Skip to Content
Mag

Walk of Fame

A Study of the Humble Socks That Achieved Immortality.

By Leanne Shapton

7:01 AM EDT on June 1, 2017

Nicolas Mahut, Lacoste, Wimbledon, 2010.

The museum at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, R.I., has some amazing exhibits: Tracy Austin’s iconic gingham dress, the reprehensible Bobby Riggs’ “Sugar Daddy” windbreaker, a holographic Roger Federer. Many treasures remain out of sight in the museum’s archives, though, such as Bjorn Borg’s Fila tracksuit and a picture of Batman and Robin drawn by an elementary-school-age John McEnroe. Hidden from view, perhaps understandably, is the Hall of Fame’s collection of notable tennis socks, which include the pair worn by Nicolas Mahut in his epic three-day, 11-hour match with John Isner at Wimbledon in 2012, and the pom-pom socks Serena Williams wore while winning the Australian Open in 2010. Also out of sight are the contents of Andy Roddick’s racquet bag after his last professional match, at the US Open in 2012, which include not only his dirty socks but also his underwear. Here, Leanne Shapton interprets and abstracts the humble socks that made it all the way to the Hall of Fame. —Racquet

Carole Graebner, ca. 1964.
Wimbledon chair umpire Lars Graff, Polo Ralph Lauren, Ladies’ Singles Final, 2012.
Andy Roddick, Lacoste, US Open, 2012.
Billie Jean King, ca. 1975.
Greg Rusedski, Nike, Hall of Fame Tennis Championships, Newport, R.I., 1993.
Ivan Lendl, Mizuno, ca. 1992.
Martina Hingis, Sergio Tacchini, Australian Open, 1997. Her first major title.
Gabriela Sabatini, Fila, European Indoor Championships, Zurich, Switzerland, 1996. Her last professional match.
Serena Williams, Nike, Australian Open Final, 2010.
Lleyton Hewitt, Nike, ATP Masters Cup, when he was the youngest ranked ATP player ever, 2001.
Tennis-themed over- the-knee ladies’ stockings, ca. 1880.
Svetlana Kuznetsova, Fila, French Open Final, 2009.

Leanne Shapton is the author of Swimming Studies, which won the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for autobiography.

Featured in Racquet Issue No. 4

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Racquet

Where Has All the Good Merch Gone?

They just don’t make tennis merch like they used to, so we asked our favorite indie brands, resellers and stylish tennis friends (and fiends) where they find the best tennis apparel.

January 16, 2026

Postcard from Substack

Melissa and Daniel—the authors of Hard Hitting and Sportsverse, two of the best newsletters around—are friends, neighbors, hitting partners, and for one magical afternoon at our new Clubhouse location, muses of style.

January 16, 2026

Rallymaster IV Unveiled Down Under

Maurice de Mauriac and Racquet complete a Grand Slam with the Rallymaster IV, the last iteration of their celebrated tennis & timepiece collab.

January 14, 2026

Where to Travel with your Racquet in 2026

We make it our business to know just where you should go, and how you can play racquet sports when you get there.

January 9, 2026

Men Have Already Lost the Battle of the Sexes

Now that tennis represents a broader purview, it churns out the same cheap tricks as the overstimulated ecosystem it dwells in: shock jockery, cash grabs, frenzied efforts for “engagement” that materialize as gauche emblems of brodernity. So I turn your attention, instead, to the real battle of the sexes: that women’s tennis is amply more exciting than men’s.

December 26, 2025

We Launched a Clubhouse

Just in time for the holidays, we are so thrilled to be opening our doors to the Racquet Clubhouse. In our hometown of New York City, there's only one club that offers best-in-class tennis, padel and squash—alongside a spa, juice and coffee bar: CityView Racquet Club. That's where we've launched our first IRL pro shop.

December 23, 2025
See all posts