's lighting of the cauldron in Atlanta. Others are a matter of personal preference. Athens was no different. In almost every sport there were memories to cherish. From the feats of Ian Thorpe Michael Phelps and Jodie Henry in the pool to unforgettable victories by Kelly Holmes and Hicham El Guerrouj on the track, every winner had a story to tell. And so did most of the losers. Losers like Jana Pittman , Wilson Kipketer and Alex Popov, who weren't losers at all, but were winners without gold medals. For the Greeks, these Games were a triumph. Not because they were the best ever, but because in the main, they went without a hitch. Because, despite the doubters, they opened on schedule, and because - perhaps against all odds in today's world - for a little more than two weeks they recaptured the spirit of the ancient Olympics. The centrepiece of these Games was the thoroughly modern stadium with its Santiago Calatrava-designed roof.

108. CNN.com - Roddick Opts For Olympic Challenge - Dec. 19, 2003
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/SPORT/12/19/tennis.roddick/index.html
International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com
Roddick opts for Olympic challenge
Story Tools OAKLAND, California World number one Andy Roddick will play in the Olympic tennis tournament for the United States this summer. "Athens 2004 we're definitely going," said Roddick's coach, Brad Gilbert, shrugging off fears that the the event is too close to his charge's defence of the U.S. Open title. Former world number one Lleyton Hewitt of Australia cited that reason for his withdrawal from the Olympics on Thursday.. The Olympic Games are scheduled for August 15-22, ending eight days before the start of the U.S. Open, where Roddick will defend his first major title. Roddick hired Gilbert, who previously coached Andre Agassi, after he suffered a first-round loss in the French Open this year. With Gilbert, Roddick reached the Wimbledon semifinals, won the U.S. Open and rose to No. 1 in the rankings. Gilbert, who spoke at an Oakland Athletics' fund-raiser in Calfornia, is enthusiastic about the Olympics.

109. Potted History
Some early history about women and the Olympics tennis was the only sport inthe interim Games for women but only Greek and French women took part.
http://www.olympicwomen.co.uk/Potted.htm
Potted History Some early history about women and the Olympics
  • Married women were barred from the Ancient Olympic Games, but prostitutes or virgins were allowed to spectate. Kallipateria was the first female Olympic boxing coach in 440 BC. The first female Olympic champion was a Spartan princess called Kynisca, in 392 BC. She was also the first woman to become a champion horse trainer when her horses and chariot competed and won in the Ancient Olympic Games. Women had their own athletic games of Hera from about 1000 BC. Women were originally the prizes in mens Ancient Olympic chariot races. Ballooning, croquet and golf (1900) were once Olympic events in which women competed. Please see Statistics for more information. 1900 was the year the World Exhibition was scheduled to take place in Paris, with celebrations and events akin to our own Millennium celebrations. The Olympic Games were taking place at the same time, from 14th May to 28th October and were considered by many to be part of the World Exhibition. Some of the competitors did not know if they were in the Olympic Games or the World Fair. Happily for the women athletes of the time, the all male International Olympic Committee, who were very against women taking parts in sports, had little influence in Paris.
The organisers of the World Exhibition seemed unconcerned about the rights and wrongs of women competing, so their presence was not an issue. To this day there is still confusion as to which events were Olympic and which were World Fair events. So, who were the first female Olympic competitors and champion? For a sport to be Olympic in 1900 it had to be an open sport, amateur and international, not handicapped and not motorised. The long-held view was that women took part in just

110. CBC.ca - Athens 2004 - History 1912 Stockholm
A history of the 1912 Stockholm Olympics. Prior to 1912, women could competeonly in archery, tennis and golf. The Stockholm Games ushered in the
http://www.cbc.ca/olympics/1912.html

111. Olympic Issues - Womens Issues
British olympic Association olympic Movement - olympic Issues - Womens Issues . tennis returns to the Games, with the inequitable agreement that fewer
http://www.olympics.org.uk/olympicmovement/olympicissueswoman.asp
SITE SEARCH
Home
The Olympic Movement Olympic Issues In the Ancient Olympic Games, women were forbidden to take part. Married women were forbidden to even enter the competition areas as spectators. If they were caught, the punishment was death. Therefore, they created their own Games dedicated to the goddess Hera. Hera was the sister-wife of Zeus. The Olympic Games were dedicated to Zeus. When the Olympic Games were revived in 1896 even the founder himself, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, did not agree with women's participation in the Games. This issue was the topic of much debate between the initial members of the IOC. However, women did not take part in the Games until 1900 in Paris. It was here that Britain's Charlotte Cooper became the first female gold medallist in the tennis singles competition. Only one other sport saw women's participation in 1900, golf. In London at the 1908 Games there were 36 women competitors in the figure skating and tennis events. After these Games and a recommendation from the British Olympic Association that women swimmers, divers and gymnasts be allowed to compete in future Games, the Swedish Organising Committee included two swimming events and one diving contest for women at the 1912 Stockholm Games. Finally, in 1924 the IOC decided to allow a larger participation of women in the Games. However, there was little evidence of this even by the 1936 Games in Berlin where there were only four sports available to women.

112. History Of The Games - Olympic Info : Olympic History -
The modern olympic Games are now 108years-old. history of the Games From Olympia to Australia - with Apollo s help Seared in the memory
http://smh.com.au/olympics/articles/2004/06/18/1089484300823.html
@import url("/olympics/css/athens_smh.css"); Welcome to 2004 Olympics. Skip directly to: Search Box Section Navigation Content
History of the Games
June 18, 2004
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The stadium at the 1896 Athens Games, the first of the modern Olympics. The Olympic Games are the creation of the Ancient Greeks with records of the first competition dating back to 776 BC. The Games reigned supreme in Ancient Greece for 12 centuries until in 393 AD Emperor Theodosius founded them to be a pagan celebration and thus ended the competition. It wasn't until the late 1800's that Frenchman Pierre de Coubertin began researching and rallying support for the rebirth of the Olympic Games. His hard work succeeded and in 1896 Athens was the host city of the first of the modern Olympic Games.
1896 Athens, Greece
Thirteen countries participated at the 1896 Athens Games with around 300 athletes taking part in the competition. There were 43 events contested which fell into the following categories;
athletics (track and field), cycling, fencing, gymnastics, shooting, swimming, tennis, weightlifting and wrestling.

113. Why Losers Are The Real Winners - Olympic Info : Olympic History -
olympic fans, ask yourself this why did you enjoy watching Tatiana Grigorievavault with Her own history. She jumped 4.55 metres and stunned herself.
http://smh.com.au/olympics/articles/2004/06/18/1089484305112.html
@import url("/olympics/css/athens_smh.css"); Welcome to 2004 Olympics. Skip directly to: Search Box Section Navigation Content
Why losers are the real winners
By Caroline Overington
September 30, 2000
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Olympic fans, ask yourself this: why did you enjoy watching Tatiana Grigorieva vault with the pole? No, besides that. Could it be the same reason you enjoyed watching Jai Taurima in the long jump? Michelle Ferris in the cycling? The little-known Justin Norris in the swimming pool? Perhaps it could. The real reason (okay, the other reason) you loved watching Grigorieva in the pole vault is that she jumped a personal best. Put aside her obvious beauty (and the way she silenced 110,000 sports fans by placing a manicured finger to bee-stung lips). Put aside the silver medal (and the email called The Silver Medallist that is doing the rounds). What, really, is the sporting point? It is that Grigorieva did better than she had ever done before. Sure, American Stacy Dragila went higher and broke a world record. Bully for her. Grigorieva was also making history. Her own history. She jumped 4.55 metres and stunned herself.

114. SportsKnowHow.com - History Of Tennis - Page 2 Of 3
SportsKnowHow.com tennis history - Page 2 of 3. Women first played Olympictennis in 1900. “Chattie” Cooper of Britain won the gold.
http://www.sportsknowhow.com/tennis/history/tennis-history-2.shtml

SportsKnowHow.com Home
Tennis Home ennis History
SportsKnowHow.com - TENNIS HISTORY - Page 2 of 3
Vying for the Prize
Tennis competitions quickly attracted more and more participants and spectators. By the early 1900s, the game had become truly international and the best players were traveling to tournaments in other countries. The International Lawn Tennis Federation (now the ITF after the word lawn was dropped) was formed in 1912 with 13 member countries. The first Davis Cup competition between a team of Americans and a Team of British tennis stars was played in 1900. The team competition was the brainchild of a young American player, Dwight Davis. The Americans won the first two Davis Cups. (The second competition was not played until 1902). Britain won the next four. Today, more than 100 countries vie for the Davis Cup. In 1923, Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman began a similar competition for women awarding the (can you guess?) Wightman Cup to the champions.

115. Track Star Gail Devers Makes Olympic History.
Gail Devers becomes the first woman in history to compete at 5 olympic Devers becomes only the 2nd woman in history to make 5 olympic teams in Track
http://athleticscholarships.net/track-field-olympic-devers.htm
Home About Us What We Do Questions ... Contact Us Track and Field. Gail Devers makes 5th Olympic Team Devers becomes only the 2nd woman in history to make 5 Olympic teams in Track NEWS RELEASE U S Track and Field. Sunday, July 18, 2004
For immediate release th Also winning Olympic Trials titles Sunday, the final day of competition, were Olympic gold medalist Stacy Dragila in the women’s pole vault, Alan Webb in the men’s 1,500 meters, Terrence Trammell in the men’s 110-meter hurdles, Shawn Crawford in the men’s 200m, Allyson Felix – at age 18 the youngest member of Team USA – in the women’s 200m, Jarred Rome in the men’s discus, Teresa Vaill in the women’s 20 km walk, and Carrie Tollefson in the women’s 1,500m. Over eight days of competition, 172, 230 fans saw an onslaught of new records set: two American, 11 Olympic Trials, eight U.S. championship, two U.S. junior, one collegiate, one U.S. all-comers, and three American U.S. all-comers records. The 1992 and ’96 Olympic gold medalist in the 100m dash, the 37-year-old Devers got off to her customary fast start, arriving at the first hurdle in first place. Joanna Hayes, who ran the second-fastest time in the world this year with her 12.50 in the semifinals, moved up over the last hurdles, but fell just two one-thousandths of a second shy Devers.

116. History Of Women In Sports Timeline - 2002
2002 Martina Hingis wins her fourth Toray Pan Pacific tennis title in six years 2002 - German women sweep the single luge at the Salt Lake Olympics as
http://www.northnet.org/stlawrenceaauw/time12.htm
to 1899
History of Women in Sports Timeline
Part 10 - 2002
"I wouldn't have thought in a hundred years that I'd be here."
- Kelly Clark of Mount Snow, VT, on her gold medal win
in snowboarding halfpipe at the Salt Lake City Olympics.
  • 2002 - Aileen Eaton becomes the first woman to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Eaton promoted more than 10,000 boxing matches in her career, from 1942-1980, many held in the Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles. Among the fighters she promoted were Sugar Ray Robinson, Floyd Paterson, George Foreman and Joe Frazier. (Eaton died in 1987 at age 78.)
  • 2002 - Jennifer Capriati wins her second Australian Open in Melbourne, beating Martina Hingis 4-5, 8-6 (9-5), 6-2. She becomes the first woman's champion to save four match points in a final, all in the second set. On-court temperatures hit 116 degrees.
  • 2002- Norway (2-1) wins the Four Nations soccer tournament held in China. Germany (1-1-1) takes second, the US third (1-1-1), and host China fourth with a 1-2 record for the tournament.
  • 2002 - Martina Hingis wins her fourth Toray Pan Pacific tennis title in six years, beating Monica Seles 7-6, (8-6), 4-6, 6-3.

117. History Of Women In Sports Timeline - Part 2 - 1900 - 1929
1900 The first 19 women to compete in the modern Olympics Games in Paris,France, play in just three sports tennis, golf, and croquet.
http://www.northnet.org/stlawrenceaauw/timelne2.htm
to 1899
History of Women in Sports Timeline
Part 2 - 1900-1929
"People said women couldn't swim the Channel but I proved they could."
Gertrude Ederle
  • 1900-1920 - Physical Education instructors strongly oppose competition among women, fearing it will make them less feminine.
  • 1900 - The first 19 women to compete in the modern Olympics Games in Paris, France, play in just three sports: tennis, golf, and croquet. Margaret I. Abbott is the first American woman to win an Olympic gold medal. An art student in Paris, she won the nine-hole golf tournament by shooting a 47.
  • 1900 - May Sutton is America's first woman tennis player of international reknown. She wins the Pacific Southwest Championship at age 13.
  • 1900 The first women's ice hockey league is organized in Quebec with three teams from Montreal, one from Quebec City, and another from Trois-Rivieres.
  • 1901 - Field Hockey is introduced to women in the United State by Constance M. K. Applebee , a British physical education teacher. She presents a hockey exhibition at Harvard University.
  • 1901 - Annie Taylor, 43, becomes the first person to go over Naigara Falls in a custom-built barrel and live. She couldn't swim. Her comment on being retreieved: "Nobody ever ought to do that again."

118. Indiana University Athletics - Traditions
IU s olympic heritage is continuing in terms of competing and coaching. a record believed to be unmatched in any sport in olympic history.
http://iuhoosiers.collegesports.com/trads/ind-trads-olympians.html

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Olympians
Indiana University's Olympic Participants:
IU's Olympic heritage is continuing in terms of competing and coaching. In Athens, six individuals with ties to IU represented the United States, while one former IU athlete represented the host-country, Greece.Here is a brief recap of how each individual fared at the 2004 Olympic Games:
  • Cassandra Cardinell along with former Hoosier All-American Sara Hildebrand finished seventh overall after faltering on their first dive of the finals of the synchro 10-meter event. The tandem scored only a 31.80 on their first dive of the evening before rebounding to finish seventh with a score of 302.22. The tandem scored an 80.58, their top score of the Olympics, on their most difficult dive.
  • Sara Hildebrand wrapped up her Olympic Game competition in the finals of the 10-meter platform with a 10th-place finish overall. She scored 62.37 points on a 2 1/2 reverse somersault in the tuck position on her first dive. Hildebrand then netted 69.12 points on her second dive with an armstand back double somersault with 1 1/2 twists in the free position. In rounds three and four of the finals, Hildebrand missed with scores of 46.53 and 55.68. Once again, the former three-time Big Ten Diver of the Year scored her best dive on her last attempt. In the fifth and final round of the finals, Hildebrand did a back 2 1/2 somersault with 1 1/2 twists in the pike position for 6.5s, 7.0s and 7.5s. Her fifth round total was her only dive over 70 points at 70.38. She finished the event with a score of 484.77.

119. 2005 AAU Junior Olympic Games History
This marked the first time in the history of the AAU Sports Program that two Since its beginning in Washington, DC, the AAU Junior olympic Games have
http://www.aaujrogames.org/history.html
For sport specific info
select a sport below!
Pick A Sport Baseball Baton Twirling Beach Volleyball Boys Basketball Cheerleading Dance Drill/Clogging Field Hockey 7 on 7 Football Girls Basketball Golf Gymnastics Indoor Soccer Inline Hockey Jump Rope Karate Powerlifting Softball Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Trampoline/Tumbling Weightlifting Wrestling
Midwest Trophy

AAU Rings PAST PICTURES AND RESULTS
Since its beginning in Washington, DC, the AAU Junior Olympic Games have been conducted in 15 states and 24 cities across the United States. The state of Tennessee is in the lead with five (5) AAU Junior Olympic Games to its credit. Florida is a strong second with four (4), all in different cities: Cocoa Beach, Jacksonville, St. Petersburg, and Tallahassee. In the nineties alone, the Games have grown by more than 6,000 participants. The Games will continue to expand and flourish into the 21st century as the popularity of sport and the attention to the youth in America intensifies. In 2000, the event broke all existing records for participation with over 13,000 athletes from all 50 states and several U.S. Territories and U.S. Military Bases around the world. One thing that remains consistent from year to year is the AAU's commitment to the youth of America. Sports for All, Forever!

120. Stanford GSB History: GSB Athletic Champions
Stanford Business School was well represented at the 1932 Olympics with a swimmer He also runs four miles a day, all year long, and plays tennis several
http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/history/timeline/athletes.html
GSB Athletic Champions
(This article appeared in Stanford Business School's alumni magazine in the Fall 1980.) “Blazin’ Ben” Eastman, MBA '35, Olympic track star
Perhaps the best known GSB alumnus athlete is Benjamin Bangs Eastman, MBA'35, who has been referred to as the greatest, middle distance runner of his time. "Blazin' Ben," as he was called on the Farm, set six individual world records in his heyday—440 yards, 400 meters, 880 yards, 800 meters, 500 yards, 600 yards, and anchored a four-man Stanford relay team to a world record. His achievements brought him to the cover of the July 11, 1932 issue of Time. In a profile in which his running style and training methods, as well as his track achievements, were described, Time said of him, “If U.S. track coaches had been trying to pick an Olympic team last week, there was one name which they surely would have chosen—Benjamin Bangs Eastman.
Frank Booth, MBA '34, Olympic swimmer

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