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A Historical Background
Within a year of the first Wimbledon Championships, the citizens of
Melbourne, Australia had embraced with enthusiasm the new sport of lawn
tennis. In its infant years the Melbourne Cricket Club controlled the
game. In 1892 the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, known as the Lawn Tennis
Association of Victoria, was formed to take over administration of
tennis in the colony of Victoria.
Melbourne born Norman Brookes' sensational Wimbledon victory in 1907,
followed a month later with his capture of the Davis Cup in partnership
with New Zealander Anthony Wilding, was a turning point in the Club's
development. Courts were rented for the first time at the Albert Ground
in St Kilda Road to stage Australia's first Davis Cup, for which
Brookes, a member of the Association's Council, was the sole selector
and mainstay of the home team.
After the First World War tennis received a further impetus following
the two Wimbledon Singles victories in 1919 and 1922 of Gerald
Patterson, another Melburnian. To accommodate the growing popularity of
the game a seventeen-acre site was purchased in the Melbourne suburb of
Kooyong (from the Aboriginal word kooyongkoot meaning 'the haunt of the
wild fowl'). Twenty lawn courts were laid out, and a clubhouse and
concrete stadium built to host Kooyong's first Australian Championship
in 1927.
In the following years the Kooyong courts were graced by a succession of
international players. Prominent among these were Jean Borotra,
Ellsworth Vines, Fred Perry and Donald Budge whose victory over John
Bromwich in the Victorian Singles Championships at Kooyong in 1937 paved
the way for his Australian title victory and the first leg in his
historic Grand Slam.
After the Second World War Kooyong was the venue for seven memorable
Davis Cup Challenge Rounds, the most famous of which took place in 1953
when teenagers, Lew Hoad and Ken Rosewall defeated the Americans, Tony
Trabert and Vic Seixas. Kooyong's last Challenge Round in 1986 saw
Australia defeat Sweden after two notable singles victories by Pat Cash.
The next year the Australian national titles were played for the last
time on the Kooyong grass centre court after which the venue was
switched to the high-tech National Tennis Centre in Flinders Park. By
then the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club had ceased to be responsible for the
day to day administration of tennis in Victoria and had embarked on a
program of progressive upgrading of its facilities to meet the demands
of a new generation of members.
The AAMI Classic, held each January before the Australian Open,
regularly attracts leading international players and maintains the
Club's tradition as an internationally significant tennis venue.
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