It is fairly said that the King rules best when the subjects are most plentiful and splendid, and for this Charlie Brumfield is the undisputed King of Racquetball of all time. He calls himself ‘The All Time Holder.’
‘Yet I still recall how he held forth for an hour or so before a group of Vermont instructors on the dynamics of the grip. He had more faith in himself than the average movie hero, and he wrote his own script as he went along.’ – Art Shay Official Racquetball Photographer, Official Olympic Photographer, Racquetball Hall of Fame.
Charlie Brumfield also enchanted the gallery because he committed the least number of Mental and Physical errors in a contest. He had perfected the Sword and Shield of backhand ceiling and sharp forehand kills to begin an unprecedented 20 tournament win streak! When everything else failed, he was still the best Gamesman in town alongside Muhammad Ali, with an IQ approaching Einstein’s 180, and a photographic memory to catalog every pro’s moves that he could rewind and edit with a single curse or jab. Once he stuck a racquet under young Hogan's chin, pushed him a few inches and threatened to bop him if he didn't back off. Brumfield was penalized one point- and won going away. Later he predicted, ‘I believe that as Hogan matures he will lose his nasty edge and be more beatable.’
Charlie Brumfield looked like the Prince of Darkness, moved like Groucho Marx, and had the flawless arsenal of a platypus on steroids. The only way to defeat him seemed to be before the finals by sending him chocolates, dates, or to hire a Californian to take him drinking. Sports Illustrated lambasted, “Brumfield is a bearded, bespectacled, silver-tongued San Diego attorney whose belief it was that nobody would beat him ‘unless they pull down my pants.’ When he rarely lost a match, he found secret solutions in laboratories like Dr. Frankenstein in a penchant for his ‘science experiments of racquetball.â€
Must sees in the book:Brumfield earned his Law degree while winning his back-to-back national singles titles on the court during 1972 and 1973. ‘I love the theory and practice of law,’ he said. ‘And use the same techniques applied from racquetball to the court of law.’ In 1975 and 1976 he again won back-to-back titles, while practicing law on the side.