NEWPORT, R.I.—Held inside the 134-year-old Newport Casino, the Hall of Fame Tennis Championships is one of the most affordable methods of time travel. There’s the museum, where you can pore over artifacts and learn about real tennis, a predecessor to the modern game that’s still played today. I know that because I watched a match unfold from the temporary media center, set directly above one the few real tennis courts still in existence.
Outside, you can mill around the matches in a venue that gives new definition to a term in vogue with home-buyers: “open concept.” Sitting on center court, you’re shielded by exposed planks of wood, weathered steel, and awnings striped in vintage green and creamy white. A full day of second-round play was completed by 5 p.m.
It was all as quaint as I had pictured, perhaps even more so. Except for one thing: A heckler.