Jimmy Dunn

It was another spectacular Jimmy Dunn weekend just before Thanksgiving. One hundred and sixty-eight players came to the Racquet Club of Philadelphia to play in one or more of the five draws (squash singles, squash doubles, racquets singles, racquets doubles and court tennis doubles).

I entered four of them, everything but my oldest sport, squash singles—I didn't do it mostly because being in five draws is a scheduling nightmare, especially if you end up winning a match or two, which wasn't likely but you never know. In the tennis, my partner Jon Crowell and I played mediocrely and lost our two matches. The two RCOP (my wife likes to call the club "our cop") pros, Barney Tanfield & Rob Whitehouse, won the open division for the third straight year, a remarkable feat.

In the racquets, Jack Shields, a young Pommie, again won the doubles draw, called the Jock Soutar after the former RCOP pro. Last year, he won the Soutar with Alcicia Turner, making it the first time in racquets history, we believe, that a woman won a racquets tournament. This year he took it in a very exciting five-gamer with Tim Proctor.

Because of that extended final, my semi-final in the 40+ squash dubs was delayed about an hour. But Proctor gracefully came next door and he and I won 3-1 and then an hour later won our finals, also 3-1. Three shirts and three wins for Proctor. That is par for the course at the Jimmy Dunn—a lot of laundry. And some looks of "of course" as everyone saw the Proctor & Zug team at the far right of the draw, but thought of Tim's brother and my father.

Speaking of national squash doubles champions, how about the ageless Rich Sheppard? Rob Whitehouse & the young Todd Ruth lost in the finals of the squash dubs open draw 3-1 to Imran Khan & Sheppard. Shep won his first of two national titles in 1987. I was in high school then and now am in the 40+ draw.

The Jimmy Dunn tournament was begun in 1980, while the fiery Irishman was still in the midst of his half-century reign as the pro at RCOP. It was originally a pro-am tennis tourney. A dozen years ago, Whitehouse absorbed the Racquet Club Invitational, a squash dubs touney, and started the Soutar. At 168, this was the largest Dunn weekend yet, and with a black-tie stag dinner and a black-tie dinner-dance, it managed to be quite a busy social weekend.

Like always, some of the talk off-court returned to Dunn himself. As he said to one overly confident neophyte tennis player, with a Camel cigarette dangling from his mouth, "Done? I'm Dunn. You just got started. You won't be finished learning the game for years. Now get outta here."

One thought on “Jimmy Dunn”

  1. I heard a story about Jimmy Dunn. WHen he first went to work at the RCOP Jock Soutar was the head pro. Jimmy was an irish kid from PHilly . Soutar , a fabulous racquets, court tennis and squash player, looked at this scrawny kid and said to him " You’re Irish, you’re a redhead and you’re a lefty. You’ll never make it. " I guess he was wrong. I took a court tennis lesson once from Jim Dunn. He was a stern taskmaster. I don’t remember too much from the lesson , but I do remember two things he said:1. " For chrissake keep your eye on the ball. " and 2. " WHen you get a fat ball on the service side, just push it at the base of the tambour. Your opponent will probably be crap because you’re just a beginner and he won’t get it back."So true…

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