For someone coming from Manhattan, the National Tennis Center at Flushing Meadows can seem like a trek deep into the New York boroughs. To get to the courts where former U.S. Open quarterfinalist Tim Mayotte has his academy, though, you must go even deeper. When I visited this spring, I passed Arthur Ashe Stadium and the Unisphere on my way to Cunningham Park in the Fresh Meadows neighborhood of Queens. From there I walked around a circus tent that blocked its entrance, and eventually found my back to the small set of hard courts that house the Mayotte-Hurst Academy. Never let it be said that Mayotte, a Stanford grad and silver medalist at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, takes the easy road.
At Fresh Meadows, Mayotte and his coaching partner, Lee Hurst, were running an afternoon practice session with a dozen or so of their juniors. On one court was a brown-haired, 10-year-old boy whom they considered especially promising. It wasn’t his ranking or his results that impressed them; it was the way he had adapted to the technique that they had tried to instill in him. He did look like a quick study. Not only did he have the smoothly controlled strokes of an older player, he appeared to have the makings of a professional-level fist-pump.
Mayotte compared the student to a visiting player on a nearby court, who had a higher ranking.
“Over time,” he said, “we think our kid will be the better player because he’s doing things the right way, and he has a foundation he can build on.”
To Mayotte, U.S. tennis doesn’t lack the best athletes, as some believe. And the country’s kids, as others say, aren’t too soft. To his mind, what we lack is the proper technique for today’s game, and the coaches to teach it well.
Mayotte and Hurst, an Englishman and veteran of Florida’s Saddlebrook Academy, met when they worked as developmental instructors for the USTA at Flushing Meadows; there, in 2009, they launched the organization’s High Performance Center. Eighteen months later, frustrated by what he saw as the USTA’s rigid and not fully articulated teaching philosophy, Mayotte left to start his own academy in Queens.