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Hey, this is Shaun with the award-winning GoTennis! Podcast powered by Signature Tennis.

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Check us out at LetsGoTennis.com and we invite you to learn more about the award by following

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the link in the show notes.

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And as you're listening to this, please look in your podcast app where to leave a review

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and do that for us.

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We would love to earn your five star reviews.

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And now let's get into our recent conversation with Greg Caccia.

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Greg talks about balancing traditional club work with independent coaching, the challenges

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of nurturing future racket sports professionals and how the sport can evolve to keep players

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engaged longer.

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Have a listen and let us know what you think.

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Who are you and why do we care?

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I am Greg Caccia.

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I've been who am I?

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Wow.

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I go way back originally from New York and I could probably take up a full time talking

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about who I am.

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But I'll put it in a nutshell, I guess.

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Yeah, I grew up in the Northeast, New York.

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I grew up playing all sports, but tennis was my focus and my love, my passion, but played

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all sports and was fortunate enough to move to the southeast for college.

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Went to a small college, fight for university.

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Only one who offered me a tennis scholarship.

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So took it, had a good career there.

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And I played some minor league stuff after college, satellite tour out in California and

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Hawaii and a great experience there.

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And then got into the teaching profession as most guys who do don't quite succeed on tour.

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And then I was fortunate enough to get involved with Hamball and that brought me to Atlanta, 1996

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Olympics.

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I was fortunate enough to represent our country and team Hamball and people say, how does a

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Hamball player become a tennis player?

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Well, it was vice versa.

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I played tennis my whole life and I became a Hamball player.

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And then just, you know, I did sales for a number of years, 20 years, but always kept my

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foot in my hand in tennis.

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Thanks to Bobby.

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I helped Bobby out at Windom here, mainly as sort of a side hustle.

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And a couple of years ago, I decided to get out of corporate America, second best decision

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of my life, get out of corporate America and focus on my true passion, tennis.

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Yeah.

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I had a head pro at the Chattahoochi Country Club in Gainesville.

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I like it.

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And you have won an award this year.

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I'm not sure when this will actually publish.

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It might actually be in 2026 by the time this goes out.

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But 2025, you were nominated for and chosen as the American Racket Sports Association head

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pro adult head pro of the year coming out of Country Chattahoochi Country Club.

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That's fantastic.

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Yeah.

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Unbelievable.

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What a great surprise that was last week.

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You actually contacting me.

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I was shocked and honored and looking forward to the awards ceremony.

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Yeah.

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Absolutely.

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Absolutely honored.

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So this will be fun.

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Bobby, tell us a little bit about why you think Greg would have won an award like this.

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Because I can ask Greg, you know, how great is he?

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We assume is the guy he works for at Chattahoochi Scott Gates is going to say good things about

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what we hope he's going to say good things about him.

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So Bobby, you've worked with Greg a long time.

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He is one of your go to coaches that you won around as much as anybody.

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Tell us about him and why by him.

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Well, number one, dependable.

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You know, and you hate to downplay it, but dependable.

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We have a history.

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I mean, we literally grew up at the same academy.

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Now, the funny part is I don't think we really met.

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We had a mutual friend down here and we were playing each other in an out-of-match and

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a mutual friend who was dating Andre Janisak.

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So it's all within the tennis world introduced us.

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And here I am thinking of, well, even if we knew each other, he wouldn't remember me because

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I was about 125 pounds when I graduated high school.

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And I'm this working out guy now.

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And he goes, oh, you probably want to recognize me there.

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I was five nine when I graduated and I looked up, I was like, what happened to my eight

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inches?

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You know, so we both changed a little bit after high school.

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And once we met, we became very fast friends.

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We did the later part of our bachelor lives together.

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So we had a lot of fun.

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But again, great on the court.

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Somebody you're going to be lying to demands, commands respect from the people and very, very

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knowledgeable and an unbelievable competitor.

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I mean, again, it goes back to you.

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What you can't, you know, we went to that seminar all together on Friday and all the things

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they talk about that you, you know, you can and cannot teach.

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And I'll argue now to the end of time, you can't teach competitiveness.

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But Greg has got a fire.

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He's almost joining the club next year at 60, you know, near 60 that he still goes out and

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we want to, I had to do it.

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But, you know, he was hurt and we'd like to slow down, you know, but it's just once you

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have that, it's hard.

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You know, it's probably better that we're not at the same location because we had a third

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gentlemen with us that was kind of like our mediator because we're both pretty competitive

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and we don't respond well to lack of effort as well as our third Thad Arnold does.

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So Thad was a good balance for the two of us.

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But yeah, I mean, I trust to Greg.

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It gave me the opportunity to go to Atlanta Country Club and search that opportunity out

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and decide that that wasn't the right fit because I knew that Windomere was in good hands

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while I was running back and forth in the mornings.

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So, you know, like I said, great player, great coach, respect.

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When we were younger, the ladies absolutely loved him.

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I can tell you the first time we hung out story, as I always pre-emphasized that we were

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at, when we were at, they don't, jocks and jails, right?

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Yeah.

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We were at Jocelyn Jails during like quarter finals, you know, NCAA basketball and the manager

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comes up to our table and we're being good.

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But we had a big group of people and what he comes up is you guys got to get in out of

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here and we're like, we didn't do anything.

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And he goes, all my waitresses are useless.

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They keep coming by the table and see if you see the big guy with the blue eyes.

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Get him out of here.

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So I was like, wow.

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So he was the king as we know him.

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But we asked the king in question, this is really the closest thing I've come to Royalty.

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Thank you.

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Thank you for all you've done for me.

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I mean, we've worked together and yeah, it's been a great working relationship and not

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just working, but friendship we live together.

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So kudos to you as well.

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Thank you.

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Greg, you kind of balanced that between country club now and independent a little bit of both.

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How does that work?

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Atlanta's a fairly unique market with as many independent coaching opportunities as are

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the out there.

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Yeah.

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We're starting to see a little bit of an adjustment in the culture where country club types

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are able to kind of loan themselves out in the independent world or even the opposite

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where Bobby, the independent type is loaning himself out into other country clubs.

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What does that like for you?

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Yeah.

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Advantage is in disadvantages to both totally different mindset, you know, being independent

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versus country club.

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I had a situation actually a couple of weeks ago at my country club and I had a junior

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boy, a young boy, seven or eight.

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It just wasn't listening, just acting up, just disturbing the entire class.

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And if I was independent, that child would have been reprimanded, reprimanded, sent home,

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you know, which in retrospect we could have done anyway.

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But a little different at the country club, we have to, you know, sort of watch our peas

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and queues.

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You know, I don't want to say tied to the club, but you know, it's, it's, you just have

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to be careful.

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You know, we can't fire anybody as we used to say, how you still fire clients, right?

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Hey, you don't, you know, you don't fit in to my lesson plans.

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You don't, I don't enjoy my time with you.

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I'm not going to coach anymore.

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So that doesn't happen anymore.

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You have to take them as they come, but a lot of advantages to, I'm fortunate enough to

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do a little bit of both, but, you know, having, having the country club role has been, is

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great this time of year and the winter time.

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And a salary, of course, you have a split with the club dollar wise.

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So it sort of balances out, but advantages and disadvantages to both the other big one is

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the junior programs.

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We can't go outside the gates to bring in junior players.

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So you're kind of just having to have your program with whoever the membership is.

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So those are the things that sort of jumped to mind.

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And Bobby did a pretty good job of sharing some of your uniqueness, but I want to ask from

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your perspective, that second question we usually ask is, why are you unique?

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Is there anything about you that means you're not just another tennis coach?

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Yeah, I think, and we talked about it Friday at the meeting, you know, I think when people

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leave and come back and you see player kids that use to coach or now, you know, is taller

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than yours, you know, grown up, let's say they don't really remember, oh, you helped me

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fix my backhand, Bolly, right?

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Are you helping me fix my forehand on the line or my sir?

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It's more about, you know, I enjoyed playing, I enjoyed my time with you.

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I enjoyed, you know, your programs.

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I had fun, you know, while improving, while competing.

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I really think it comes down to enjoying our great game and really not losing sight of that,

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you know, being there for kids at all to them ever, whoever you're spending your time

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with, you know, it's almost like being a bartender, right?

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You have to, you know, being able to listen to their, as we all know, we hear a lot of stuff

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on every morning I go on the court, I'm hearing it all from the ladies and even the gentleman

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at night.

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So just being able to relate with people, I think, personality wise is sort of what sets

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me apart.

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And I enjoy that.

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It made me think, Bobby, we saw Wes recently as well, Wes Adam, another award winner this

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year, 2025 in the American Raga Sports Association, independent pro of the year.

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And he mentioned that when he was in that room, it was interesting for him because there

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were two guys there in the room that coached him when he was a junior.

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Was that right?

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And he was now coaching and it was kind of an interesting perspective for him and probably

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for them as well.

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But to see that as a coach, that's probably a wonderful feeling to realize there's someone

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you coached that became a coach because you've got to picture that as if I wasn't a good influence

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on them, they probably would have run away streaming, right?

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Joe, Joe's in a different path for sure.

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Yeah, I'm trying to think as we talk.

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A lot of kids come back that still play that have gotten, you know, good players and she,

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I don't know, Bobby, do we know?

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I can't think of anybody.

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It's actually turned around and become a coach since we've coached them.

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But in time, I'm sure it'll happen.

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We're getting up there.

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So it'll happen.

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Volume, volume will play out.

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Actually, Bobby, the Dave Chatterjee's son, I don't think he counts.

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You didn't work with him.

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I do not work with Dave.

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I don't work with Dave's though.

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That's true.

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So you can ask the father and the father.

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Yeah.

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Well, the funny part.

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And I didn't want to co-opt the meeting on Friday.

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But I really want, when they were talking about your influences, your past coaches, and

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because Greg and I shared a coach and I do, and it's funny because Wes is the same way.

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Wes and I share a mentor.

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And I see both of them is very reflective.

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Greg and I shared King Ben Austrian.

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And I told this story a thousand times to people that, you know, why didn't you play tournaments?

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I was like, well, because they were 25.

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That it could have destroyed me at the club.

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I didn't need to travel to lose.

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I was quite comfortable losing at match point.

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It was just one of those moments in time.

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And then this gentleman was just that.

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I mean, he wasn't loud.

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But he worked with his wife.

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And when you walked in there, you felt like you were family.

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And it was just amazing.

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And you were just so respectful of him because if you had to look at somebody and Greg knew

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him better because he was also a teacher at Bayshore.

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Am I correct there?

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Greg?

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Yeah.

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His brother Allen, twin brother.

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Yeah.

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So they got to see him in that environment as well.

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I saw him as a tennis coach.

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And you know, where I have a tendency to be a little more sarcastic.

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And flip a King was just, you know, you just felt good being there.

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You felt safe.

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You couldn't.

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There weren't enough walls.

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You could run through this guy.

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You know, through he would be on his wife's boots was just as, you know, I would remember

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it being sick one time.

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And literally, you know, when you weren't playing, she'd be putting a blanket around you.

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And it was just, you know, it was a great time to be 14 to 15.

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You know, if you ever look back at, you know, your influences, King would definitely be one

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of the people that I just was always just an off for just respect.

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He was amazing just just to just to, you know, expand on Bobby's point.

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He was number one in the world in the 60s, 65s, 70s, 75s, 80s, 85s.

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I mean, the guy played Mike Stillby playing.

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But number one in the world, the guy was just like Bobby said, he didn't say much.

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But when he spoke, people really, really listened.

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And I was fortunate enough to have him as my coach at match point at the club.

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And then my varsity genocime at Bay Shore Eye was his brother, Alan, another well-respected

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guy.

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So coach and teacher.

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So I was gosh, I don't think I could have had any better growing up as a junior.

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I'll look.

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We were contemporaries with his two daughters.

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The sons were older than us.

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But Jane worked out with us and Molly, who was my age, was, you know, major to win building.

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16s or quarter finals.

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Quarter finals.

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And she ended up going to, and it's all I'll never forget the last time I saw her because

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she ended up going to SMU.

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I went to TCU and we were coming home for Thanksgiving.

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And we ended up on the same plane sitting next to each other.

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In the small world of the party, I hadn't seen her since I was 15 or 16 and there she is

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sitting next to me on a plane.

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And we got to come back from Dallas together.

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And I was probably the last time I started getting because he met them at the gate.

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So long time.

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Amazing.

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Yeah.

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I have a friend who met his wife on a plane.

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They were those just sat next to each other, started talking and there you go.

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One direction and the direction back, which I found is interesting.

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Like there's a little bit of a little kiss met there.

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But I think we've covered who you are and I like the way you put that Greg in the beginning

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where you said we could probably spend a lot of time on that, which I can appreciate

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because that means you understand the volume that we can beat.

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It isn't just, well, I'm a tennis coach.

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Well, that's what you do.

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But who you are, if people really think about it, should be a difficult question to answer

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in a brief amount of time and you recognize that.

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So I appreciate that.

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Is there anything as we move toward finishing up here?

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Is there anything you have going on?

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I know you just wanted a ward.

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So you probably, you know, you're probably not a type to scream that from the rooftops.

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We're going to do that soon.

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But does Cheta Hootji, you don't have anything outward facing.

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You just finished your pro-amp.

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Is there anything you got you want to talk about?

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You have something in life that you like to discuss that you're passionate about?

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With me.

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Well, at work, I'll start with.

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We have a great pro-amp that we finished up with.

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Yeah, it's fantastic.

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Event, three days and what makes it great is our membership, but really houses all the

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pros and really dives in and just loves the event and it's just a really, really great event

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up there.

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I think the next big thing on our board is we have the Athens Cup Challenge where we play

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Athens Country Club every year.

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I took a team, actually, Scott put it on my plate last year and I chose the team, men and

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women, 12 men, 12 women, all different levels and we went out to Athens Country Club and

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then we won.

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So they're coming strong in February to come get us back at our place.

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So we host and then travel and we're hosting.

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So that's the next big event for us and we're having a $25 million expansion of our club.

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Everything's coming down.

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The blueprints look absolutely amazing.

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So we're moving the pickleball courts, adding pickleball will be keep the same eight tennis

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courts, three clay, five hard, but new buildings, new pools, new everything, $25 million project

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and that's going to start happening in the spring of 2026.

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And I mean other than that, I stayed busy as much as I can playing Alta mainly, a more singles

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these days and I really had fun with that.

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I think my pro league days are over.

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It's just too much.

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Friday nights is a bad, I'll say Friday nights is a bad time, but that's a lie.

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I'm just not good enough anymore.

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Those guys are too good.

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So the pro league's probably done, but I just, I enjoy the playing part.

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I just don't have time to practice much anymore.

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But hey, how great is this sport that we can play till we die?

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I mean, and we get nine years, we live nine years longer, racquet sports players.

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So it's the greatest, greatest game ever invented.

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And I mean, I just love telling my kids who played multiple sports, keep playing multiple

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sports, but make tennis one of them.

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You know, John McArrow's Academy, he tells them they go play other sports.

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So we should be telling our kids to play all sports.

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And at the end of the day, tennis, you'll be playing for the rest of your life if you choose

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so.

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Let me just help.

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We just help Greg real quick strong. So he doesn't get in trouble because he's actually a client

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of mine too.

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He is also in a new, wonderful relationship with someone.

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Lori.

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So you guys got to go to the airport to pick up.

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And so I just want to make sure that Lori gets her props during this little shout out.

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Nice.

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Well, that's going to, that's a thank you, Bobby.

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Let me go along.

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Thank you.

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We've got a couple of friends now at clubs that are doing major renovations upcoming.

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You got anything coming at Wendermere?

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You guys putting in any fancy new courts or getting your lights fixed there?

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What's going on?

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Well, we have great lights.

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I don't know.

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The ones that go out from time to time or they're state of the art when they were.

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Just a matter of whatever that happens.

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Just a different life.

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All right.

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You got anything else for Greg or should I hit him with King of tennis?

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Let's, we can go Greg King of tennis since he's got a little timeline.

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We can keep going, but let's do it.

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Sounds good.

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All right.

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So my last question and was become kind of our favorite question is the King of

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tennis question, which is Greg, if you were King of tennis, whether it was the whole world

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or just Atlanta or professional social, any aspect that you can picture, if you were

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King of tennis, if there is there anything you would do or chain?

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Yeah.

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I'm going to take it to the pro level.

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So I took, took a few notes actually and I think it's all about the fans, you know?

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And today's all of our major sports baseball has done a good job, I think.

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All our major sports.

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Fortunately or not, we could talk about that for hours.

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They're tweaking them right to make it, make it shorter and make it more fan friendly, I

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guess.

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And, you know, some of the purists and maybe some of our other guys, you know, don't like

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it, but I kind of do for me to sit and watch a baseball game for four hours.

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I'd rather, you know, watch grass grow.

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But I think just, I think playing Lets would be great.

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That's the first thing I came to mind in college, right?

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Lets, you know what?

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Half the time we can't tell if it was a letter, not anyway.

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So let's play all Lets.

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We play them during their alleys and I think you would add a little bit of excitement to

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the game.

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Play the Lets.

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I like this fast-for-format.

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We play it at our pro-am.

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Men and women can each play five best of five sets, fast-for format.

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I really enjoy that format again for the fans, trying to speed things up a little.

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And I think, you know, you know, we've all been the major events.

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You have to open or whatever it is, Miami open, right?

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This waiting outside of a court sitting there in the heat, standing there in the heat while

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they play 12-duce points and you can't go sit down.

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Give me a break.

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Let's let the people come and go as they want.

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Tennis players, if we have to start at some time, the only reason why it's quiet is because

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we grew up that way.

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We grew up playing in a quiet atmosphere.

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If we start changing it, we can certainly play in a noisy atmosphere.

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People are always comparing.

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Why can't tennis players play baseball and football or yelling and screaming?

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We could, but we just, we've grown up in a different environment, right?

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So why not, at some point, I think I would start it if I'm the king of tennis.

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Let's start it up.

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Let's make, I don't say make noise, but let people come and go.

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Let people go get their drinks.

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Let them come back to their seats.

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I mean, to stand outside the court for 25 minutes and miss a lot of tennis is kind of absurd

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to me.

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What do you guys think about that?

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I think the guys that intense will love it, first of all.

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I think I was speaking with John Hannah about, we were talking about all the things that could

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be massaged and no getting rid of the duce ahead was one thing that we were both like,

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again, tough with the purists, but like you said, I'm a baseball fan as well and we've said

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a thousand times.

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Since they went to the pitch, you know, the clock, it makes the game go so much faster.

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Yeah.

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It's a two hour, it's not four hours and it makes baseball a lot more fun.

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And I've gone to a lot more games over the last two years that I had in the previous 20

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because of that.

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And then it goes back to the biggest thing in great can validate this when we first got

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to wind him here.

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And I would play music on the courts, people are trying to play a match here.

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Now you literally go to wind him here and there's 12 different, you know, areas going on

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because everybody brings music now.

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So, you know, it's just a matter of changing the culture and getting used to it and realizing

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what background noise doesn't hurt, not at all.

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And it might even make you play better because it might make you relax.

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So, yeah.

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I think something else we could throw around is just, I don't know how to do it, but

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I think the lower levels, you know, the guys that are playing futures and these lower levels,

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how do we get them more financially secure to go on to the next event?

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To go, I mean, the money down there is just pathetic.

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And we all know players here in Atlanta that really, I think, could have played professionally

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and maybe succeeded, but they just didn't have the funds to do it.

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So how do we get more money in their pockets?

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How do we, you know, I don't know the answer.

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I'm just throwing it out there because it just doesn't seem like it's, I mean, I think

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the USDA and they choose certain players to focus on and to coach and they get well taken

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care of.

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But what about the guys that are, you know, are not on that team, aren't inflarded with

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the USDA and, you know, you know, struggling out there, ranked 1500 in the world, 18, 2000

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in the world.

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I mean, these are amazing players.

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If they could continue to play, you don't know what they can do.

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So I just think more money for the lesser players.

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I know joke of it was involved with it.

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He was trying to have a push that way a number of years ago, but I haven't heard anything

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much about it since.

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Right.

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We've had that, that's come up a lot and it's something that we completely agree with.

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And it's, I mean, just this weekend, you look at basketball, for instance, I watched

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OKC last night, you know, and if they're not a juggernaut with everybody, well, they got

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a third string center that was playing some minutes because the Hardenstein, their number

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one center has been out, guys, 29 years old.

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And he's been out of the league, you know, been just jumping around and now he's been playing

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the last two years because there's enough money in other areas and the guy that Golden State

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brought up, a guy that was a professional lacrosse player and just decided it like 26.

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I'm going to go play basketball.

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And there was avenues to doing it.

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Look at Greg, somebody who grows from, you know, five, nine, to six, five over four years,

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in 18, they might not have been looking and now they're going to send it to 22, they're like,

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well, what the heck?

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But, you know, how do we help them get to that spot?

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So, yeah, nobody gets better now playing.

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So if we can keep the sticks and people's hand, we might see some of those achievements

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as well and tennis.

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People mature differently at different times.

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I mean, look at these quarterbacks in the NFL and ones from the New York teams, everybody

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thinks they stink.

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Well, they played, you know, 15 games.

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Now they're playing 30, 40, 50 games.

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You know, they're doing great and Arnold's a great, a very good quarterback and, you know,

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Daniel Jones until he got hurt yesterday.

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Guys, everybody matures differently.

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You can't look at somebody in a minute setting and say, oh, he stinks and he's never going

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to make it.

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You don't know that.

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You got to give people time to mature and to improve.

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So, yeah, I think a little bit more of that and maybe US tennis, US tennis is doing well,

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but everybody in this country wants champions.

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So, I think we'll get it with Ben, but we'll see.

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And then the 250 events going away.

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I'm not so sure.

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That's a good thing.

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It's all about money.

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I get it.

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They want to make these two-week events kind of morph them into men's and women's thousand

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events, but the 250's were really good for these lower level pro players.

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I mean, these are guys that need to do those two-

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He's so, I think those need to stick around as well.

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I love it.

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I love it.

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We'll add it to the list, Bobby, if a good idea is made.

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But Greg, I appreciate your time.

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Thanks so much.

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We've been talking about doing this for a while.

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Really appreciate you taking the time to tell us about who you are and what you're doing

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now.

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Bobby's always, thank you.

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I appreciate it.

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Gentlemen.

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Well, there you have it.

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We want to thank reGeovinate.com for use of the studio and signature tennis for their

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support.

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And with that, we're out.

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See you next time.

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