Tennis began as a game of courts, clubs, lawns, and rituals, but it grew into one of the world's most recognisable sporting cultures. Net Gains: The Rise of Tennis in Sporting Culture tells the fact-based story of how tennis evolved from medieval handball games and royal court traditions into a global professional sport shaped by Grand Slam championships, national rivalries, television, technology, fashion, celebrity, equality campaigns, and mass participation.
From the birth of lawn tennis and the rise of Wimbledon to the Davis Cup, the Open Era, the Williams sisters, Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, modern women's tennis, public access, academies, data, and the digital court, this book follows the people, places, and changes that made tennis far more than a game. It explores how surfaces shaped styles, how players became cultural figures, how women fought for recognition, how technology changed officiating and preparation, and how tennis moved from elite spaces into parks, stadiums, screens, and everyday sporting life.
Written in a polished, narrative, fact-only style, this is a broad cultural history of tennis for readers interested in sport, society, competition, and the enduring drama of a ball crossing a net.
Trademark Disclaimer
This book is an independent, unofficial historical and cultural work. It is not authorised, sponsored, endorsed by, or affiliated with the International Tennis Federation, the Association of Tennis Professionals, the Women's Tennis Association, the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon, Roland-Garros, the French Tennis Federation, Tennis Australia, the Australian Open, the United States Tennis Association, the US Open, the Davis Cup, the Billie Jean King Cup, the Olympic Games, or any other tournament, governing body, federation, club, sponsor, broadcaster, brand, player, estate, or rights holder mentioned in the text.
All names, trademarks, tournament names, logos, event titles, organisations, and related marks are the property of their respective owners. Their use in this book is strictly for factual, descriptive, historical, and editorial purposes. No trademark ownership is claimed, and no association, approval, sponsorship, or endorsement is implied.