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Peter Doohan, The Becker Wrecker

Check out my latest book, Tennis Players as Works of Art, now available on Amazon. Called “madly ambitious” and named one its 5 featured books of 2024 in the category of Art/Imagination/Creativity by Publisher’s Weekly Booklife, Tennis Players as Works of Art has also been named “One of the Best Books we Read in 2024” (Independent Book Review) and “Book of the Year” (Inside Tennis Magazine.)

after a story by Simon Robinson

Darkness closes in. The officials tell Doohan this is the last game. Doohan breaks Alex Antonitsch to win 9-7 in the fifth set of the first round of Wimbledon. Then three days of rain, a necessary pause. Boris Becker is next, the two-time defending champion. Three days of waiting, boredom. Doohan finds a broken phone booth where coins get stuck, allowing him to talk to his girlfriend back in Little Rock, Arkansas for as long as he wants. Three days of rain means three days of imagination, strategy, planning: chipping it low to Becker’s feet, anticipating every Becker backhand volley would be volleyed crosscourt. Rex Bellamy wrote that Doohan “covered the net like an octopus with souped-up reactions.” Boris Becker is slain; Peter Doohan is dubbed the “Becker Wrecker.” One match, one tournament, can make a career.

Dying suddenly from Lou Gehrig’s disease at 56, Peter Doohan tells his college roommate, Simon Robinson, the following joke: The village’s fishing master comes home to a wife gone missing. After a desperate week, the village authorities call him in. We have good news and bad news. Great news, too. The good news is that we found your wife. The bad news is that she was found dead in the water, a few lobsters clinging to her body. Visibly shaken, the fisherman asks:“What could possibly be the great news?” We lowered her again down into the water, brought her up with seventeen lobsters clinging to her body. You can have half the haul. After Simon stops laughing, Doohan insists: “you must promise to tell this joke during your eulogy for me in a couple of months.”

Simon walks to the altar in Newcastle’s biggest church . . .

About the Artist:

Born in the French Pyrenees, Miki de Goodaboom moved to Goettingen, Germany at age 19 to study mathematics and physics. After graduating, she worked for many years in German industry as a mathematician and consultant until she moved to Spain, Andalucia, where she lives now. A self-taught artist, Miki kept creating more and more art until it finally became her full-time profession. She most enjoys painting sport themes since she loves movement and the challenge of reducing it to 2 dimensions on paper or canvas. If you check out her countless “Sport Art” paintings and posters on her website, you will see almost 300 images from the entire world of sport. But as you can see from her website, she loves to paint almost anything she encounters in the world.

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