Tennis/Catalogs/Famous players: Difference between revisions
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imported>Hayford Peirce (finished info for Karel Koželuh in table; added Vinnie Richards and Hans Nüsslein to list, for future inclusion in the table) |
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|Nickname= | |Nickname= | ||
|Full name=Karel Koželuh | |Full name=Karel Koželuh | ||
|Birth=March 7, 1895 | |Birth=March 7, 1895, Prague | ||
|Death=April 27, 1950 | |Death=April 27, 1950, Prague | ||
|Nationality=Czech | |Nationality=Czech | ||
|Hand=right | |Hand=right | ||
|Strength= | |Strength=Tireless baseliner; court coverage; passing shots | ||
|Weakness= | |Weakness=Never hit the ball particularly hard; needed ample running room behind the baseline for his game to be effective: was handicapped playing on some of the tighter indoor courts; seldom approached the net | ||
|rank years=Never played amateur tournaments or Davis Cup matches | |rank years=Never played amateur tournaments or Davis Cup matches | ||
|Davis years= | |Davis years= | ||
Line 168: | Line 168: | ||
|Slam mixed doubles= | |Slam mixed doubles= | ||
|Davis info= | |Davis info= | ||
|ProAm=Professional only, first as a coach, then as a touring pro | |ProAm=Professional only, first as a coach, then as a touring pro; won top professional tournaments into his 40s | ||
|Trivia= | |Trivia=Along with [[Hans Nüsslein]], probably the best player never to have been a top amateur; won numerous professional championships; the American tennis player [[Vinnie Richards]] described Koželuh as "Seamy-faced, cadaverous-looking and, in general, resembled a cigar-store Indian;" was killed in an automobile crash outside Prague at age 55 | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Tennis player2 | {{Tennis player2 | ||
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|Trivia=Was once called a "cheese champ," hence his nickname, from [[Gorgonzola]]; was married 6 times, twice to Miss Rheingold of 1958, once to the sister of [[Andre Agassi]]; died in near penury; Agassi paid for his funeral.}} | |Trivia=Was once called a "cheese champ," hence his nickname, from [[Gorgonzola]]; was married 6 times, twice to Miss Rheingold of 1958, once to the sister of [[Andre Agassi]]; died in near penury; Agassi paid for his funeral.}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
*[[Vinnie Richards]] March 30, 1903 | |||
*[[Hans Nüsslein]] March 31, 1910 | |||
*[[Ken Rosewall]] 2 November 1934 | *[[Ken Rosewall]] 2 November 1934 | ||
*[[Lew Hoad]] 23 November 1934 | *[[Lew Hoad]] 23 November 1934 |
Revision as of 17:04, 17 September 2007
This is a supplement to the article about Tennis and to the articles about the individual players.
Under construction: this will be a list of famous players, in chronological order. Although other players will also be included, this list will, at a minimum, include all players who have ever been considered to be the World No. 1 player or Co-No. 1 for an entire year.
Male
Name | Biographical | Technique | Record | |||||||
Event | S | D | MD | Wins | ||||||
|
Nationality: British |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Agressiveness; serve and overhead smash |
Grand Slam | 7 | 5 | 12 | ||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | Played before rankings; also before Davis Cup was initiated | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Was the younger, by 15 minutes, to his twin, Ernest Renshaw, also a Wimbledon singles champion; together they won Wimbledon doubles 5 times | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: NZ |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Hit his drives with great pace and overspin; defense and baseline play |
Grand Slam | 6 | 5 | 11 | ||||
Davis Cup | 15-6 | 6-3 | 6 teams | 4 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1913 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Joined the Royal Marines in World War I, rose to Captain; along with the American Joe Hunt, probably the most prominent tennis player ever killed on active service | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:"Cannonball" serve; overhead smash; volleying Weakness:Retired at 29, perhaps worn out from his violent on-court exertions |
Grand Slam | 2 | 3 | 5 | ||||
Davis Cup | 9-4 | 3-4 | 4 teams | 1 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1914 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: The first of the great serve-and-volley attackers | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Took ball on the rise using the Continental grip, going for winners on every shot; unbeatable when his game was "on" Weakness:Extremely erratic, could lose to much inferior players |
Grand Slam | 2 | 3 | 1 | 6 | |||
Davis Cup | 6-3 | 4-0 | 6 teams | 5 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | Was the U.S.A. No. 1 in 1916, when there were no world rankings because of World War I | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Was a Titanic survivor, nearly had his legs amputated after being rescued from the near-freezing waters. | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1930; thereafter a touring professional Strength:"Cannonball" serve; all-court game; speed and court coverage; intelligence and analytic ability to change strategy and tactics during matches Weakness:Initially, his backhand; possibly his overhead smash |
Grand Slam | 10 | 6 | 5 | 21 | |||
Davis Cup | 25-5 | 9-2 | 11 teams | 7 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1931, second most to Pancho Gonzales | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Beat Karel Koželuh before 14,000 in his professional debut at Madison Square Garden on February 18, 1931; thereafter toured for many years against other top professionals. Served two periods of incarceration near Los Angeles for morals charges involving underage males Davis Cup info: On 7 consecutive winning teams, 1920 through 1926, still a record | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur only; retired from competition in 1927 Strength:Topspin forehand drive hit shoulder-high with a Western grip; volleying from the service line Weakness:Backhand, which he hit with the same face of the racquet as his forehand; occasional physical fraility |
Grand Slam | 3 | 3 | 1 | 7 | |||
Davis Cup | 14-3 | 4-0 | 8 teams | 7 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1919 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Died of tuberculosis at age 51 Davis Cup info: On 7 consecutive winning teams, 1920 through 1926, still a record | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: Czech |
right handed Class: Professional only, first as a coach, then as a touring pro; won top professional tournaments into his 40s Strength:Tireless baseliner; court coverage; passing shots Weakness:Never hit the ball particularly hard; needed ample running room behind the baseline for his game to be effective: was handicapped playing on some of the tighter indoor courts; seldom approached the net |
Grand Slam | |||||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | Never played amateur tournaments or Davis Cup matches | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Along with Hans Nüsslein, probably the best player never to have been a top amateur; won numerous professional championships; the American tennis player Vinnie Richards described Koželuh as "Seamy-faced, cadaverous-looking and, in general, resembled a cigar-store Indian;" was killed in an automobile crash outside Prague at age 55 | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: Australian |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Very hard serve, both flat and twist; smash; volleying; forehand |
Grand Slam | 3 | 5 | 1 | 9 | |||
Davis Cup | 21-10 | 11-4 | 6 teams | 1 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1919 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Won the Military Cross with Australian army in World War I; nephew of diva Dame Nellie Melba | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: French |
Right handed Class: Amateur only as a player; for a while was a teaching professional in California Strength:Doubles -- was the doubles specialist of the Musketeers; "A player of rare stroke variety and delicacy of touch." [1] |
Grand Slam | 10 | 2 | 12 | ||||
Davis Cup | 4-2 | 22-9 | 11 teams | 6 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Oldest and smallest of the Musketeers; nearly made the finals of the 1926 Wimbledon championship, having 5 match points in the semi-finals against Bob Kinney without winning any of them Davis Cup info: On 6 consecutive winning teams, from 1927 through 1932, but actually played in only 4 of them | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: French |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Attacking game and volleying; skillful gamesmanship; a great indoor player who won the French indoor title 12 times, the British 11, and the U.S. 4 |
Grand Slam | 4 | 9 | 3 | 16 | |||
Davis Cup | 19-12 | 17-6 | 17 teams | 6 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Always wore a blue beret during his matches; intensely disliked by Bill Tilden, the consummate showman, master of gamesmanship, and show-off — Tilden considered Borotra to be a show-off "a charlatan, the greatest faker in tennis history";[2] "Borotra [Tilden wrote] was what passes for 'typically' French. That is to say, he had all the charm, warmth, glamour and insincerity which is Paris." [3] Davis Cup info: On 6 consecutive winning teams, from 1927 through 1932; | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Left handed Class: Amateur into the 1940s, then became a successful tennis coach Strength:Very hard serve, one of the fastest in the world at the time Weakness:Lack of mobility compared to many other top players |
Grand Slam | |||||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | Never had a national ranking because he played exclusively on the West Coast | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Was sometimes mistakenly called "Roy" Casey in New York Times articles; most famous pupil was Bob Lutz | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: French |
Right handed Class: Amateur until 1934; had an undistinguished professional career; reinstated as an amateur in 1945 Strength:Taking the ball on the rise to make volleys and half-volleys; overhead; successful shots from apparently impossible positions; winning matches that apparently had been lost Weakness:"A weak serve, he seldom bothered to lob, and he had a backhand which Tilden characterized as 'a little too cramped and defensive.' "[4] |
Grand Slam | 7 | 5 | 3 | 15 | |||
Davis Cup | 34-8 | 10-6 | 11 teams | 6 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1928, 1929, 1930 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: The only one of the Four Musketeers who turned professional | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: French |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Relentless backcourt returning; passing shots and lobs Weakness:Fragile health; retired in 1929 at age 25 |
Grand Slam | 7 | 3 | 10 | ||||
Davis Cup | 32-8 | 8-3 | 6 teams | 2 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1926, 1927 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: For many years his polo shirts with the crocodile logo on the breast have been sold worldwide; developed the first successful metal racket, the Wilson T2000, used by Jimmy Connors; his daughter, Catherine Lacoste, won the U.S. Open gold title in 1967 | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: Australian |
Right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Graceful, effortless, but powerful baseline strokes; a fine serve Weakness:Suffered from asthma, which sometimes affected his ability to play |
Grand Slam | 6 | 6 | 5 | 17 | |||
Davis Cup | 23-16 | 13-5 | 8 teams | wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1933 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Came within 1 set of winning the Grand Slam in 1933, 5 years before Don Budge did it; with his wife, Marjorie Cox, won 3 straight Australian mixed doubles titles; as singles players, they also both made the 1931 Australian finals Davis Cup info: During his long career, was on only 1 winning team, in 1939, but didn't play in the final round against the United States | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: British |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1936, then a touring professional through the mid-1940s Strength:Extremely good footwork and great speed; played an all-court attacking game dominated by a superb forehand that, with a Continental grip, took the ball on the rise Weakness:An "underslice" backhand;[5] was perceived as being selfish, sarcastic, and egotistical; Jack Kramer says that as a professional Perry frequently gave less than 100% in his matches, not caring whether he won or lost[6] |
Grand Slam | 8 | 2 | 4 | 14 | |||
Davis Cup | 34-4 | 11-3 | 6 teams | 4 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1941 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Father was a Labour Party member of the House of Commons; Perry was a table tennis champion before taking up tennis. Davis Cup info: Led Great Britain to 4 consecutive wins; Great Britain has never won since | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: German |
right handed Class: Amateur only Strength:Endurance and tenacity |
Grand Slam | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 | |||
Davis Cup | 58-10 | 24-11 | 9 teams | wins | ||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Along with Frank Sedgman and Lew Hoad, probably the best player never to be ranked the World No. 1 player; a homosexual who was persecuted by the Nazis, he was once married to the American socialite Barbara Hutton. Davis Cup info: Lost in 5 sets to Don Budge in what has been called the greatest Davis Cup match of all time, the 5th and deciding match of the 1937 semi-finals. | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur until 1933, then a touring professional through 1939 Strength:Tremendously hard serve and forehand, both hit flat with no spin, "murderous" overhead,[7] good volleying Weakness:Very erratic, played with no margin of safety when hitting shots |
Grand Slam | 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | |||
Davis Cup | 13-3 | 0 | 2 teams | 0 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1932, 1935, 1936, 1937 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Lost interest in tennis and at 28 became a professional golfer; won one professional golf tournament and reached the semi-finals of the 1951 PGA championship. | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1938, then a touring professional through the early-1950s Strength:Universally considered to have had the greatest backhand of all time, at least until Ken Rosewall; very powerful serve; powerful all-court game; also considered to be a great doubles player Weakness:Hurt his shoulder during military service, which eventually rendered his overhead less effective |
Grand Slam | 6 | 4 | 4 | 14 | |||
Davis Cup | 19-2 | 6-2 | 4 teams | 2 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1942 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: In 1938 was the first man to achieve the singles Grand Slam by winning the four major tournaments: Australian, French, United States, and Wimbledon championships | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1941, then a touring professional for a few years after World War II Strength:Return of serve; lob; dropshot; passing shots; overhead smash; court coverage; all-round defensive game; calm temperament Weakness:Smaller than many of his opponents such as Budge and Kramer, and not as powerful, but no noticeable weaknesses |
Grand Slam | 3 | 1 | 2 | 6 | |||
Davis Cup | 2-2 | 2 teams | 2 wins | |||||||
World #1 player | 1941, 1946, 1947 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Played women's champion Billie Jean King in "The Battle of the Sexes" in 1975, a match televised worldwide; was notorious as a highly successful hustler in both tennis and golf, particularly after his retirement from top-level tennis; generally thought of as a defensive player, but had a fine serve and volley and frequently played a very agressive game | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1941, then an occasional touring professional for a number of years after World War II Strength:His best shot, says Kramer, was "a hard, angled backhand crosscourt, but he could never figure out how to set it up so he could take advantage of it." [8] Weakness:"Kovacs had picture strokes, but the reason he could never win anything is because he didn't have any idea how to go about winning. He never had a set plan for a match. Hell, he never had a set plan for a shot. He could sort of decide what to do with it halfway through the stroke." [9] |
Grand Slam | |||||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Known for his on-court eccentricities, such as chewing tennis balls; one source says that as of October, 1951, Kovacs held a remarkable 14-3 lead over Jack Kramer, the world's best player, in their head-to-head meetings, which is difficult to credit;[10] his cousin was the entertainer Ernie Kovacs. | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: Ecuadorian/American |
right handed Class: Amateur through 1947, then a touring professional for two decades Strength:Two-handed forehand, which Jack Kramer once called "the greatest single shot ever produced in tennis"; exceptional quickness; lob; dropshot Weakness:Relatively ordinary backhand; over-reliance on his forehand |
Grand Slam | |||||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | 1950, 1951, 1952 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Small and bandy-legged, suffered from hernias, malaria, and rickets as a child; according to Kramer, probably played "more matches against top players than anyone in history"; never won any major amateur titles but was, for 3 years, the World Co-No. 1 as a professional | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1947, thereafter a touring professional and promoter Strength:Serve; second serve; volley; overhead; forehand; ability to pace himself and play "percentage tennis"; also considered to be a great doubles player Weakness:no noticeable ones except physical infirmities, particularly in his back, that eventually curtailed his career |
Grand Slam | 3 | 6 | 1 | 10 | |||
Davis Cup | 6-0 | 1-2 | 3 teams | 2 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1953 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: The first great player to use serve-and-volley with every point; an important tennis figure in four separate categories: as a player; as a promoter of the professional tour; as a powerful advocate for Open Tennis; as a broadcaster and tennis spokesman | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: Australian |
Right handed Class: Amateur through 1952, thereafter a touring professional for many years Strength:Superb fitness; exceptional quickness, particularly at the net; fine serve and a great volley; also considered to be a great doubles player Weakness:According to Jack Kramer, his slice backhand, plus an inability to win at the very highest level "because he couldn't keep the heat on." |
Grand Slam | 5 | 9 | 8 | 22 | |||
Davis Cup | 16-3 | 9-0 | 4 teams | 3 wins | ||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: The first of the great post-War Australians who went on to nearly dominate world tennis for three decades; competing first against Jack Kramer, then Pancho Gonzales, was probably the greatest player except for Gottfried von Cramm or Lew Hoad never to be ranked as World No. 1; in 1953 is said to have been the first professional to earn more than $100,000 in a single year. | ||||||||||
|
Nationality: American |
right handed Class: Amateur through 1949, then a touring pro for more than 2 decades Strength:Overwhelming and relentless serve and volley game; speed and court coverage; physical strength and mental tenacity; unbreakable will-to-win Weakness:Backhand was relatively less reliable than his other strokes |
Grand Slam | 2 | 2 | 4 | ||||
Davis Cup | 2-0 | 1 teams | 1 wins | |||||||
World #1 player | 1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961 | |||||||||
National #1 player | {{{national rank years}}} | |||||||||
Trivia: Was once called a "cheese champ," hence his nickname, from Gorgonzola; was married 6 times, twice to Miss Rheingold of 1958, once to the sister of Andre Agassi; died in near penury; Agassi paid for his funeral. Davis Cup info: Played only 1 year before turning pro; won both his singles matches in the finals |
- Vinnie Richards March 30, 1903
- Hans Nüsslein March 31, 1910
- Ken Rosewall 2 November 1934
- Lew Hoad 23 November 1934
- Rod Laver 9 August 1938
- Arthur Ashe 10 July 1943
- John Newcombe 23 May 1944
- Jimmy Connors 2 September 1952
- Björn Borg 6 June 1956
- John McEnroe 16 February 1959
- Boris Becker 22 November 1967
- Andre Agassi 29 April 1970
- Pete Sampras 12 August 1971
- James Blake 28 December 1979
- Juan Carlos Ferrero 12 February 1980
- Lleyton Hewitt 24 February 1981
- Roger Federer 8 August 1981
- Rafael Nadal 3 June 1986
Female
- Helen Wills Moody (USA) 10-6-05
- Althea Gibson (USA) 8-25-27
- Margaret Court (Australia) 7-16-42
- Billie Jean King (USA) 11-22-43
- Virginia Wade (England) 7-10-45
- Evonne Goolagong Cawley 7-31-51 (Australia)
- Martina Navratilova (Czechoslovakia/USA) 10-18-56
- Chris Evert 3-21-54
- Tracy Austin (USA) 12-12-62
- Steffi Graf (Germany) 6-14-69
- Monica Seles (Yugoslavia/USA) 12-2-73
- Inmaculada Concepción ("Conchita") Martinez (Spain) 4-16-72
- Arantxa Sánchez Vicario (Spain) 12-18-71
- Mary Pierce (Canada/USA) 1-15-75
- Jennifer Capriati (USA) 3-29-76
- Lindsay Davenport (USA) 6-8-76
- Amélie Mauresmo (France) 7-5-79
- Venus Williams (USA) 6-17-80
- Martina Hingis (Switzerland) 12-30-80
- Serena Williams (USA) 12-26-81
- Justine Henin - (Belgium) 6-1-82
- Kim Clijsters (Belgium) 6-8-83
- Maria Sharapova (Russia) 4-19-87
References
- ↑ Wallis Myers, quoted in Total Tennis, The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia, edited by Bud Collins, Sport Classic Books, Toronto, 2003, page 650
- ↑ Big Bill Tilden, The Triumphs and the Tragedy - Frank DeFord, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1976, page 139
- ↑ Big Bill Tilden, The Triumphs and the Tragedy - Frank DeFord, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1976, page 139
- ↑ Big Bill Tilden, The Triumphs and the Tragedy - Frank DeFord, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1976, page 142
- ↑ Kramer, pages 58
- ↑ Kramer, pages 59-61
- ↑ Total Tennis, The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia, edited by Bud Collins, Sport Classic Books, Toronto, 2003, page 753
- ↑ Kramer, page 51
- ↑ Kramer, page 51
- ↑ McCauley, page 198
Sources
- Big Bill Tilden, The Triumphs and the Tragedy, by Frank DeFord, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1976, ISBN 0-671-22254-6
- Total Tennis, The Ultimate Tennis Encyclopedia, edited by Bud Collins, Sport Classic Books, Toronto, 2003
- The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis, by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1979, (ISBN 0-399-12336-9