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St. Louis Magazine - September, 2009
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In This Issue

Features

Web Extra: Early Hits The Public's Intellectual Best Dressed 2009 Think Again: STL Confidential Web Extra: Wine Notes Always on the Rise 15 Ways to Shop Smart in St. Louis Where'd You Go to High School?

Departments

From the Editor: On Balance STL Confidential The Buzz: Tennis, Everyone The Buzz: Battle of the Border The Buzz: Five Quick Things The Buzz: Office Space The Buzz: Ring of Fire The Buzz: Strange Folklore The Buzz: No Strings Attached First Shot: Raisin’ the Roof What It's Like...to Fly the Bunny Balloon The Buzz: Office Space Coming of Age Stylish Subtleties: Nicole Genovese Smart Shopper: For the Long Run Behind the Curtain: Theater Behind the Curtain: Film Behind the Curtain: Fine Art Behind the Scenes: Music Behind the Curtain: Poetry Behind the Curtain: Deutsch Country Days What We Talk About When We Talk About Wine Liquid Assets: Cellaring Wines Rose Revisits: Dressel’s Public House Review: In the Shadow of The Pageant… First Look: The Terrace View Kitchen Q&A: Eliott Harris Flashback: 1969 A Conversation With Judee Sauget
2009.11.21 - 2009 Beaujolais Nouveau Celebration
 Join us at our intimate French-American Bistro for a 2009 Beaujolais...
2009.11.28 - Mount Pleasant presents "Lucy Goes Cruisin" Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
Join Mount Pleasant for an evening of uproarious whodunit as only Lucy...
2009.12.03 - "GIFTED" Original Art for Holiday Giving
Skip the malls this year and make your gift giving a unique expression of...
2009.12.03 - Holiday Rooms in Bloom
The Historic Samuel Cupples House on the campus of Saint Louis University is...

The Buzz: Tennis, Everyone

The Buzz: Tennis, Everyone
Photograph by Kaufmann-Natale Photography

Why go to Flushing Meadows for the U.S. Open when there’s more intense championship tennis at Forest Park? September 1 through 6, smack in the middle of the better-known tournament, the 2009 U.S. Open USTA Wheelchair Championships run at Forest Park’s Dwight Davis Tennis Center.

“We’ve invited the world,” says Jim Dugan, co-founder of the competition’s local host, the Gateway Confluence Wheelchair Sports Foundation. “It’s an international championship, and this is its 30th year.”

So doesn’t wheelchair tennis require a lot of complicated rule changes? “Whoever’s using a chair gets two bounces,” Dugan says simply. “Oh, and a foot fault’s a wheel fault.”

He mentions a strong local contender in the lettered (not quite pro) division: “Brent Bicket. He’s a social worker; this is how he unwinds.” So we find Bicket, who spends hours wheeling around tennis courts like one of the Furies, slamming serves cross-court and arcing back for lobs...

You played wheelchair basketball on SIU Carbondale’s team. Why switch sports?
Basketball ran its course. I was totally focused on it for years.

What’s your favorite shot?
Forehand topspin. My backhand is a work in progress.

How do you handle high bounces?
Get back as deep as you can. But it’s a lot about recognition: You try to take the ball out before it gets too high.

What’s your overall strategy?
My biggest asset’s my speed. I get to a lot of balls.



How’s your serve?
Fourth or fifth match in a tournament, it gets good—and then it’s over.