| Founder |
![]() Dan Merrin with Muhammad Ali BRUCE MERRIN: Tennis, anyone?
63-year-old excels at
winning sport's mind game
By JAN
HOGAN
There's some gray in his hair, but there's
also a spring in his step.
Tennis enthusiast Bruce Merrin, 63, often
faces 20- or 30-something contenders across the net. An unfair advantage? You
bet. The younger players have no idea what they're up against.
Merrin has been known to win in straight
sets against his younger opponents. At the Stacy Darling Memorial Day Classic
at the
The game lasted three hours. It tested
Merrin's endurance. But, as in any contest, experience also counted.
"The 20-year-old, when it comes to
running and hitting, sure, he has it over me. But, mentally ... it's like
chess, a mind game. You figure out where to hit the ball, how to set up your
shot," Merrin said. "I like the mental challenge of figuring out how
to win."
Merrin is an 18-year resident of The Lakes
community near Summerlin and operates his own publicity company, Bruce Merrin's
Celebrity Speakers and Entertainment Bureau. He's been booking clients for 34
years, including people like Johnny Carson, Phyllis Diller and Michael Landon.
The day he was interviewed, he'd just booked Goldie Hawn for an appearance in
Merrin also is captain of the Bally's
tennis team, part of the Nevada Tennis Association Saturday League. The team
has 12 players.
"I'm amazed at his energy," said
Irwan Groh, a dentist on the Bally's team. "Does he drink Red Bull? No, I
think it's (energy) just naturally in his blood."
Jason Swanson, director of tennis for the
Merrin always has been active in some type
of sport. He was on the track team in high school, on the racquetball team at
UCLA, where he majored in film making. Later, he ran 10Ks and half marathons --
13.1 miles.
Merrin said he's been blessed with no
major injury when it comes to tennis. Sure, he's suffered a sprained ankle or a
sore muscle here and there, but nothing serious.
The same cannot be said for another sport
he enjoyed in his 30s and 40s -- racquetball.
He was rated an A player, the highest in
the sport, and played on a league in
"We were macho guys. We didn't wear
eye protectors," he said.
In the middle of a game, his opponent
rocketed a forehand that sent the ball speeding at more than 100 miles per hour
into Merrin's left eye.
"With my right eye, I could see
OK," he recalled. "But with my left, everything was gray."
The blow had caused his retina to detach.
Merrin was in the hospital for 14 days and underwent surgery. For the next few
months, he saw double until the muscles returned to near normal. He now has to
wear glasses for his 20/80 vision.
"My ophthalmologist told me, 'You
have no idea how lucky you are. If the ball had hit a little lower, you'd be
blind," ' he said.
He switched to tennis after that and has
been enjoying the game ever since, playing at least twice a week.
Merrin said he'll continue to play the
sport as long as he's physically able. |

