Country (sports) | ![]() |
---|---|
Died | June 8, 2000 (aged 88) |
Plays | Right-handed |
Singles | |
Career record | 82-71 |
Career titles | 14 |
Grand Slam singles results | |
US Open | 3R (1932, 1933, 1934) |
Jack Tidball was an American tennis player. [1] He won the 1936 Canadian Open Championships. He won the 1938 Long Beach tournament defeating Don Budge in a close final.
Active in the 1930s, Tidball was a leading player in collegiate tennis for the UCLA Bruins. He was the 1933 national intercollegiate champion, which made him the first Bruin to win the title. [2] He won the 1934 Eastern Intercollegiate Championships defeating Gene Mako in a close five set final.
His 1933 season also included a win over Ellsworth Vines at the Pacific Southwest Championships and a U.S. Clay Court doubles championship. [3]
He won the Southern California Championships in 1934 defeating Bobby Riggs in the quarterfinal.
In 1936 he won the Canadian Championships, in the final defeating John Murio of Hawaii, who had won the 1933 Canadian title. [4] He won the Ojai Tennis Tournament in 1936 (defeating Wayne Sabin in the final), in 1937 (the final a w.o. against Riggs), in 1938 (defeating William Doeg in the final), and in 1939 (defeating Thomas Chambers in the final).
In October 1938 he won the Long Beach Championships at the Hotel Virginia with a close three set win over Don Budge in the final. Budge had won the first Grand Slam that same year.
Tidball's two sons were college tennis players as well. His youngest son Steve competed for UCLA, while elder son John was a USC player. Both featured at tour level. [5]
John Donald Budge was an American tennis player. He is most famous as the first tennis player — male or female, and still the only American male — to win the Grand Slam, and to win all four Grand Slam events consecutively overall. Budge was the second man to complete the career Grand Slam after Fred Perry, and remains the youngest to achieve the feat. He won ten majors, of which six were Grand Slam events and four Pro Slams, the latter achieved on three different surfaces. Budge is considered to have one of the best backhands in the history of tennis, with most observers rating it better than that of later player Ken Rosewall.
Frederick John Perry was a British tennis and table tennis player and former world No. 1 from England who won 10 Majors including eight Grand Slam tournaments and two Pro Slams single titles, as well as six Major doubles titles. Perry won three consecutive Wimbledon Championships from 1934 to 1936 and was World Amateur number one tennis player during those three years. Prior to Andy Murray in 2013, Perry was the last British player to win the men's Wimbledon championship, in 1936, and the last British player to win a men's singles Grand Slam title, until Andy Murray won the 2012 US Open.
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Henry Ellsworth Vines Jr. was an American tennis champion of the 1930s, the World No. 1 player or the co-No. 1 in 1932, 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937, able to win Pro Slam titles on three different surfaces. He later became a professional golfer and reached the semifinals of the PGA Championship in 1951.
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Gottfried Alexander Maximilian Walter Kurt Freiherr von Cramm was a German tennis player who won the French Championships twice and reached the final of a Grand Slam singles tournament on five other occasions. He was ranked number 2 in the world in 1934 and 1936, and number 1 in the world in 1937. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1977, which states that he is "most remembered for a gallant effort in defeat against Don Budge in the 1937 Interzone Final at Wimbledon".
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