Dinard International | |
---|---|
Defunct tennis tournament | |
Tour | ILTF Circuit (1913-69) |
Founded | 1889 |
Abolished | 1969 |
Location | Dinard France |
Venue | Tennis Club de Dinard |
The Dinard International [1] also known as the Dinard Championships [2] or Championnats de Dinard and also known as the Dinard Cup or Coupe de Dinard was a combined men's and women's open clay court tennis tournament established in 1889 and was first played at the Tennis Club de Dinard, Dinard, France. The tournament became part of ILTC Circuit and was staged until 1968.
On 25 April 1879 the Dinard Lawn Tennis Club was founded [3] and in 1886 it began to organise competitions. [4] In September 1889 it established an open international tournament that quickly grew in importance and prestige. [5] In the early years of the event a challenge round was in play the with the men's players competing for the Dinard Challenge Cup, [6] a challenge round for women was in place from 1903 to 1907.
Tournaments winners at first was mainly dominated by players from Great Britain and Ireland until just before the start of World War I, when the first French winner of the gentlemen's singles was Max Decugis in 1910. [7] The French women were somewhat more successful their first singles title winner was Yvonne Prévost in 1899. [8] The most successful players were Britain's Wilberforce Eaves won the men's event ten times, [9] and French player Suzanne Devé who won the women's singles event six times. [10] The tournament was not held during World War I from 1914 to 1918. During the Second World War it was not held from 1940 to 1945. The event ran until 1968 when it was discontinued as part of the ILTF World Circuit.
Major Josiah George Ritchie was a tennis player from Great Britain. Major was his first name, not a military title. He was born in Westminster, educated at Brighton College and died in Ashford.
Wilberforce Vaughan Eaves MBE was an Australian-born tennis player from the United Kingdom. At the 1908 London Olympics he won a bronze medal in the Men's Singles tournament.
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The 1877 Wimbledon Championship was a men's tennis tournament held at the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon, London. It was the world's first official lawn tennis tournament, and was later recognised as the first Grand Slam tournament or "Major". The AEC & LTC had been founded in July 1868, as the All England Croquet Club. Lawn tennis was introduced in February 1875 to compensate for the waning interest in croquet. In June 1877 the club decided to organise a tennis tournament to pay for the repair of its pony roller, needed to maintain the lawns. A set of rules was drawn up for the tournament, derived from the first standardised rules of tennis issued by the Marylebone Cricket Club in May 1875.
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