Tennis: A winning Oscar and Felix tandem
Richard Dunn
Lenny Lindborg and Jim Nelson, longtime friends and doubles
partners, are an odd couple who make a great pair on the tennis court.
“Jimmy’s like a surgeon -- I’m like a hustler. It works pretty well,”
said Lindborg, a first-year player in the men’s 65s division, along with
Nelson, who plays at Palisades Tennis Club in Newport Beach.
Both players are part of an amazing collection of coastal Orange
County seniors who continue to roll up United States Tennis Association
championships as if the gold balls awarded to winners are made of the
real stuff.This year, for the second time as a doubles team, Nelson and
Lindborg captured the prestigious Grand Slam, winning USTA titles on all
four surfaces (hard court, grass, clay and indoors).
In 1990, they won a Grand Slam in the 55s, then did it again a decade
later, winning the USTA hard courts at Huntington Beach in July, the
indoors at Seattle in August, on grass in early September at Seabright,
N.J., and on clay in late September at Knoxville, Tenn.
“We really do have a lot of fun playing these tournaments, and when
you go to those national championships, it’s kind of like a reunion,”
Nelson said. “There’s a renewal of a lot of old friendships, while all
the players are very competitive. It’s not like on the pro tour, where
everybody’s on their own, they have their own entourage and don’t go out
to dinner with anybody. It’s a lot more friendly atmosphere.”
As players get older, of course, it becomes increasingly more
difficult to stay healthy. The aches and pains are sometimes bone on
bone.
But Nelson, Lindborg and other top senior men in the area, like
Newport Beach’s Bob Duesler, who plays with Nelson the most, have been
able to maintain their top rankings.
Last year, Lindborg underwent right knee surgery, but still played the
2000 campaign in pain. On Tuesday, he’ll have a second operation on the
knee, and if that doesn’t work it’s time for a total knee replacement.
“Lenny hobbled all year, but he played great considering his
condition,” Nelson said. “He’s a real horse. He’s 200-something pounds
and can fight through pain a lot more than I can. I’d be whimpering on
the sidelines.”
Lindborg is a power hitter, Nelson a finesse player.
“I try to hit through guys and try to use power,” Lindborg said.
“(Nelson) tries to use touch. He and Bob Duesler really have a got a nice
touch. I play a different game, but it works for Jimmy. I hit it hard and
he takes care of the net. I’ll hit it two or three times, then Jimmy will
slice a nice little angle and get the point.”
Nelson has won three Grand Slams in his men’s doubles career, his
first coming in 1982 with Duesler in the 45s.
Lindborg, who lives in Laguna Beach, owns the Lindborg Racquet Club in
Huntington Beach, but is hardly there. His visits are so infrequent, the
clerks at the front desk don’t even know who he is.
“One time, they asked me for guest fees, but it’s not their fault,”
said Lindborg, who usually plays at Laguna Niguel Racquet Club, Palisades
and the homeowners association courts in the Turtle Rock community where
Nelson lives.
Add Lindborg: “As you get older, center court gets farther away and
fewer people want to talk to you.”
Former Newport Harbor High standout Natalie Braverman played in a
qualifying round Sunday at the $25,000 USTA Women’s Challenger in
Haywood, Calif. Her older sister, Brandis, will play Tuesday in the main
draw.
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