Frank Sedgman
Frank Allen Sedgman, born October 29,
In a four-year span from
In the days in which the Davis Cup, with its doubles match, had more far importance than it does today, and when doubles in
general were more important as a spectator attraction than today, Sedgman was also noted as a particularly good doubles player.
Sedgman and his partner
Sedgman was an extremely fast, slim, 5'11" (1.80 m) right-hander known for his fitness who played the
Sedgman, writes Kramer, "was the quickest I've ever seen. He could attack off his second serve, or he could come in behind his little slice backhand -- and once Sedg got to the net, forget it, because he was so quick you had to thread a needle to get anything past him. Anything he could get he would put away. Frank Sedgman hardly ever hit a second volley. If he got his racquet on a volley, it was almost always a placement, deep and hard."
Sedgman dominated amateur tennis in 1951 and 1952 when there was no Open tennis. There
were no lengthy professional tours during those two years, however, and the best professionals played only a few tournaments
among themselves. It is arguable, therefore, that Sedgman was the world's best player over that period. In late 1952 Sedgman was
tempted to turn professional. Harry Hopman, however, led a fund-raising drive via his newspaper column in the Melbourne Herald to keep Sedgman an amateur. Enough money was raised to purchase a gasoline station in
the name of Sedgman's future bride. [4] Sedgman remained an
amateur for another year but finally turned professional in 1953 and, according to some sources,
became the first tennis player, except, perhaps, for Bill Tilden, to make more than $100,000
in a single year. According to Kramer, Sedgman might have made as much as $150,000 during that tour. He was, however, narrowly
beaten that first year by the reigning king of professional tennis, Jack Kramer, 54 matches
to 41. It was the closest Kramer came to losing an annual tour, but "still he couldn't beat me. He couldn't handle my second
serve, and at the end, that was what saved me." Sedgman was slightly ahead, 18 matches to 17, when he began to have trouble with
his shoulder and the flu. Kramer won 17 of the next 19 matches, then, when Sedgman had recovered, split the remaining matches to
preserve his edge.
Sedgman was the winner of three major titles in
professional tennis and was the runner-up four times more in the years before Open tennis. He continued to play professionally
well into the 1960s. According to Kramer, he took the money he made on the tour and "made more money out of squash courts, a
confection named Sedgie Straws, and various other enterprises. Since he always stayed in shape, he came back as a big winner on
the Grand Masters tour when he reached forty-five."
Sedgman was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1979.
Sedgman was a proud grandparent when his grandson, Will Marshall walked on to centre court as an Aviva Ballkid for the 2007 Australian Open Mens Singles Final between Roger Federer and Fernando Gonzalez
Grand Slam record
Australian Championship - Singles champion: 1949, 1950
- Singles runner-up: 1952
- Men's Doubles champion: 1951, 1952
- Men's Doubles runner-up: 1947, 1948
- Mixed Doubles champion: 1949, 1950
- French Championship
- Singles runner-up: 1952
- Men's Doubles champion: 1951, 1952
- Men's Doubles runner-up: 1948
- Mixed Doubles champion: 1951, 1952
- Mixed Doubles runner-up: 1948
- Wimbledon
- Singles champion: 1952
- Men's Doubles champion: 1948, 1951, 1952
- Mixed Doubles champion: 1951, 1952
- U.S. Championship
- Singles champion: 1951, 1952
- Men's Doubles champion: 1950, 1951
- Men's Doubles runner-up: 1949, 1952
- Mixed Doubles champion: 1951, 1952
- Mixed Doubles runner-up: 1950
Professional World Singles Tournament wins
Wembley , England- Champion, 1953, 1958
- Finalist, 1956
- Champion, 1953, 1958
- United States Professional Championship
- Finalist, 1956, 1961
- French Professional Championship
- Champion, 1953
- Finalist, 1959
- Champion, 1953
Notes
- ^ Writing in 1979, Kramer considered the best player ever to have been either
Don Budge (for consistent play) or Ellsworth Vines (at the height of his game). The next four best were, chronologically, Bill Tilden, Fred Perry,Bobby Riggs , andPancho Gonzales . After these six came the "second echelon" of Rod Laver,Lew Hoad , Ken Rosewall,Gottfried von Cramm ,Ted Schroeder ,Jack Crawford ,Pancho Segura , Frank Sedgman,Tony Trabert , John Newcombe, Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith,Björn Borg , andJimmy Connors . He felt unable to rankHenri Cochet andRené Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best. - ^ Interview with tennis historian Rich Hillway in 2005 at the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
- ^ Interview with tennis historian Rich Hillway in 2005 at the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
- ^ The History of Professional Tennis, Joe McCauley, page 58
Sources
- The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9)
- Rich Hillway, tennis historian http://www.coloradotennis.com/cta/website.asp?Dept=News&Sec=Features&Page=Rich%20Hillway
See also
List of male tennis players
External links
| Pre Open Era Wimbledon men's singles champions* |
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* Pre Open Era | (1877) |
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