Skip to Content
Mag

Tennis Courts Are Like the Ocean

By Maya Muñoz

8:23 PM EDT on September 26, 2022

Tennis courts are like the ocean. Or a landscape. I grew up in California, so I love the vastness of the West Coast. I am drawn to empty places. A tennis court evokes the same emptiness as the ocean or uninterrupted land. It gives me solitude. A sense of peace.

maya-munoz2

Just before the pandemic, I moved back to Bicol, the province in the Philippines where I was born. Before that I lived in Manila. During lockdown I would pass the Albay Ligñon Hill Tennis Club during my morning walks. I didn’t think much of it then. Eventually the courts became a subject of mine.

maya-munoz3

Tennis used to be more common in the Philippines in the 1980s and ’90s. These days when I go to the courts I see mostly old men playing the game. I actually love it, but it’s a senior citizens’ sport here. The men play tennis and the women do ballroom dancing.

maya-munoz4

I also like the crazy colors they paint the courts here. Purple like Barney the dinosaur. And pink: That one just gave me a headache.

maya-munoz5

Aside from how it feels to be around empty courts—solitude, loneliness, and a certain...heaviness—I love the lines: the parameters and what they mean when you play the game.

I love empty pools for the same reasons. They’re sad.

maya-munoz7
maya-munoz8

Maya Muñoz was born in 1972. She studied painting at San Jose State University. In 2003, she relocated back to the Philippines. She is a recipient of the Ateneo Art Award and has been exhibiting with The Drawing Room, Artinformal, and Silverlens Galleries since 2007. She lives and works in Bicol, Philippines.

This article was featured in Racquet Issue No. 20

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Racquet

Back on the Ranch

In 1957, John Gardiner raised the bar at a tennis resort in Carmel. There's no one left who can reach it.

October 22, 2025

Shanghai Masters Was a Mirror Held up to China

Between the brand activations and choreographed energy, it felt like modern China itself: futuristic and polished; still striving to assert its place on the world stage.

October 16, 2025

Have Padel will Travel

Padel has emerged as a more-approachable alternative to tennis, drawing in a vast customer base eager for a sport that eschews the traditional formality often associated with tennis clubs. This shift speaks to a broader opportunity in presenting a warm front door that’s wide open for newcomers; Tennis could stand to take note.

October 10, 2025

Tennis by Sea

In which a never-cruiser cruises, crushes balls, converts.

October 8, 2025

Roscoe Tanner’s Second Serve: The ’80s Bad Boy in Teeny Tacchinis

We talked with Grand Slam winner and former world no. 4 Roscoe Tanner—at one time everyone’s favorite bad boy—about his time on tour with Borg and Ashe, getting out on the Champions Tour [Jim Courier: please make it happen], and tiny shorts. His new book, Second Serve, reconciles past mistakes (and there were quite a few) with what he’s learned since. 

October 7, 2025

Is Anyone Having Any Fun?

At this point, who is going to be able to make it through this meat grinder of a season? Do the the tour finals still matter no matter how many friends they lose, or people they leave dead and bloodied and dying along the way? Plus: No matter who REALLY started the conspiracy theories about courts getting slower (looking at you, Roger), you can count on Alex Zverev to whine about it.

October 6, 2025
See all posts