Jimmy Connors
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| Country | Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States | |
| Residence | East St. Louis, Illinois | |
| Date of birth | September 2 1952 | |
| Place of birth | East St. Louis, Illinois | |
| Height | 1.77 m (5 ft 91⁄2 in) | |
| Weight | 70 kg (150 lb/11 st) | |
| Turned Pro | 1972, international debut in 1970 | |
| Retired | 1996 | |
| Plays | Left-handed; two-handed backhand | |
| Career Prize Money | US$8,641,040 | |
| Singles | ||
| Career record: | 1225-272 (81.8%) | |
| Career titles: | 139 including 109 listed by the ATP Players' Guide | |
| Highest ranking: | No. 1 (July 29, 1974) | |
| Grand Slam results | ||
| Australian Open | W (1974) | |
| French Open | SF (1979-80, 1984-85) | |
| Wimbledon | W (1974, 1982) | |
| U.S. Open | W (1974, 1976, 1978, 1982–1983) | |
| Doubles | ||
| Career record: | 173-78 (68.9%) | |
| Career titles: | 15 | |
| Highest ranking: | No. 370 (March 1, 1993) | |
James Scott "Jimmy" Connors (born September 2, 1952 in East St. Louis, Illinois) is a former World Number 1 American tennis champion who was the top player for 160 consecutive weeks from July of 1974 to August of 1977. He also was the number one player an additional eight times during his career. He won eight Grand Slam singles titles, won two Grand Slam doubles titles with Ilie Năstase and finished mixed doubles runner-up with Chris Evert at the 1974 U.S. Open. He is considered to be one of the top male tennis players of all time [1]. Currently, he is coaching former World Number 1 and 2003 U.S. Open champion tennis player Andy Roddick.
[edit] Career
In 1970, Connors played his first international matches and recorded his first significant victory in the first round of the Pacific Southwest Open in Los Angeles, defeating Roy Emerson.
In 1971, Connors won the NCAA singles title while attending the University of California, Los Angeles. He also won his first international tournament in Jacksonville, Florida, as an amateur. He turned professional in 1972 and won the Jacksonville tournament again.
Connors' competitiveness on the court quickly made him stand out. He refused to accept that he was beaten and gave everything on every point of every game, no matter how apparently hopeless the cause. He also was not averse to playing to the crowd (he once remarked that "I want to bring the crowd into the match; in short, turn it into a football game") or abusing his opponent or the umpire--anything he could think of to give himself an edge. His brash behaviour both on and off of the court earned him a reputation as the brat of the tennis world. He acquired the nickname of the "Brash Basher of Belleville" (after the St Louis suburb where he grew up). His high-profile romance with fellow teen tennis prodigy Chris Evert in the early years of his career also helped to keep him in the headlines.
Connors also acquired a reputation as a maverick in 1972 when he refused to join the newly formed Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP), the union that was embraced by most male professional players. He avoided the mainstream of professional tennis to play in, and dominate, a series of smaller tournaments organized by Bill Riordan, his manager and a promoter.
In 1974, Connors and Riordan began filing lawsuits, eventually amounting to U.S. $10 million, against the ATP and its president Arthur Ashe for allegedly restricting Connors' freedom in the game. It started when Connors was banned from the French Open in 1974 after he had signed a contract to play World Team Tennis (WTT) for Baltimore. The ATP and the French Tennis Federation opposed WTT because it conflicted with the French Open; therefore, all entries to the French Open from WTT players were refused.
The French Open was the only Grand Slam tournament that Connors did not win in 1974. He won the Australian Open, defeating Phil Dent in four sets in the final. Connors then beat Ken Rosewall in straight sets in the finals of both the Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Therefore, his exclusion from the French Open possibly prevented him from becoming the first male player since Rod Laver to win all four Grand Slam singles titles in one year. Though he reached the semi-finals on four occasions, Connors never won the French Open, failing to achieve a Career Grand Slam.
Connors reached the World No. 1 ranking in July 1974, and held it for 160 straight weeks--that was the world record of straight weeks being number one until Roger Federer beat it on 26th February 2007. Over the course of his career, he held the World No. 1 ranking for a total of 268 weeks.
In 1975, Connors was the runner-up in the three Grand Slam singles tournaments he had won the year before. The 1975 Wimbledon final was a duel between lawsuit opponents, as Connors lost to Ashe in what most consider to have been a great upset. Shortly thereafter, Connors dropped the lawsuits and parted with Riordan.
That year, Connors won two highly-touted "Challenge Matches," both arranged by Riordan and televised nationally by CBS Sports from Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas. The first match, in February, was against Rod Laver, fourteen years Connors' senior at age 36. Connors won that match, billed as a U.S. $100,000 winner-takes-all, 6-4, 6-2, 3-6, 7-5. In April, Connors played the man who had beaten him in the Australian Open final, John Newcombe, in a match billed as a U.S. $250,000 winner-takes-all. Connors won the match in four sets.
In 1976, Connors met Björn Borg, the new Wimbledon champion, in the final of the U.S. Open, which now was being played on clay. Connors saved four set points in a third-set tie-break to beat the Swede 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(9), 6-4. Connors finished 1976 as the top-ranked player for the third consecutive year.
In early 1977, Connors won his first World Championship Tennis (WCT) Finals, the championship tournament of the WCT tour.
Despite his success,Connors remained an independent character. At Wimbledon in 1977, he refused to participate in a parade of former champions to celebrate the tournament's centenary and was booed when he played in the final the following day. He lost in five sets to Borg, who a month later was able briefly to interrupt Connors' long hold on the #1 ranking. Connors then lost in the final of the U.S. Open to Guillermo Vilas.
Having irritated sponsors and tennis officials by shunning the end-of-year Masters championships for the previous three years, Connors entered the competition for the first time in January 1978. In the round-robin portion of the tournament, which had just moved to New York City, Connors lost a celebrated late-night match to Vilas 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 but took the title by defeating Borg in the final 6-4, 1-6, 6-4.
Borg beat Connors comfortably in the 1978 Wimbledon final, but Connors defeated the Swede 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 in the final of the 1978 U.S. Open, which was held for the first time at the Flushing Meadows venue. By winning the first Grand Slam tournament ever held on hard courts, Connors became the first male tennis player to have won Grand Slam singles titles on three different surfaces: grass (1974), clay (1976), and hard court (1978).
Connors lost his stranglehold on the #1 ranking to Borg in early 1979. He returned to the French Open in May, losing in a semi-final. He also lost in the semi-finals at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, repeating those results in 1980 and 1981. His best win during these years was in 1980, when he took his second WCT Finals by defeating the defending champion, John McEnroe.
In 1982, at age 30, Connors was back in the Wimbledon singles final, where he faced McEnroe, who by then was established firmly as the world's top player. Connors recovered from being three points away from defeat in a fourth-set tie-break to win the match 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 7-6, 6-4 and claim his second Wimbledon title, eight years after his first.
Connors then defeated another of the next generation of tennis stars, Ivan Lendl, in the U.S. Open final and soon regained the #1 ranking. He beat Lendl again in the 1983 U.S. Open final.
Connors' last Grand Slam final came at Wimbledon in 1984, where again he faced McEnroe. This time, McEnroe won easily 6-1, 6-1, 6-2. Though beaten, Connors' competitive fire was certainly not dampened. Asked afterwards if he now admitted his rival was the better player, he simply replied, "Never."
A low point in Connors' career occurred on February 21, 1986 when he was defaulted in the fifth set of a semi-final match against Lendl at the Lipton International Players Championships in Boca Raton, Florida after being angered by the officiating. He paid a U.S. $20,000 fine and accepted a ten-weeks suspension from the professional tour, starting March 30. He was forced to miss the French Open, marking the first time that any player had missed a Grand Slam tournament due to suspension. He subsequently lost in the first round at Wimbledon and the third round at the U.S. Open, a tournament where he had made at least the semi-finals for twelve consecutive years.
Connors gradually transformed himself into a respected elder of the tennis world in the later years of his career. He continued to compete forcefully against much younger men until he was well into his 41st year.
In the fourth round of the 1987 Wimbledon tournament, Connors defeated Mikael Pernfors, ten years his junior, 1-6, 1-6, 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 after having fallen behind 1-6, 1-6, 1-4 and again 0-3 in the fourth set.
In July 1988, Connors ended a four-year title drought by winning the Sovran Bank Tennis Classic in Washington, D.C. It was the 106th title of his career. Connors had played in 56 tournaments and 12 finals since his previous victory in the Tokyo Indoors against Lendl in October 1984.
At the 1989 U.S. Open, Connors defeated the third seed (and future two-time champion), Stefan Edberg, in straight sets in the fourth round and pushed sixth-seeded Andre Agassi to five sets in a quarter-final.
The defining moment of Connors' later career came in 1991. His career had seemed to be at an end in 1990, when he played only three tournament matches (and lost all three), dropping to No. 936 in the world rankings. But after surgery on his deteriorating left wrist, he came back to play 14 tournaments in 1991. An ailing back forced him to retire from a five-sets match in the third round of the French Open against Michael Chang, the 1989 champion. But Connors made an improbable run to the U.S. Open semi-finals at the age of 39. On his birthday, he defeated 24-year-old Aaron Krickstein 3-6, 7-6(8), 1-6, 6-3, 7-6(4) in 4 hours and 41 minutes, coming back from a 2-5 deficit in the final set. Connors then was defeated in a semi-final by the reigning French Open champion, Jim Courier.
During his career, Connors won a record 109 men's singles titles. He also won 15 doubles titles (including the men's doubles titles at Wimbledon in 1973 and the U.S. Open in 1975).
In his 1979 autobiography, Jack Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself, ranks Connors as one of the 21 best players of all time.[2] Connors was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1998 and has his own star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.
On July 24, 2006 at the start of the Countrywide Classic tournament in Los Angeles, American tennis player Andy Roddick formally announced his partnership with Connors as his coach.
[edit] Personal life
Connors and Chris Evert had planned to marry in October 1973, but it was called off.
In 1980, Connors married "Playboy" model Patti McGuire. They have two children and live in the Santa Barbara, California area.
In the spring of 2006, Connors had successful hip-replacement surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. [1]
On January 8, 2007 the mother and long-time coach of Connors died at the age of 82. [2]
[edit] Style of play
Undoubtedly Connors' strongest asset was his extremely powerful flat, double-handed backhand. In an era when top-spin was becoming the rage, Connors was one of the few players to hit the ball flat and low. Connors' forehand was in the continental grip and also hit flat. While not as formidable as his backhand it shared with his backhand the great advantage of requiring relatively little energy to hit powerfully. This is perhaps one of the reasons for Connors' unusually-long 26 years as a tennis professional (excluding his time on the senior's circuit). Connors was known to practice no more than two hours a day and felt satisfied enough in his game not to improve his serve, which was accurate but slow relative to the standards of the day. Connors was unusual in being able to combine a solid base-line game with aggressive charges to the net and agile mid-court play.
Connors' game was highly reliant on precision and to obtain this he experimented extensively with lead tape wound around the head of his racket.
[edit] Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
Connors was noted for continuing to use the all-steel Wilson T-2000 tennis racquet for a long time, despite the fact that most professionals had switched to graphite/graphite-composite racquets. He did eventually switch to a Slazenger Panther Pro Ceramic racquet.
Connors also commentates for the BBC during the Wimbledon Championships. This often coincides with John McEnroe's own stints as an analyst and commentator, often leading to much banter between the two former arch-rivals. Connors also has developed a trade-marked verbal "tic" when commentating, which is noticeable when, after a good shot or winner has been hit by a player, Connors will register his approval by muttering, "'hmm.' he liked to grab the ball by the hunches."
[edit] Grand Slam singles finals
[edit] Wins (8)
| Year | Championship | Opponent in Final | Score in Final |
| 1974 | Australian Open | Image:Flag of Australia.svg Phil Dent | 7-6, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 |
| 1974 | Wimbledon | Image:Flag of Australia.svg Ken Rosewall | 6-1, 6-1, 6-4 |
| 1974 | U.S. Open | Image:Flag of Australia.svg Ken Rosewall | 6-1, 6-0, 6-1 |
| 1976 | U.S. Open (2) | Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Björn Borg | 6-4, 3-6, 7-6, 6-4 |
| 1978 | U.S. Open (3) | Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Björn Borg | 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 |
| 1982 | Wimbledon (2) | Image:Flag of the United States.svg John McEnroe | 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 7-6, 6-4 |
| 1982 | U.S. Open (4) | Image:Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg Ivan Lendl | 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 |
| 1983 | U.S. Open (5) | Image:Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg Ivan Lendl | 6-3, 6-7, 7-5, 6-0 |
[edit] Runner-ups (7)
| Year | Championship | Opponent in Final | Score in Final |
| 1975 | Australian Open | Image:Flag of Australia.svg John Newcombe | 7-5, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5 |
| 1975 | Wimbledon | Image:Flag of the United States.svg Arthur Ashe | 6-1, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4 |
| 1975 | U.S. Open | Image:Flag of Spain under Franco.svg Manuel Orantes | 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 |
| 1977 | Wimbledon (2) | Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Björn Borg | 3-6, 6-2, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4 |
| 1977 | U.S. Open (2) | Image:Flag of Argentina.svg Guillermo Vilas | 2-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-0 |
| 1978 | Wimbledon (3) | Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Björn Borg | 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 |
| 1984 | Wimbledon (4) | Image:Flag of the United States.svg John McEnroe | 6-1, 6-1, 6-2 |
[edit] Grand Slam men's doubles finals (3)
[edit] Wins (2)
| Year | Championship | Partnering | Opponents in Final | Score in Final |
| 1973 | Wimbledon | Image:Flag of Romania (1947-1989).svg Ilie Năstase | Image:Flag of Australia.svg John Cooper Image:Flag of Australia.svg Neale Fraser | 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, 8-9 (3), 6-1 |
| 1975 | U.S. Open | Image:Flag of Romania (1947-1989).svg Ilie Năstase | Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Tom Okker Image:Flag of the United States.svg Marty Riessen | 6-4, 7-6 |
[edit] Runner-up (1)
| Year | Championship | Partnering | Opponents in Final | Score in Final |
| 1973 | French Open | Image:Flag of Romania (1947-1989).svg Ilie Năstase | Image:Flag of Australia.svg John Newcombe Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Tom Okker | 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 |
[edit] Grand Slam mixed doubles final (1)
[edit] Runner-up (1)
| Year | Championship | Partnering | Opponents in Final | Score in Final |
| 1974 | U.S. Open | Image:Flag of the United States.svg Chris Evert | Image:Flag of the United States.svg Pam Teeguarden Image:Flag of Australia.svg Geoff Masters | 6-1, 7-6 |
[edit] Grand Slam results
[edit] Singles record
- 1222-269 (record of ATP events Singles wins) #1 most all-time in ATP Wins (= 81,96 %, highest winning percentage of all players more than 1000 games played).
[edit] Career singles titles (139) and runner-ups (54)
105 titles are registered in the ATP Web site, 4 titles in the ATP Players' Guide, and 30 are not listed in any ATP Statistics
[edit] Singles titles listed by the Association of Tennis Professionals--ATP (109), 105 in the Web site and 4 others in the Players' Guide
- * ATP Web site non-listed tournaments
[edit] Singles runner-ups (54), only 49 are listed by the Association of Tennis Professionals
- * - ATP non-listed tournaments
- ** - Four-men invitational tournament not bringing ATP-ranking points, usually considered exhibition, and not counted as official by the ATP but so-called "Pepsi Grand Slam" is in ATP statistic included in the titles and runner-up listings (it was an ITF tournament)
[edit] Other (non-ATP, exhibition/invitational and special events) singles titles - draw at least eight players (18)
Here are Connors' tournament titles that are not included in the statistics on the Association of Tennis Professionals Web site. These mainly are special events like invitational tournaments and exhibitions.
| Year | Date | Tournament | Surface | Prize Money | Final Opponent | Final Result | Winners Prize |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971 | Jacksonville | Carpet | Clark Graebner | ||||
| 1972 | Aug 14-20 | Ocean City | Herb Fitzgibbon | 6-3 6-2 | |||
| 1978 | June 5-10 | Beckenham - Kentish Times Tennis Week | Grass | Stan Smith | 9-8 6-3 | ||
| 1978 | Nov 21-26 | Tokyo - Gunze Invitational | Carpet | Ilie Nastase | 6-2 6-4 | ||
| 1979 | Sept 28-30 | Asuncion - Boqueron International | Clay | Guillermo Vilas | 7-5 6-3 | ||
| 1979 | Oct 1-5 | Buenos Aires | Clay | Victor Pecci | 6-2 1-6 6-2 | ||
| 1980 | Aug 4-10 | Frejus - 8-men Round Robin | Hard | Roscoe Tanner | 6-0 6-7 6-4 | ||
| 1980 | Oct 8-12 | Melbourne - Mazda Challenge | Carpet | Gene Mayer | 1-6 6-2 6-0 7-5 | ||
| 1982 | Jan 6-11 | Rosemont - Michelob Light Challenge of Champions | Carpet | $310,000 | John McEnroe | 6-7 7-5 6-7 7-5 6-4 | |
| 1982 | Sept 29-Oct 3 | Montreal - Molson Light Challenge Cup | Hard | $250,000 | Bjorn Borg | 6-4 6-3 | $80,000 |
| 1982 | Dec 17-19 | North Miami Beach - Nastase-Hamptons Invitational | Hard | $305,000 | Brian Teacher | 6-2 6-2 | $80,000 |
| 1983 | Feb 8-13 | Toronto - Molson Challenge | Carpet | Jose Higueras | 6-2 6-0 5-7 6-0 | ||
| 1983 | July 28-31 | Beaver Creek - Vail Beaver Creek Classic | Hard | Mats Wilander | 7-6 6-2 | ||
| 1983 | Aug 3-7 | Newport Beach - High Stakes | Hard | $300,000 | Tim Mayotte | 6-3 6-4 6-2 | |
| 1983 | Dec 14-20 | North Miami Beach - Nastase-Hamptons Invitational | Hard | $305,000 | Ivan Lendl | 6-3 7-6 6-1 | $90,000 |
| 1984 | Jan 3-8 | Rosemont - Lite Challenge of Champions | Carpet | $250,000 | Andres Gomez | 6-3 6-2 6-1 | |
| 1985 | July 30-Aug 4 | Stowe | Hard | Gene Mayer | 2-6 6-3 6-4 | ||
| 1988 | April 21-24 | Tulsa | Hard | Mel Purcell | 6-3 6-3 |
[edit] Other (non-ATP, exhibition/invitational and special events) singles titles - draw less than eight players (12)
| Year | Date | Tournament | Surface | Final Opponent | Final Result | Winners Prize |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1972 | Nottingham - 4-men invitational | |||||
| 1978 | September 22-24 | Buenos Aires - 4-men invitational | Bjorn Borg | 5-7 6-3 6-3 | ||
| 1979 | July 27-28 | Montpellier Invitational Tennis Tournament - 4-men invitational | John McEnroe | 7-6 2-6 7-5 | ||
| 1979 | September 15-16 | Rio de Janeiro - 4-men invitational | Guillermo Vilas | 6-3 6-4 6-3 | ||
| 1980 | March 6-7 | Munich - 4-men invitational | Carpet | Vitas Gerulaitis | 6-1 6-7 6-4 | |
| 1980 | April 7-8 | Tokyo - Suntory Cup | Carpet | John McEnroe | 7-5 6-3 | |
| 1981 | April 11-12 | Tokyo - Suntory Cup | Carpet | John McEnroe | 6-4 7-6 | |
| 1982 | July 22-24 | Industry Hills - $100,000 4-men invitational | Hard | Bjorn Borg | 5-7 6-2 6-2 6-7 6-2 | $50,000 |
| 1983 | April 10-11 | Tokyo - Suntory Cup | Carpet | Bjorn Borg | 6-3 6-4 | |
| 1983 | July 8-10 | Sun City - Round Robin Bophuthatswana | Hard | Ivan Lendl | 7-5 7-6 | $400,000 |
| 1986 | April 19-20 | Tokyo - Suntory Cup | Carpet | Mats Wilander | 6-4 6-0 | |
| 1989 | May 5-7 | Nîmes | Anders Jarryd | 6-2 6-3 |
[edit] Singles performance time line
| Tournament | 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1991 | 1992 | Career SR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australian Open | A | A | A | A | W | F | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | 1 / 2 |
| French Open | A | A | 2R | 1R | A | A | A | A | A | SF | SF | QF | QF | QF | SF | SF | A | QF | A | 2R | 3R | 1R | 0 / 13 |
| Wimbledon | A | 1R | QF | QF | W | F | QF | F | F | SF | SF | SF | W | 4R | F | SF | 1R | SF | 4R | 2R | 3R | 1R | 2 / 21 |
| US Open | 1R | 2R | 1R | QF | W | F | W | F | W | SF | SF | SF | W | W | SF | SF | 3R | SF | QF | QF | SF | 2R | 5 / 22 |
| Grand Slam SR | 0 / 1 | 0 / 2 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 3 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 1 / 2 | 0 / 2 | 1 / 2 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 2 / 3 | 1 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 2 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 2 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 0 / 3 | 8 / 58 |
[edit] Sources
The following are the sources for the information that is not on the Association of Tennis Professionals Web site:
- Michel Sutter, Vainqueurs Winners 1946-2003, Paris 2003. Sutter has attempted to list all tournaments meeting his criteria for selection beginning with 1946 and ending in the fall of 1991. For each tournament, he has indicated the city, the date of the final, the winner, the runner-up, and the score of the final. A tournament is included in his list if: (1), the draw for the tournament included at least eight players (with a few exceptions, such as the Pepsi Grand Slam tournaments in the second half of the 1970s); and (2), the level of the tournaments was at least equal to the present-day challenger tournaments. Sutter's book probably is the most exhaustive source of tennis tournament information since World War II, even though some professional tournaments held before the start of the open era are missing. Later, Sutter issued a second edition of his book, with only the players, their wins, and years for the period of 1946 through April 27, 2003.
[edit] Doubles titles (15)
[edit] Runner-ups (11)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- ATP Tour profile for Jimmy Connors
- International Tennis Hall of Fame profile
- Official Wimbledon website profile
- BBC profile
| Sporting positions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by John Newcombe Björn Borg Björn Borg John McEnroe John McEnroe John McEnroe John McEnroe Ivan Lendl John McEnroe | World No. 1 July 29, 1974 - August 22, 1977 August 30, 1977 - April 8, 1979 May 21, 1979 - July 8, 1979 September 13, 1982 - October 31, 1982 November 8, 1982 - November 14, 1982 January 31, 1983 - February 6, 1983 February 14, 1983 - February 27, 1983 May 16, 1983 - June 5, 1983 June 13, 1983 - July 3, 1983 | Succeeded by Björn Borg Björn Borg Björn Borg John McEnroe John McEnroe John McEnroe Ivan Lendl John McEnroe John McEnroe |
| Awards | ||
| Preceded by John McEnroe | ITF World Champion 1982 | Succeeded by John McEnroe |
World No. 1s in Men's tennis |
|---|
| Ilie Năstase | John Newcombe | Jimmy Connors | Björn Borg | John McEnroe | Ivan Lendl | Mats Wilander | Stefan Edberg | Boris Becker | Jim Courier | Pete Sampras | Andre Agassi | Thomas Muster | Marcelo Ríos | Carlos Moyà | Yevgeny Kafelnikov | Patrick Rafter | Marat Safin | Gustavo Kuerten | Lleyton Hewitt | Juan Carlos Ferrero | Andy Roddick | Roger Federer |
Australian Open men's singles champions* |
|---|
* Open Era • (1969) Rod Laver • (1970) Arthur Ashe • (1971-72) Ken Rosewall • (1973) John Newcombe • (1974) Jimmy Connors • (1975) John Newcombe • (1976) Mark Edmondson • (1977 [Jan]) Roscoe Tanner • (1977 [Dec]) Vitas Gerulaitis • (1978-79) Guillermo Vilas • (1980) Brian Teacher • (1981-82) Johan Kriek • (1983-84) Mats Wilander • (1985) Stefan Edberg • (1986) No competition • (1987) Stefan Edberg • (1988) Mats Wilander • (1989-90) Ivan Lendl • (1991) Boris Becker (1992-93) Jim Courier • (1994) Pete Sampras • (1995) Andre Agassi • (1996) Boris Becker • (1997) Pete Sampras • (1998) Petr Korda • (1999) Yevgeny Kafelnikov • (2000-01) Andre Agassi • (2002) Thomas Johansson • (2003) Andre Agassi • (2004) Roger Federer • (2005) Marat Safin • (2006-07) Roger Federer |
Wimbledon men's singles champions* |
|---|
* Open Era • (1968-69) Rod Laver • (1970–71) John Newcombe • (1972) Stan Smith • (1973) Jan Kodeš • (1974) Jimmy Connors • (1975) Arthur Ashe • (1976–80) Björn Borg • (1981) John McEnroe • (1982) Jimmy Connors • (1983–84) John McEnroe • (1985–86) Boris Becker • (1987) Pat Cash • (1988) Stefan Edberg • (1989) Boris Becker • (1990) Stefan Edberg (1991) Michael Stich • (1992) Andre Agassi • (1993–95) Pete Sampras • (1996) Richard Krajicek • (1997–00) Pete Sampras • (2001) Goran Ivanišević • (2002) Lleyton Hewitt • (2003–07) Roger Federer |
US Open men's singles champions* |
|---|
* Open Era • (1968) Arthur Ashe • (1969) Rod Laver • (1970) Ken Rosewall • (1971) Stan Smith • (1972) Ilie Năstase • (1973) John Newcombe • (1974) Jimmy Connors • (1975) Manuel Orantes • (1976) Jimmy Connors • (1977) Guillermo Vilas • (1978) Jimmy Connors • (1979–81) John McEnroe • (1982–83) Jimmy Connors • (1984) John McEnroe • (1985–87) Ivan Lendl • (1988) Mats Wilander • (1989) Boris Becker • (1990) Pete Sampras • (1991–92) Stefan Edberg • (1993) Pete Sampras • (1994) Andre Agassi • (1995–96) Pete Sampras • (1997–98) Patrick Rafter • (1999) Andre Agassi • (2000) Marat Safin • (2001) Lleyton Hewitt • (2002) Pete Sampras • (2003) Andy Roddick • (2004–07) Roger Federer |
| Male tennis players who have won 3 or more Grand Slam singles titles in one season | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1933: Jack Crawford (3) | 1934: Fred Perry (3) | 1938: Don Budge (4) | 1955: Tony Trabert (3) | 1956: Lew Hoad (3) | 1958: Ashley Cooper (3) | 1962, 1969: Rod Laver (4) | 1964: Roy Emerson (3) | 1974: Jimmy Connors (3) | 1988: Mats Wilander (3) | 2004, 2006, 2007: Roger Federer (3) | ||
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Categories: Articles with trivia sections from July 2007 | American tennis players | Tennis Hall of Fame members | Australian Open champions | Wimbledon champions | US Open champions | American tennis coaches | UCLA Bruins athletics | Sports in St. Louis | University of California, Los Angeles alumni | People from Belleville, Illinois | Irish-American sportspeople | 1952 births | Living people

