The Wailea Tennis Club is proud to announce our second Wailea Fantasy Camp, November 12th to 16th, 2008.
Experience world-class instruction from former U.S. Davis Cup Captain Tom Gullikson, World-ranked Robby
Ginepri and #1 ranked WTA doubles team Corina Morariu and Lindsay Davenport.
The Wailea Fantasy Camp is designed for avid tennis players ranging in skill from recreational to tournament-level.
It includes four days of instruction and free play, five nights accommodations at the spectacular
Four Seasons Resort, players' welcome party, awards luau
and ample opportunities to enjoy a visit to the island of Maui.
There will be an exhibition match on November 15th at the Club.
UPDATE: There has been an overwhelming excitement with the addition of Lindsay Davenport and Robby Ginepri
to the lineup of Pros at the event. Therefore, the registration deadline for participation has been extended up to the day of the
event or on space availability.
Contact Cathy Nicoloff, Director of Tennis, for details. (808) 879-1958.
Prices start at $2795 per person. If you have accomodations or you live on Maui, the price is $1595.00.

TOM GULLIKSON
Tom Gullikson has had an illustrious career. He reached #38 in singles -- recording wins over such players as Bjorn Borg,
Jimmy Connors, Ilie Nastase and Stefan Edberg -- and #9 in doubles, most notably in performances with twin brother Tim.
The duo reached the Wimbledon final in 1983. Gullikson won one career singles title and 15 career doubles titles, and has
coached such top players as Jennifer Capriati, Todd Martin and Pete Sampras. From 1994 to 1999, he served as U.S. Davis Cup
Captain, leading the team to victory in 1995. He also coached the U.S. Olympic Team in 1996 and helped Andre Agassi win
the gold medal.

ROBBY GINEPRI
Robby Ginepri
(born October 7, 1982) is an American tennis player who turned professional in 2001.
Ginepri had the best year of his young career in 2005. In August 2005 he reached the semifinal of an
ATP Masters Series tournament for the first time in his career, in Cincinnati, USA. He beat 2004
French Open runner-up Mariano Puerta and David Ferrer in rounds 1 and 2, 1998
French Open and past Cincinnati champion Carlos Moya in round 3, and two-time Grand Slam
winner Marat Safin in the quarterfinal. He gave World No. 1 Roger Federer the biggest test Federer
had endured in quite a while in semifinal. His summer hardcourt record was at 14-3 when
he arrived at the U.S. Open two weeks later. Ginepri continued winning, and reached his first semifinal of Grand Slam.
He lost that semifinal match to veteran Andre Agassi in five sets. His third-round, fourth-round and quarterfinal
matches also went five sets, making him the first player in US Open history to play four consecutive five-set matches.
In November at the Madrid Masters, Ginepri made it to another ATP Masters Series semifinal before losing
to eventual champion Rafael Nadal. His achievements at the Masters Series and Grand Slam level
helped him finish 2005 at No. 15 in the ATP Rankings, the highest ranking of his career to date.
He owns the Olde Town Athletic Club in Marietta along with his father and his coach.

LINDSAY DAVENPORT
Lindsay Davenport
started playing tennis at age 5, when her mother put her in an afternoon class at the local club to keep her occupied.
She turned Pro in 1993 and has since won 38 singles titles (including an Olympic title) and 33 doubles titles on the WTA Tour,
3 Grand Slam singles titles and 3 Grand Slam doubles titles. She is one of only four women
(the others being Graf, Navratilova and Evert) since 1975 who has been the year-end World No. 1 at least four times.
Her father, Wink, participated in the 1968 Olympics in volleyball and her mother, Ann, is the president of the Southern California Volleyball Association.
She graduated from Murrieta Valley High School in June 1994.
She was married in Hawaii on April 25, 2003 to Jon Leach, a private banker and four-time All-American tennis player at University of
Southern California. She gave birth to her first child, Jagger Jonathan Leach, on Sunday, June 10, 2007.

CORINA MORARIU
Corina Morariu (pronounced:
mo-RAR-yoo) turned professional in 1994. Mainly known as a doubles specialist, she won the women's doubles title at
Wimbledon in 1999 with Lindsay Davenport. She also won the mixed doubles title at the 2001 Australian Open with
Ellis Ferreira. She reached the Australian Open women's doubles final with Davenport in 2005.
Morariu was formerly ranked the world's number one female doubles player.
In 2001, Morariu was diagnosed with leukemia and began a programme of chemotherapy.
She has since made a full recovery and has returned to competition.
After a loss in the quarter-finals of the women's doubles at the US Open 2007 on Sept. 19th,
Corina announced her retirement. She was also dating Justin Gimelstob.
She is currently a commentator with the Tennis Channel.
The Wailea Tennis Club is one of the largest resort tennis facilities on Maui, featuring 11 Plexipave courts including three
lit for night play and a picturesque stadium court. Renowned for its high level of customer service and idyllic country club
atmosphere, Wailea Tennis Club offers daily lessons and clinics by its team of
USPTA-certified professionals, full-service pro shop,
and special events and activities throughout the year.
The Wailea Fantasy Camp's host hotel, the Four Seasons Resort, is situated
fronting spectacular Wailea Beach. For more information, surf over to
www.fourseasons.com/maui/.