Tennis column, Personal touch is now guaranteed
It’s a win-win situation for Tennis Town USA, otherwise known as
Newport Beach, with the sale of the Newport Beach Tennis Club.
After some shaky years, the club is planning to become the tennis and
social hot spot of the town with a new owner and an invigorated approach.
“What I want to do,” new club owner Steve Joyce said Friday, “is create a
real fun, service-oriented environment. (Members) pay dues and I want to
make sure they’re happy and having fun with the money they’re spending.
My staff is very service-oriented and we want to make sure everybody gets
what they want.
“Our goal is to make the highest maintenance person happy.”
The club, sold to Joyce from Julianne Ren, features 19 lighted courts, a
full-service bar, pool, restaurant, lounge and two locker rooms. It will
soon add a pro shop, said Joyce, who wasted no time selecting former
touring pro Scott Davis as the new director of tennis.
“Newport Beach Tennis Club will become the club of choice,” Von
Simindian, a high-level club player who owns Paramount Tennis in Costa
Mesa, said on Aug. 10, before the deal was complete.
Joyce, who took over Nov. 1, said the first task he did was take “a fire
hose to (the facility)” and clean it. The new owner/operator said a
revamping of the pool deck is next, along with the addition of an
innovative salt water system for the pool, which doesn’t require chlorine
and is better for your skin, he said.
The club had about 650 members when he purchased it and 50 new members
have already been added. Initiation fees have been waived until Feb. 1.
“It’s new, it’s exciting and I’ve been around here a long time and a lot
of people know me and I have a lot of friends,” Joyce said of the reason
behind NBTC’s membership increase. “I really want to turn this into a fun
and social environment.”
For the last several years, Newport Beach Tennis Club played second
fiddle to Palisades Tennis Club as the club of choice in Newport Beach.
But, now, with a full orchestra, Joyce intends to pump up the volume.
“Steve’s going to bring that club to where it should’ve been for a long
time,” Palisades Club owner/operator Ken Stuart said Friday. “His focus
is different than mine. My focus is private-club exclusivity with tennis;
his (goal) is a real high-end social scene with a focus on the bar and
restaurant. I wish him the best and hope he’s successful, and I hope he
brings that facility back to its one-time status.
“It’s good for the industry. The better he does, the better I do; and the
better I do, the better he does. It raises the standard (among private
tennis clubs), not just here, but countywide.”
Many longtime Newport Beach members and employees are thrilled with the
new owner.
“Everyone’s excited here,” longtime NBTC administrator Norma Veal said.
“We’re already seeing changes and there’s a lot of activity. This (sale)
will be fantastic. We have to wait a few more months, but the club is on
its way to being a premier club.”
Joyce said Newport Beach real estate broker Bob Laskey was responsible to
handling the negotiations and bringing the two parties together.
Hank Lloyd’s Costa Mesa Tennis Center, already under the auspices of the
United States Tennis Association as an Orange County-based area training
center, received a ringing endorsement Friday from former U.S. Davis Cup
captain Tom Gullikson, who visited the facility and oversaw the weekly
practice session featuring some of Orange County’s top boys and girls in
the 16s and 18s.
“Now, with Gullikson giving us his stamp of approval, it just makes our
facility more recognized (as an official USTA Area Training Center),”
Lloyd said.
Gullikson, who made his first trip to the courts adjacent to TeWinkle
Park, is now the USTA’s Director of Junior Player Development.
Elliott Telscher, Costa Mesa head pro and USTA regional coach, conducted
a shootout with Gullikson Friday, with the winner earning a wild card
into the qualifier at the men’s USTA Challenger at Burbank. The qualifier
is Dec. 4-5.
As if University of Mississippi-bound Newport Harbor High standout Audra
Adams doesn’t have enough on her plate heading into Thanksgiving, she has
secured a second straight year with her mother, Dorsey, as the top-ranked
mother-daughter tennis team in the nation.
The Adams family defeated Leslie Damion and her mother, Patricia, of
Corona del Mar, in the finals of the recent USTA National Mother-Daughter
Hardcourt Championships at the Waldon Racquet Club near Houston.
It is the third USTA gold ball for the Adams duo. Dorsey, 42, and Audra,
17, repeated as champions at Montgomery, Texas.
Audra Adams will play in the CIF Southern Section Division I team finals
Monday for the Tars; Leslie Damion was part of the Pacific Coast League
championship doubles team this season for Corona del Mar (with Kristen
Griffith).
Wonder if next time the mother-daughter teams compete they can stay a
little closer to home?
Eight schools from outside California have committed to the inaugural
National High School Boys Tennis Championship next March at Palisades
Tennis Club.
Tim Mang, Corona del Mar High boys tennis coach and longtime seedings and
tournament chief for Ojai and CIF, believes the event will become “the
Ojai of Newport Beach.”
The Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament in the springtime is the oldest amateur
tournament in the U.S. The event’s traditions of afternoon tea and the
aroma of orange blossoms have given it a special charm. Perhaps the
Newport Beach event can feature sand, sailing and sunsets.
Headquarters for the national team tennis championship will be the Irvine
Hyatt Regency. (Sounds like some local hotels might miss out on a good
thing.)
Danielle Scott, an ex-touring pro from CdM who now owns a marketing firm,
is involved in the tournament and looking for sponsors. Details: (949)
717-7710.
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