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General About

Club Management

Management
Epsom Lawn Tennis Club is a section of Epsom Sports Club Ltd. Helped by the Club Manager, the tennis section is run by the Tennis Club Committee, elected at the AGM held in the Spring each year. The names and contact details of the current Committee are displayed in the tennis clubhouse.

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Serious about Child Protection

The "Serious about Child Protection" accreditation scheme is run by the Leisure Developments

We have included an overview from the Epsom-Ewell website regarding this scheme.

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Club News

Regular updates are sent out to members via Email with details of events and results.  If you do not have Email, paper copies of news are put on the club noticeboard. Upcoming events are also shown on our website.

 

Playing facilities

Epsom LTC has twelve courts:

  • 5 grass courts; used from May to September, subject to the weather (open from 10.30am until dusk)
  • 5 artificial grass courts (3 with floodlights)
  • 2 macadam hard courts (with floodlights)

All other courts may be used from 8am until 10pm.

Additionally, there is a practice wall behind Court 12.

 

Teams

We run several adult teams throughout the year for ladies, men, veterans and mixed, entering league and knock-out competitions. Match practice is held on Wednesday evenings for team members only . If you would like to try out for a team contact the Ladies or Mens Captains, whose details are displayed on the clubhouse noticeboard.

 

Visitors

Adult members may invite visitors to play on payment of a visitor’s fee each time they play. Current visitors fees are £5 for adults and £2.50 for under 18's. The fee should be handed to a Committee Member or the Head Coach with the accompanying list being signed.. Each visitor may play up to three times in a season. Junior visitors may only play as a guest of an adult member.

 

Our History

As with most older Lawn Tennis clubs, Epsom derived from the game of croquet, which began in the 1850s, being played on the lawns of Woodcote House adjacent to the present premises.

By the 1870s croquet was in decline with the advent of the bouncing rubber ball and, as with the All England Club at Wimbledon, tennis began to be played on the croquet lawns. Epsom was one of the leading croquet clubs and were national champions in 1907. The All England Club had begun to concentrate on the new game of tennis and held its first championships in 1877, which was the principal tournament in the country. Following the championships most of the players entered the Epsom Open and this continued until the early 1920s, by which time many other tournaments, principally the Davis Cup, were affecting entries due to clash of dates and the event was terminated in 1928.

By 1913 the Epsom Club had 5 lawn tennis courts and three croquet courts and in 1914 2 hard courts were laid for winter play on what is now the car park. In 1923 the last remaining croquet court was converted to a grass court. Whilst the Epsom Club did not evolve into the leading club as it so easily could have done, it has gone from strength to strength over the years. It now has 5 good quality grass courts, 3 floodlit artificial grass courts, 2 all-weather hard courts and 2 floodlit porous acrylic courts.

With these facilities the club has earned itself the present reputation of a large friendly club with a good standard of club play, provisions for better players to enter match play, a thriving junior section, a resident coaching facility and an improving social scene within the ever improving pavilion facilities.

 


 

Nurturing all levels and ages of tennis in a professional and family atmosphere'