tennis ball
Sunday, 24 May 2015
Louis Lumière: court maintenance French-style
Tuesday, 19 May 2015
Tennis Léo Lagrange: Bloomin' marvellous!
I was itching to try out the tennis courts at Léo Lagrange near the Porte de Charenton in the 12th arrondissement after visiting a flat just opposite. It wasn't exactly a court-side seat, but you could certainly see the stadium and it would be a two-minute walk at most. My husband wasn't keen on the area, but with the Bois de Vincennes on the doorstep and great sporting facilities a stone's throw away I felt he was writing it off too quickly. The Centre Sportif Léo Lagrange has just about everything you could ask for in a sports centre - football pitches, basketball and handball courts and an athletics track - and most importantly six tennis courts and also a practice wall. It is also the first place we have played that feels less like a huge municipal facility and more like an English tennis club with lots of lawns and flowerbeds to soften the hard lines with the woods of the Bois de Vincennes as a backdrop. A particularly pretty planting scheme along one side of the court reminded me I was missing the Chelsea Flower Show and it was Chelsea weather too - sunny, but rather blowy with the constant threat of a shower.
We had booked one of the five concrete courts, but the man on reception let us switch our booking to court number 6 - a green astroturf carpet with a liberal sprinkling of sand. We'd passed it on the way in and I wanted to try it as it is the closest thing I'll get to grass in Paris unless I can persuade someone to let me play on the court at the British Embassy. It took a bit of getting used to - the bounce wasn't great, but it made for an interesting game, forcing me to get to the net and volley with surprising success.
9 out of 10 for this court and with six to choose from you are relatively sure of a booking - though I'm not sure it will be enough to persuade my husband to buy the flat opposite!
68 Boulevard Poniatowski
75012 Paris
Friday, 15 May 2015
Tennis Jandelle: Birdsong in Belleville
It was busy, noisy and dirty with traffic and roadworks and crowds of people blocking the pavements - you could hardly walk down the road in the Rue du Faubourg du Temple and it wasn't much quieter up the hill on the Rue de Belleville. The restaurants were doing roaring trade, there were bins blocking the pavements - I couldn't imagine where they would squeeze a tennis court into this hubbub so I couldn't have been more surprised to see the quiet cul-de-sac Cité Jandelle with its unmade road and overhanging gardens.
8 out of 10.
Tennis Jandelle
15-17 Cité Jandelle
75019 Paris
Wednesday, 13 May 2015
Tennis Moureu-Baudricourt: A dazzling performance
Back to the concrete jungle around Place d'Italie for our game this morning. The architecture in that part of the city always makes me think of our years in East Berlin, but the French deserve some credit for including so many excellent sports facilities when they built their high-density housing projects and the Centre Sportif Charles Moureu has three indoor and three outdoor courts as well as four basketball courts and an athletics track.
It was another gorgeous, sunny day so we were playing outside on court number three - and for the bargain price of €5.40. The surface was the classic concrete block construction, but the court surface was in excellent condition as was the net, with a towering umpire's chair making me think matches must be played here.
Two small gripes, there was a wall at the back of one of the baselines on our court which meant balls could easily rebound and roll underfoot. The other problem was the glass roof of the reception area which on a bright, sunny day reflected blinding flashes of sun right into the eyes of whoever was serving in that direction.
Court rating: 7/10 and on a cloudy day 8!
17 Avenue Edison
75013 Paris
An unusual window box near Place d'Italie |
Sunday, 10 May 2015
Tennis Croix Nivert: Room to to manoeuvre
My friend and I had been Googling vintage tennis dresses on eBay and it was so warm I even braved my tennis skirt on the Metro ride across the city. It felt like a holiday weekend with the terraces of pavement cafes full of people enjoying a leisurely lunch even at 3pm. It was warm and sunny - perfect tennis weather.
Tennis Croix Nivert has just one outside court positioned between the apartment blocks and balconies. The space was so vast it felt as though two courts could have been squeezed in so it was a long way from the baseline and the tramlines to the outside netting - take plenty of balls or you'll walk a long way between points.
The surface was excellent - one on the best we've played on - with no cracks between panels to send the ball awry. If I have a gripe it is that the court also serves as a basketball pitch and handball court so there was a confusing number of lines leading to more than one suspect line call.
As it was we had a perfect Sunday afternoon game of tennis and I believe the Champagne had done its job knocking my husband off his stride so my son and I were once again victorious in our family four! My friend suggested an innovation - giving each court a mark. So this one was 8/10.
107 rue de la Croix Nivert
75015 Paris
Metro: Commerce
Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Tennis Bertrand Dauvin: High price a bit of a racket!
Our court was a single court and there were two more courts in the adjoining dome. The surface was the ever-popular concrete block construction which looked at first glance to have moss growing between the cracks though this turned out to be fluff from tennis balls. It was quite a contrast from last week when we played on the rooftop with a net overhead.
I played appallingly in the first set, losing 6-2 in spite of the fact that my partner had been working until 2am that morning. Fortunately there was time for a comeback and I won the second set 6 - 0 otherwise €17 would certainly have been too high a price to pay!
Tennis Bertrand Dauvin
12 rue Rêne Binet
75018 Paris
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)