Posted on
July 04, 2010 by
Dean Hybl
Lou Gehrig's speech was one of the most memorable 4th of July moments in sports history.
The Fourth of July is known for fireworks, patriotism, and family outings, but it’s also a day that has been filled with some great moments in the sports world.
No July 4th moment has been bigger than the day, 71 years ago, when Lou Gehrig stood on the field at Yankee Stadium and proclaimed himself, “The luckiest man on the face of the earth.”
The sudden transformation of Gehrig from the “Iron Horse” to a man for whom a disease would soon be named after was punctuated that day, when the baseball world said goodbye to one of the all-time greats.
Gehrig died less than two years later, but his legacy is still alive today and will be honored in special ceremonies all across the baseball world on Saturday.
Yankee Stadium was the site for another memorable July 4th moment, 44 years later. On July 4, 1983 New York Yankees left-hander Dave Righetti hurled a no-hitter against the Boston Red Sox.
The “no-no” by Righetti, who would go on to earn his greatest distinction as a relief pitcher, was the first by a Yankee since Don Larsen’s perfect game in the 1956 World Series.
More than any other sport though, tennis and the Fourth of July have had a very special history.
The premier tennis tournament in the world, Wimbledon, is contested each year in late June and early July and often crowns a champion on a day that isn’t recognized as fondly in England as it is in the former colonies. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: John McEnroeJuly 4thLou GehrigRichard Petty
Category
General, Sports History
Posted on
October 17, 2009 by
JA Allen
The 1980s were a Golden Era for Professional Tennis.
It was the best of times – Tennis in the Eighties – when the thrill of tense tiebreaks entered everyman’s domicile, highlighted by exotic locales like Paris, Melbourne, London and New York.
The 1980s tennis also ushered in exciting yet exasperating players whose on-court conduct thrilled, engaged and enraged fans across the globe.
The ’80s energized the popularity base and took tennis out of country clubs and landed estates and into public parks and arenas. It became a sport in contrast to an amenable pastime.
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Tags: Bjorn BorgIvan LendlJohn McEnroeMartina NavratilovaSteffi GrafTennis in the 1980sWomen's Tennis
Category
Tennis
Posted on
October 11, 2009 by
JA Allen
The 1981 season proved to the final one of Bjorn Bjorg's career.
The Iceman Melts Away…
It was like being evicted from your neighborhood playground where you practiced ball all of your life, where you reigned as King of the Mountain, swatting down the little kids who scrabbled toward you to reach the top. That is what Bjorn Borg felt like after being dethroned during the trophy presentation at the conclusion of Wimbledon in 1981.
This new kid, this John McEnroe, was taking away his perch and making him feel ordinary. So what do you do when someone invades your kingdom and steals your crown? You storm his castle and try to take what belongs to him—tit for tat or an eye for an eye.
This, according to Lesley Visser of The Boston Globe (Sept. 1, 1981), caused Bjorn Borg to declare that winning the U.S. Open was his greatest passion—which he had been trying unsuccessfully to accomplish since he was 16 years of age.
At the time he uttered this fateful sentiment, Borg was 25 years of age and had been playing professional tennis for 11 years, since the age of 14.
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Tags: Bjorn BorgJohn McEnroeU.S. Open
Category
Sports History, Tennis
Posted on
October 01, 2009 by
JA Allen
Bjorn Borg was the face of tennis in the late 1970s.
For Bjorn Borg, the summer of 1980 was a time of highs and lows, of thrilling victory followed by stunning defeat.
His holding pattern persisted, as Borg, who won three consecutive doubles at the French Open and Wimbledon, lost his bid again for a chance at a calendar-year Grand Slam at the conclusion of 1980’s season in the sun.
During that sultry summer, two men met on fateful Sundays in July and in September to tighten the screw on Borg’s legacy. After 10 U.S. Opens, Borg sensed that his time to win this elusive Grand Slam was slipping away. He looked across the net at the up-and-coming John McEnroe and felt his tennis future fading.
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Tags: Bjorn BorgJohn McEnroeWimbledon
Category
Sports History, Tennis