This article presents top ten lists of male singles tennis players, as ranked by various official and non-official ranking authorities throughout the history of the sport. Rankings of U.S.-only professionals pre-Open Era, and U.S.-only amateurs during World War II are also included.
The article is split into two sections: 1912–1972, and since 1973 when the first official ATP rankings were published, for ease of navigation.
A. E. Crawley [1] [a] | E. B. Dewhurst [3] | R. Norris Williams [3] |
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E. B. Dewhurst [4] | A. Wallis Myers [5] ( The Daily Telegraph ) | American Lawn Tennis [6] [7] | B. H. Liddell Hart [8] ( The Times ) | The Field [6] [7] | Lawn-Tennis [5] |
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E. B. Dewhurst [9] | A. Wallis Myers [10] | "Argent" [10] (Lawn Tennis and Badminton) | Theodore Mavrogordato [11] |
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no world rankings (World War I)
A. Wallis Myers [12] |
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A. Wallis Myers [12] | "Austral" (R. M. Kidston) [13] ( The Referee) |
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A. Wallis Myers [14] [15] | "Austral" (R. M. Kidston) [16] | B. H. Liddell Hart [17] | Bill Tilden [18] [b] | Gerald Patterson [19] |
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A. Wallis Myers [20] | S. Wallis Merrihew [21] [22] (American Lawn Tennis) | New York Times [23] | Bill Tilden [24] |
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(didn't rank himself) |
A. Wallis Myers [25] [26] | B. H. Liddell Hart [27] | Bill Tilden [28] |
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(didn't rank himself) |
A. Wallis Myers [29] | B. H. Liddell Hart [30] | Samuel Brookman [31] |
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A. Wallis Myers [32] | Maxime Lanet [33] ( L'Auto ) | Frank Poxon [34] ( Daily News ) | "Server" [35] ( The Australasian ) | Bill Tilden [36] [c] | James Anderson [38] |
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(didn't rank himself) |
(didn't rank himself) |
A. Wallis Myers [39] | Stanley Doust [40] ( Daily Mail ) | Suzanne Lenglen [41] | Bill Tilden [42] |
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A. Wallis Myers [43] | U.S. ranking committee president [44] | Émile Deve [45] | Marcel Berger [45] ( L'Opinion ) | Jean Samazeuilh [46] ( Le Miroir des sports ) | Henri Cochet [45] |
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A. Wallis Myers [47] | Pierre Gillou [48] (L'Auto) | F. Gordon Lowe [49] ( The Scotsman ) | W. J. Daish [50] | Vincent Richards [51] | Bill Tilden [50] |
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Ray Bowers [52] | Vincent Richards [51] |
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Ray Bowers [52] |
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A. Wallis Myers [53] | "Austral" (R. M. Kidston). [54] | F. Gordon Lowe [55] [d] | Vincent Richards [57] | Didier Poulain [58] (L'Auto, combined ranking) | Bill Tilden [59] | Karel Koželuh [60] |
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Ray Bowers [61] | American Lawn Tennis [62] | Bill Tilden [63] | Karel Koželuh [60] |
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Ray Bowers [61] | Bernard Brown [64] ( Brooklyn Times-Union ) |
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A. Wallis Myers [65] | Pierre Gillou [66] | Didier Poulain [67] | Bill Tilden [65] |
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Ray Bowers [61] | Bernard Brown [68] |
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Ray Bowers [61] |
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A. Wallis Myers [69] | Stanley Doust [70] | Pierre Gillou [71] | Didier Poulain [72] | Bill Tilden [73] | Noel Dickson [74] ( Melbourne Herald ) | "Service" [75] ( Western Mail ) | Sport magazine [76] (Zurich) |
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Ray Bowers [77] | George Agutter [78] | Bill Tilden [73] | PLTA [e] [79] (U.S.-only) |
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A. Wallis Myers [81] | Pierre Gillou [82] | F. Gordon Lowe [83] | Bernard Brown [84] | Jean Borotra [85] | Ellsworth Vines [86] |
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(didn't rank himself.) |
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Ray Bowers [87] | Bill Tilden [88] |
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Ray Bowers [87] | Ellsworth Vines [89] |
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(didn't rank himself) |
A. Wallis Myers [90] | Pierre Gillou [91] | Didier Poulain [92] | Bernard Brown [93] | Harry Hopman [94] (Melbourne Herald) | John R. Tunis [95] [96] ( The Literary Digest ) | Alfred Chave [97] (Brisbane Telegraph) | "Set" [98] ( The West Australian ) | Ellsworth Vines [99] |
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Ray Bowers [87] | Ellsworth Vines [99] | Albert Burke [100] [101] | Bill Tilden [102] | PLTA [103] [f] (U.S.-only) |
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(didn't rank himself) |
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Ray Bowers [87] |
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A. Wallis Myers [104] | Pierre Gillou [105] | Bill Tilden [106] [g] | Bernard Brown [108] | Harry Hopman [109] | John R. Tunis [110] | Ned Potter [111] (American Lawn Tennis) | G. H. McElhone [112] ( The Sydney Morning Herald ) | R. O. Cummings [113] ( The Courier-Mail ) | J. Brookes Fenno, Jr. [114] (The Literary Digest) |
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Ray Bowers [115] | John R. Tunis [110] |
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Ray Bowers [115] | Pierre Gillou [116] | Tennis [117] (Italian newspaper) | Bill Tilden & Ellsworth Vines [118] |
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A. Wallis Myers [119] | S. Wallis Merrihew [120] | Pierre Gillou [121] | Harry Hopman [122] | Ned Potter [123] | G. H. McElhone [124] | The Times [125] | "Forehand" [126] [127] ( Ashburton Guardian ) |
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Ray Bowers [128] |
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A. Wallis Myers [130] | "Austral" (R. M. Kidston) [131] | Pierre Gillou [132] | Bill Tilden [133] | Harry Hopman [134] | Ned Potter [135] | G. H. McElhone [136] | The Times [137] | Mervyn Weston [137] (The Australasian) | Fred Perry [138] | Jack Crawford [139] |
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Ray Bowers [140] | Bill Tilden [141] | Fred Perry [142] |
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Ray Bowers [140] | Bill Tilden [143] | Robert Murray [144] ( Sports Illustrated ) |
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A. Wallis Myers [145] | Pierre Gillou [146] | Harry Hopman [147] [148] | Alfred Chave [149] | Ned Potter [150] | The Times [151] | Mervyn Weston [152] | Pierre Goldschmidt [153] (L'Auto) |
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Ray Bowers [154] |
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Ray Bowers [154] | Pierre Goldschmidt [153] | Sports Illustrated [155] |
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A. Wallis Myers [156] | Pierre Gillou [157] | F. Gordon Lowe [158] | Alfred Chave [159] | Ned Potter [123] | G. H. McElhone [160] | The Times [158] | Mervyn Weston [161] | Pierre Goldschmidt [162] | "International" [163] (The Referee) | Jack Crawford [164] | Don Budge [165] |
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(didn't rank himself) |
Ray Bowers [166] |
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Ray Bowers [166] |
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American Lawn Tennis [167] | Pierre Gillou [168] | F. Gordon Lowe [169] | Alfred Chave [170] | Ned Potter [171] [h] | G. H. McElhone [172] | The Times [173] |
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USNLTA [i] [176] (U.S.-only) |
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Ray Bowers [177] |
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Ray Bowers [177] |
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USNLTA [176] (U.S.-only) |
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Ray Bowers [177] |
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Ray Bowers [177] |
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USNLTA [178] [176] (U.S.-only) |
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Ray Bowers [179] | PLTA [180] (U.S.-only) |
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Ray Bowers [179] |
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no world rankings (World War II)
USNLTA [176] (U.S.-only) |
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WPTA [j] [181] | PLTA [182] (U.S.-only) | Bill Tilden [183] |
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Pierre Gillou [184] | Harry Hopman [185] | Ned Potter [123] | Jean Samazeuilh [186] |
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Pierre Gillou [188] | Ned Potter [189] | John Olliff [190] (The Daily Telegraph) |
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Pierre Gillou [191] | Ned Potter [192] | John Olliff [193] |
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Pierre Gillou [196] | Harry Hopman [197] | Ned Potter [198] | John Olliff [199] |
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Pierre Gillou [201] | Harry Hopman [202] | Ned Potter [203] | John Olliff [204] |
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PLTA [205] (U.S.-only) |
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Pierre Gillou [206] | Harry Hopman [207] | Ned Potter [123] |
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Pierre Gillou [211] | Harry Hopman [212] | Ned Potter [213] [o] | Lance Tingay [214] (The Daily Telegraph) |
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PTPA [215] (U.S.-only) |
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Harry Hopman [216] | Ned Potter [217] [p] (World Tennis) | Lance Tingay [219] | Tennis de France [220] (Philippe Chatrier ed.) | Bill Talbert [221] [q] | Ham Richardson [218] | Noel Brown [221] [r] | Hal Burrows [221] [s] | Gardnar Mulloy [218] | Grant Golden [218] | Tony Trabert [221] [t] | Vic Seixas [218] |
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Cleveland tournament committee [222] | George Lyttleton Rogers [223] |
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Harry Hopman [224] | Ned Potter [225] | Lance Tingay [226] | New York Times [227] [228] (panel of experts) |
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Ned Potter [230] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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IPTA [231] |
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Ned Potter [232] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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Jack March [233] [v] |
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Ned Potter [235] | Lance Tingay [193] | Adrian Quist [236] | Yvon Petra [237] |
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Jack March [238] |
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Adrian Quist [239] |
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Ned Potter [240] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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Jack March [241] |
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Ned Potter [242] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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Jack March [243] | Jack Kramer [244] | Robert Roy [245] [244] ( L'Équipe ) | Robert Barnes [244] | Ampol rankings [246] [247] |
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Ned Potter [248] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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Jack Kramer [249] |
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Ned Potter [250] | Lance Tingay [193] |
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Ned Potter [253] | Lance Tingay [193] | Ulrich Kaiser [254] (panel of 13 experts) |
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Ken Rosewall [255] |
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Ned Potter [256] | Lance Tingay [193] | Ulrich Kaiser [257] (panel of 13 experts) |
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Ned Potter [259] | Lance Tingay [193] | Ulrich Kaiser [260] (panel of 14 experts) |
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Norris McWhirter [261] ( The Observer ) | Official pro rankings [262] [x] |
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Norris McWhirter [261] |
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Ned Potter [264] | Lance Tingay [193] | Ulrich Kaiser [265] (panel of 16 experts) | Joseph McCauley [266] | Sport za Rubezhom [267] |
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Lance Tingay [268] | Joseph McCauley [269] (World Tennis) | Pierre de Thier [270] | Sport In The USSR [271] |
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Lance Tingay [193] | Ulrich Kaiser [272] (panel of 13 experts) | Joseph McCauley [273] | Martini and Rossi [274] |
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Lance Tingay [275] | Ulrich Kaiser [276] (panel of 18 experts) | Joseph McCauley [277] | Martini and Rossi [278] (panel of 11 experts) | Bud Collins [279] ( The Boston Globe ) | Rino Tommasi [280] ( La Gazzetta dello Sport ) | Seagram's [281] (panel of 15 experts) | The Times [282] |
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Lance Tingay [275] | Joseph McCauley [283] | Martini and Rossi [284] (panel of 14 experts) | Bud Collins [279] | Rino Tommasi [280] | Frank Rostron [285] ( Daily Express ) |
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Lance Tingay [275] | Joseph McCauley [286] | Martini and Rossi [287] | Bud Collins [279] | Rino Tommasi [280] | Rex Bellamy [288] (The Times) | Judith Elian [289] (L'Équipe) | Mike Gibson [289] | Tennis magazine [290] (Germany) |
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Lance Tingay [275] | Joseph McCauley [291] | Martini and Rossi [292] | Bud Collins [279] | Rino Tommasi [280] | Rex Bellamy [293] | Frank Rostron [294] | Ilie Năstase [295] |
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Lance Tingay [275] | Martini and Rossi [296] | Bud Collins [279] | Rino Tommasi [280] | Rex Bellamy [297] | Judith Elian [298] | Frank Rostron [299] | Neil Amdur [300] (World Tennis) |
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John Donald Budge was an American tennis player. He is most famous as the first tennis player — male or female, 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.
Lewis Alan Hoad was an Australian tennis player whose career ran from 1950 to 1973. Hoad won four Major singles tournaments as an amateur. He was a member of the Australian team that won the Davis Cup four times between 1952 and 1956. Hoad turned professional in July 1957. He won the Kooyong Tournament of Champions in 1958 and the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions in 1959. He won the Ampol Open Trophy world series of tournaments in 1959, which included the Kooyong tournament that concluded in early January 1960. Hoad's men's singles tournament victories spanned from 1951 to 1971.
Kenneth Robert Rosewall is an Australian former world top-ranking professional tennis player. Rosewall won 147 singles titles, including a record 15 Pro Majors and 8 Grand Slam titles for a total 23 titles at pro and amateur majors ranks him second all time to Novak Djokovic on 24. He also won 15 Pro Majors in doubles and 9 Grand Slam doubles titles. Rosewall achieved a Pro Slam in singles in 1963 by winning the three Pro Majors in one year and he completed the Career Grand Slam in doubles.
Ricardo Alonso "Pancho" González, known sometimes as Richard Gonzales, was an American tennis player. He won 15 major singles titles, including two U.S. National Singles Championships in 1948 and 1949, and 13 Professional Grand Slam titles. He also won three Tournament of Champions professional events in 1957, 1958, and 1959. He was ranked world amateur No. 1 in 1948 by Ned Potter and in 1949 by Potter and John Olliff.
Jean René Lacoste was a French tennis player and businessman. He was nicknamed "the Crocodile" because of how he dealt with his opponents; he is also known worldwide as the creator of the Lacoste tennis shirt, which he introduced in 1929, and eventually founded the brand and its logo in 1933.
Francis Arthur Sedgman is an Australian former world No. 1 tennis player. Over the course of a three-decade career, Sedgman won five Grand Slam singles tournaments as an amateur as well as 22 Grand Slam doubles tournaments. He is one of only five tennis players all-time to win multiple career Grand Slams in two disciplines, alongside Margaret Court, Roy Emerson, Martina Navratilova and Serena Williams. In 1951, he and Ken McGregor won the Grand Slam in men's doubles. Sedgman turned professional in 1953, and won the Wembley World Professional Indoor singles title in 1953 and 1958. He also won the Sydney Masters tournament in 1958, and the Melbourne Professional singles title in 1959. He won the Grand Prix de Europe Professional Tour in 1959.
John Albert Kramer was an American tennis player of the 1940s and 1950s, and a pioneer promoter who helped drive the sport towards professionalism at the elite level. Kramer also ushered in the serve-and-volley era in tennis, a playing style with which he won three Grand Slam tournaments. He also led the U.S. Davis Cup tennis team to victory in the 1946 and 1947 Davis Cup finals.
Henry Ellsworth Vines Jr. was an American tennis champion of the 1930s, the World No. 1 player or the co-No. 1 in 1932 as an amateur, and in 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937 as a professional. He won three Grand Slam titles, the U.S. National Championships in 1931 and 1932 and the Wimbledon Championships in 1932. Vines also was 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.
Henri Jean Cochet was a French tennis player. He was a world No. 1 ranked player, and a member of the famous "Four Musketeers" from France who dominated tennis in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
John Herbert Crawford, was an Australian tennis player during the 1930s. He was the World No. 1 amateur for 1933, during which year he won the Australian Open, the French Open, and Wimbledon, and was runner-up at the U.S. Open in five sets, thus missing the Grand Slam by one set that year. He also won the Australian Open in 1931, 1932, and 1935. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1979.
Before the advent of the Open era of tennis competitions in April 1968, only amateurs were allowed to compete in established tournaments, including the four majors. There was no prize money and players were compensated for travel expenses only. However many top tennis players turned professional to play legally for prize money in the years before the open era. They played in separate professional events, mostly on tours involving head-to-head competition, but also in professional tournaments as the biggest events on the pro tour. Professional tournaments, in particular the professional majors, usually only had a men's draw.
Marion Anthony Trabert was an American amateur world No. 1 tennis champion and long-time tennis author, TV commentator, instructor, and motivational speaker.
Karel Koželuh was a Czech tennis, association football, and ice hockey player of the 1920s and 1930s. Koželuh became a European ice hockey champion in 1925 and was one of the top-ranked players on the professional tennis circuit in the 1930s.
World number 1 ranked male tennis players is a year-by-year listing of the male tennis players who were ranked as world No. 1 by various contemporary and modern sources. The annual source rankings from which the No. 1 players are drawn are cited for each player's name, with a summary of the most important tennis events of each year also included. If world rankings are not available, recent rankings by tennis writers for historical years are accessed, with the dates of the recent rankings identified. In the period 1948–1953, when contemporary professional world rankings were not created, the U.S. professional rankings are cited.
Lester Rollo Stoefen was an American tennis player of the 1930s.
Robert Larimore Riggs was an American tennis champion who was the world No. 1 amateur in 1939 and world No. 1 professional in 1946 and 1947. He played his first professional tennis match on December 26, 1941.
World number 1 ranked female tennis players is a year-by-year listing of the female tennis players who were ranked as world No. 1 by various contemporary and modern sources.
For many years before the Open Era of tennis in 1968, the usual format for the handful of touring tennis professionals was a series of two-man one-night stands across the United States and often in other countries as well. The most notable of these tours were the "World Series" or "World Professional Championships", in which the reigning world champion went head-to-head against a challenger, most often the leading amateur of the previous year who had just turned pro. Promoters would attempt to sign the leading amateur to a contract with a minimum guarantee against a percentage of gate receipts, making a similar type of deal with the reigning professional champion and sometimes giving smaller percentages to undercard players. The winners of the tours were described as being the "world champion".
This article presents top ten lists of female singles tennis players, as ranked by various official and non-official ranking authorities throughout the history of the sport.
Jack Kramer of Los Angeles today gained official recognition as the best professional player in the United States. He drew the No. 1 spot in the 1948 rankings of the Professional Lawn Tennis Association.
RANKIN TELESKOOP MAGAZINE 1967.Pro's & Amateurs) 1.Rod Laver 2.Ken Rosewall 3.Andres Gimeno 4.Lew Goad 5.Mal Anderson 6.Earl Buchholtz 7.Dennis Ralston 8.Fred Stolle 9.Pancho Gonzales 10.Manuel Santana (Amateur) 11.Alex Olmedo 12.Nicola Pietrangeli (Amateur)13 Luis Ayala 14.Pancho Segura 15.Fred Sedgman 16.John Newcombe (amateur) 17.Tom Okker(Amateur) 18.Arthur Ashe (Amateur) 19.Stan Smith (Amateur)20.Barry Mackay21.Neal Fraser (Amateur) 22.Owen Davidson (Amateur & Prof) 23.Mike Davies 24.Robert Haillet 25.Sven Davidson (Amateur)retired: Ken Mc Gregor, Mervyn Rose, Dick Savitt (Amateur)Ashley Cooper, Tony Trabert