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#1 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 703
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Just wondering - now that i am a senior - man - i hate getting old.
but anyway - i have found that i love going back to my older racquets. now that i have passed the 60 year mark - been playing since 1967 when we played with the old wooden racquets - they must have weighted at least 14 or 15 oz back then. i went to the wilson T-2000 and T-3000 then back to wood again. stopped playing for several years and then came back to a mid size head racquet then on a wilson hyper hammer. that thing weighted all of 9.6 oz - my arm has never fully recovered. now back the prince, fischer and wilson heavier more flexable racquets. love them. how about other senior players. what has been your racquet journey and have you came back to the classics as well????
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I have nothing to say, ... You know me, Tracy, I'm a low-key guy. Jimmy Connors |
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| jimanuel12 |
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#2 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 3,169
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I started out with a Spalding Goncho Gonzales wooden model.
Then went to a Bancroft Borg model- still wooden. PK Bronze Dominator- played with it 12 years Volkl V1 - played with it about 6 months Volkl C10 Pro Tour - still using it off and on Technifibre VO 2 Max XL- using this off and on Kneissl Tom's Machine- ( green version) using it off and on The last three mentioned are the ones I carry with me when I play. I bring two of each to the courts. I consider the C10 Pro Tour more of a classic weighted racquet. I have mine wighted up to 13.6 oz, the Technifibre at 13.5 oz and the Kneissl at 12.5 oz. To me they have that old school feel to them. Last edited by mctennis : 07-06-2011 at 09:00 PM. |
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#3 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 127
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hi - depends what you mean by senior i guess, but i'm about to turn 40 so thats senior to me. started out in about 1983 tennis wise:
max200g (amazing) puma becker super (amazing) fischer stan smith superform (ridicluous idea) volkl world cups (yellow) slazenger panther pro ceramic (best results ever aged 17 / 18 with these) volkl some others cant remember yonex widebody things, yellowy white colour, both cracked, rubbish dunlop revelation pro 90s (loved these) prince synergy 24? (crap) head prestige (not bad) head i prestige (as above) babolat pure drive (almost gave them away) volkl c10 pro (armache after these) wilson ps 6.0 (good for a set or so then got tricky) estusa / puma again POG )also v good) dunlop AG 200 etc (average) back to max 200g (joy) now firmly Kneissl white star to stay. although i have of course started recollecting everything again faves? max 200g, puma becker pros and kneissl white stars. until i started with the white stars i was scornful of the new stuff, and was happy with the max 200g. i cant believe i used to haul those around aged 13 / 14 / 15. thanks |
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| michael valek |
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#4 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Loganville, Ga.
Posts: 255
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Started off with an old McGregor woodie. Don't remember the model.
some strange aluminum racquet (maybe Rawling's?). Tensor steel. Jack Kramer Autograph Yamaha YFG 30 30 year layoff cheap Wilson Advantage 110 Dunlop Black Max OS (thrift store find) Head FXP Radical Tour Head MG Radical OS (current) I've always been a cheap racquet ho... |
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#5 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 703
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Quote:
i got most of mine back in the winter for about $10.00 or so.
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I have nothing to say, ... You know me, Tracy, I'm a low-key guy. Jimmy Connors |
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| jimanuel12 |
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#6 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 356
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Yes, similar - heading well into super seniorhood. It all started with a Spalding woodie - so many after that - two stand out: Kramer Pro Staff wood and Head Master...
Spent too, too mamy years trying to play the "new" stiff & light stuff - almost quit the game... Then better with a Head Microgel Midplus (with lead)and loose natural gut. Plays OK with traditional strokes. Then, the heavens opened, and I stumbled upon some classic 80's softer stuff and the game is fun and predictable again. Yes, I can hit hard and flat and the ball will stay in... too much fun again... Last edited by Frankc : 05-18-2012 at 02:41 PM. |
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#7 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,765
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Spalding Smasher(Pancho stick) was the first racket I purchase, Wilson woods in college ending with the Cliff Richey Ultra, Ashe comps, Yamaha YFG's 30,50 & 70. Kawasaki Rulers to CP001s(mid), then back to YAMAHA Ceramics. White Star Twin Pro Kennex Silver ace then the Ceramic Destiny.
Settled on the Prince _port frames for the last five years.
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GAMMA 4000 + WISE | PRINCE SPEEDPORT GOLD |
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#8 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 2,254
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my journey revolves always around the most demanding racquets no matter my age at all
Hey Seniors challenge yourself each time you step on the court otherwise your game is gonna go down the hill pretty fast!
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if you focus on the results, you will never change. If you focus on change, you will get results |
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#9 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 3,169
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Very well said. It is so easy to stand there and slap at the ball or push it back over the net. Good wake-up call.
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#10 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 2,254
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^ that's truly what I think....I'm almost 53, still among the fastest guys in the club where I play. I have the endurance to play couple of hours a singles match or whatever is necessary to finish it.
Common Seniors kick some ***.... you still can!
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if you focus on the results, you will never change. If you focus on change, you will get results Last edited by blackfrido : 12-24-2011 at 06:42 PM. |
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#11 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Austin, hook 'em, Texas
Posts: 2,033
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Like some others, I started with a Spalding Pancho Gonzales($5.65 @ Western Auto!), bought a NINE dollar Gonzales a year or so later and then the Spalding Smasher. The early '70s brought all sorts of new shapes and constructions. Fortunately, I started working in a tennis shop in '72. The list of rackets I actually played with would fill a few pages in this thread, I reckon.
I have 'replicated' some of those early models from my tennis 'youth'. The original Gonzales, couple of Smashers, T3000, Arthur Ashe Competition from the earliest years; Yonex YY7500, Rawlings Tie Breaker, Red Head, Slazenger Professional(wood), Fischer Superform from the later '70s. Could fill a room IF I had kept all my personal playing frames from my rep days with Rossignol, Pro Kennex, Dunlop, Yonex, Puma and Yamaha. The only frame I actually have from those days is a prototype Kennex Micro Mid. Enjoyed playing with that stick off and on for a year. Still hit it from time to time. |
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#12 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 581
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I started out with a $2.00 wooden racket from the dime store when I was 12 and just learning the game.
After a few years I got a $7.00 Wilson (wood press included) from a Sporting Goods store. It had black and white trim and *red* strings! I played with that racket until sophmore year in college when I lost in an intramural tournament to a T 2000. I bought a used T 2000 and played with that until senior year when I lost to an Arthur Ashe Competition. I bought *that* AAC, made the tennis team as a walk on, and earned a varsity letter. I played with that racket from then on until entering a layoff period when I only played maybe once or twice a year for the next 30. During the second half of that layoff, I dabbled with a Becker Super, Prince Pro 110, and a Prince Precision Graphite before ending my long layoff and joining up with some serious weekend players a couple years back. Since then, and after joining TT, I learned about and acquired some used POGs. The 90, OS and LB, all of which are "serving" me well. However, in the last few months I've done a 360 and have been playng with wood again. I found a Jack Kramer Autograph, the racket the best players in my college conference were using at the time, and I love it. I'll be hitting with it come spring, and can't wait to see how I play with it. I think I'll do fine as long as I don't come up against a T 2000… |
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#13 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 136
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I've been hitting with my Spalding GC 20 this racquet has a filled core in it like the new Donnays . The GC20 is very solid with great vibration dampening.
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| buffalobill3 |
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#14 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 323
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I started playing around 1970 at age 11, using one of my dad's old woodie's. He gave me a Rosewall seamless at about age 13, that I beat the crap out of. It was replaced by a Stan Smith W, and a Maxply Fort that carried me thru college. Not much Tennis to speak of until my 17 year old step son got me playing again a few years ago. Started with a 110 Prince, and shortly to a 100", then a ""player's" Ozone Pro Tour 100 18 x20", then recently a PK "Laver Type C 93 Mid..." I am finding much love in the "old school" approach.
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#15 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 703
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Quote:
i was beating him on a regular basis until i hurt my arm again. from the other post, hurt my arm about 3 years ago using the darn Wilson never really fully recovered. now i am taking the ASTYM therapy - so let's hope for the best. hope to be playing again in a few weeks if i am lucky.
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I have nothing to say, ... You know me, Tracy, I'm a low-key guy. Jimmy Connors |
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| jimanuel12 |
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#16 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Austin, hook 'em, Texas
Posts: 2,033
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Quote:
It's not easy to do, but if you can figure out what strokes actually hurt your arm and can just do everything else, at least you could stay on the court. Back in the old days, I probably went three weeks without hitting a backhand(during my worst TE in the '80s). Got halfway decent at hitting 'off hand'(lefty for me). Hang in there!!! |
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#17 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 2,917
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kramer auto. 1966 to 1983 ... ultra II 1983-89 prestige pro 1989-92 fisher vacuum pro 92 98 ... 98 prestige pro 1998-2012 and pacific vacuum pro.
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#18 |
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Professional
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: the Netherlands
Posts: 875
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Well, I started off with an Indian Harma (Maxply look a like).
The rest is as follows: Spalding Specialist frame (No Idea) Snauwaert Alu 7005 Volkl Drive Slazenger X-100 Snauwaert Gerulaitis graphite Fischer Elliptic Oliver Blackbird Tecno Explosion 50 Donnay Pro One (TW re-issue) Mad Raq Ceramic 3 string Rox Pro Delta 2000 Head TT Radical MP MAX 200G Pro
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2x MAX 200G PRO, Nat.Gut/Ferry Force Super Touch at 58 lbs. |
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#19 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Posts: 1,470
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Quote:
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See my racquet collection at www.80s-tennis.com/pages/virginia-crawford.html and my addition to the Borg collection of the now rare Donnay Diamant. |
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#20 |
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Professional
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,423
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It's not the years, honey. It's the mileage.
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Is it solipsistic in here, or is it just me? |
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| Don't Let It Bounce |
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