Analysis. History. Perspective.

Sports Then and Now


Archive for the ‘Tennis’


Roger Federer Enters The U.S. Open At The Top Of His Game Comments Off on Roger Federer Enters The U.S. Open At The Top Of His Game

Posted on August 24, 2009 by JA Allen
Roger Federer will be looking for his third Grand Slam title of the year at the U.S. Open.

Roger Federer will be looking for his third Grand Slam title of the year at the U.S. Open.

When the latest ATP rankings came out on Aug. 24, 2009, there was a new world number two player who was not named Rafael Nadal or Roger Federer.  Scotland’s own Andy Murray was the first man to break the iron grip on the top rankings since Nadal took over the number two spot on July 25, 2005 – over four years ago.

Nadal held that number two spot for 160 weeks before he finally seized the number one ranking from Roger Federer.  From Aug. 18, 2008 through July 5, 2009 the Spaniard held the crown of number one – eventually handing it back again to Federer, currently ranked in the top spot.

Read the rest of this entry →

Helen Wills Moody 3

Posted on August 23, 2009 by Dean Hybl
Helen Wills Moody

Helen Wills Moody

Few women’s tennis players have enjoyed greater success in Grand Slam championships than this week’s Sports Then and Now Vintage Athlete of the Week.

Between 1923 and 1938, Helen Wills Moody was victorious in 19 of the 24 major tournaments in which she participated. Except for two defaults due to an appendectomy in 1926, she reached the finals of every Grand Slam tournament in which she participated.

Read the rest of this entry →

Will It Be “Murray Time” At The U.S. Open Comments Off on Will It Be “Murray Time” At The U.S. Open

Posted on August 17, 2009 by JA Allen

Andy Murray will be looking for his first major championship at the U.S. Open

Andy Murray will be looking for his first major championship at the U.S. Open

“Never change a winning game; always change a losing one.”—Bill Tilden

Bill Tilden won seven U.S. Open Championships, six consecutively. Roger Federer will be attempting to tie this record in 2009 at Flushing Meadows in New York.  His major competitor will be Andy Murray, the world’s most dour yet respected Scotsman and the new No. 2-ranked player in the world.

Read the rest of this entry →

U.S. Open Classic: 1988 Men’s Final 1

Posted on August 16, 2009 by JA Allen

Mats Wilander's classic win over Ivan Lendl was his third major title of the year, but the last of his career.

Mats Wilander's classic win over Ivan Lendl was his third major title of the year, but the last of his career.

The Set Up

1988 was a spectacular year to be a sumptuous Swedish male tennis pro.  They were well on their way to winning a “Swedish” grand slam with Mats Wilander seizing the Australian and French Open crowns while Stefan Edberg captured the Wimbledon championship.

Read the rest of this entry →

Maria Sharapova: Answer to a Prayer? 5

Posted on August 11, 2009 by JA Allen
Is Maria Sharapova what the women's tennis game needs?

Is Maria Sharapova what the women's tennis game needs?

Tennis superstar Maria Sharapova is the perfect solution to the dilemma in the women’s game today.  The tour has never stabilized since Justine Henin stepped down in May of 2008.  Henin held the No. 1 ranking for a total of 117 weeks.

With Henin’s abrupt departure, Maria Sharapova assumed the No. 1 ranking for three weeks prior to the 2008 French Open; then Ana Ivanovic held it for nine weeks after winning the French Open for the first time.

Unfortunately, Ivanovic could not keep it and Jelena Jankovic captured it for one week; then, Ivanovic took back the No. 1 ranking for another three weeks, only to lose it when Serena Williams took over and held it for four weeks after winning the U.S. Open.  Finally, Jelena Jankovic recaptured the No. 1 spot and held it for another 17 weeks.

Read the rest of this entry →

Looking Back: Roscoe Tanner, Tennis Bad Boy 27

Posted on August 09, 2009 by JA Allen
Roscoe Tanner won the 1977 Australian Open and was a finalist at Wimbledon in 1979.

Roscoe Tanner won the 1977 Australian Open and was a finalist at Wimbledon in 1979.

Blond, beautiful, athletic—filled with untapped promise, Roscoe Tanner should be among our heroes in tennis.  Instead he sits atop a rare list of tennis gone-bad boys.

Tanner remains one of the finest tennis players of the 1970s. In 1977, he won the Australian Open and in 1979 played Bjorn Borg to a trauma-inducing final at Wimbledon, extending him to five sets before finally falling to the mystique and iron will of the ice man.

The significance of that match goes beyond the intensity of its level of competition. It was the first live broadcast of Breakfast at Wimbledon, now a tradition to tennis loving fans in the United States.

NBC had prayed for John McEnroe or Jimmy Connors to meet Borg in the finals. Instead, they got Roscoe Tanner, who played the match of his life. We owe the continuation of the early morning live broadcast to him for making it memorable.

Read the rest of this entry →

  • Post Categories



↑ Top