The third International Tournament TAP (Tenis Adaptado de Pie, or stand-up adaptive tennis) – Master Final, organized by the Paralympic Committee of Chile, was held December 11 and 12 in Santiago, Chile. Thirty-four athletes traveled from South Africa, Mexico, Portugal, Argentina, Columbia, Brazil, and the United States to compete. Jeff Bourns of Houston was the only U.S. player to participate.
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Bourns has 25 years of experience as a competitive tennis player. He has a right knee disarticulation and is the first stand-up adaptive tennis player to serve on the United States Tennis Association (USTA) of Texas Adaptive Tennis Committee. He is charged with helping the sport to grow and is also a tennis pro, helping others with lower-limb amputations learn to play or improve their game.
Classifications in the TAP tournament were based on skill level rather on amputation level, said Bourns. For instance, someone with a lower-limb amputation might be matched against a competitor with an arm amputation. “It was something I hadn’t experienced, but I liked it because the overall goal with what we are doing right now [with adaptive tennis] is to say I can play anybody that is put in front of me, even if it’s an able-bodied person.”
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A player returns the ball. In round-robin play, competitors were grouped by skill level, not amputation level.
Typically, a tennis match consists of two or three sets that must be played against a competitor to move forward in the bracket. However, the TAP tournament was set up with a one-set round-robin format per match. In his first match, Bourns said his opponent tried to “sneak” a ball by him. “I had to lay out my backhand side and I landed on my ribs in the clay,” he said. He lost that match but came back to win two more that day-despite two cracked ribs-and made it to the quarter-finals. The following day, though, he said he woke up with a bruised left side and was unable to play to his full capacity, and was subsequently knocked out of the tournament, with a ranking of eighth.
“It was a really great experience,” Bourns said. “The talent that I saw was incredible.”