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Tennis player on ace tennis club tour fundraiser in memory of brother to play at Inverness Tennis and Squash Club Bellfield Park Tennis Club tomorrow


By Gavin Musgrove

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Stuart and his brother Richard.
Stuart and his brother Richard.

A tennis player is serving up an ace fundraiser by playing at 40 clubs in four days in memory of his brother who passed away earlier this year.

Stuart Falconer, from Pencaitland, will embark on a 400-mile road trip in his campervan around Scotland, playing 40 ‘Fast4’ tennis matches at the different clubs along the way, to raise money for MND Scotland.

He will be playing tomorrow at Inverness Tennis and Squash Club and the city's Bellfield Park Tennis Club

The venues he will be calling in at tomorrow include the tennis clubs at Newtonmore, Rothiemurchus and Aviemore and Boat of Garten.

Richard Falconer sadly died in March of motor neuron disease (MND), becoming the second member of Stuart’s family to have their life cut short by MND.

He also lost his cousin Brian to the condition in 2017.

Stuart started on the epic fundraiser yesterday to help raise funds for others affected by the disease.

He hit his first service at Haddington Tennis Club – his town club – in East Lothian at 8am yesterday (Thursday).

Stuart’s ‘Fast4’ tennis challenge will finish in Orkney, the place that Richard had called home since 1995, at around 8pm on Sunday.

He said: "Tennis has always been a favourite pastime of mine since I started playing at age 10 so when I was thinking of how I might be able to raise some money for MND Scotland, it made sense to try and factor it in.

"Although Richard wasn't really a tennis fan, in recent years he had started to enjoy a social game of ‘Touch Tennis’ with friends at his local sports centre so that was another tennis connection."

Stuart will be playing the Fast4 version of the game as he clocks up the clubs and miles.
Stuart will be playing the Fast4 version of the game as he clocks up the clubs and miles.

Fast4 Tennis is a format for playing tennis with modified rules that leads to shorter match times, a factor which Stuart hopes will help him to complete his trip on schedule.

Stuart commented: "I knew to raise money, it had to be a challenge that would catch people’s attention and considering we’ve just surpassed my initial fundraising target, I think the idea of playing 40 games in four days has managed to do that.

"The tennis community is very friendly, and I have had people from other clubs who have been affected by motor neurone disease, showing their support for my challenge and offering to help me in any way they can."

MND is a rapidly progressing terminal illness, which stops signals from the brain reaching the muscles and this can cause someone to lose the ability to walk, talk, eat, drink or breathe unaided.

Average life expectancy is just 18 months from diagnosis.

Richard first experienced symptoms of MND when he began to feel breathless and soon after, began to also feel a loss of strength in his hands.

In August 2020, Richard received his MND diagnosis, having just retired at the age of 64.

As the disease progressed, Richard’s strength continued to deteriorate, with his regular walks with his dog and cycles becoming shorter, before stopping completely.

He died less than two years after his diagnosis.

Stuart said: "Richard had only just retired, and he was supposed to be starting a new chapter in his life, spending his time doing the things he enjoyed.

"Although he didn’t lose his ability to communicate until near the very end, he was a very practical person who loved being outdoors and to see MND strip him of his independence was very difficult.

"I must admit that before Brian was diagnosed with MND in 2017, I knew very little about the disease and although they shared the same diagnosis, my cousin Brian and Richard’s experiences were both very different.

"We are a very close family and to have two people diagnosed with MND has been devastating.

"Richard didn’t have children of his own but he was a favourite uncle to all his nieces and nephews who all loved to visit him at his home in Orkney."

Due to Covid restrictions being in place at the time, Stuart and his family were unable to make the time that Richard had left count in the way they had hoped but thankfully Richard was still able to maintain some normality throughout his time living with MND.

Remembering the care that his bother received, Stuart said: "I am so grateful for the MND nurses and the medical community in Orkney who provided a wonderful service, and with the fantastic support of his partner, who is a former nurse, they all enabled Richard to stay in his own home till the very end."

Rachel Maitland, MND Scotland’s CEO said: "From everyone at MND Scotland, we would like to say a huge thank you to Stuart for taking on this incredible challenge to raise money for MND Scotland.

"This money will help us continue to change the lives of people across Scotland living with MND and fund vital research, both of which would be impossible without the support of people like Stuart."

People can support Stuart’s Fast4 fundraising journey by visiting his Just Giving Page.


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