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Don Budge

John Donald Budge (June 13, 1915 – January 26, 2000) 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.[3] 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 (consecutively, a men's record) 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.[4][5]

Don Budge
Full nameJohn Donald Budge
Country (sports) United States
Born(1915-06-13)June 13, 1915
Oakland, California
DiedJanuary 26, 2000(2000-01-26) (aged 84)
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Height6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Turned pro1938 (amateur tour from 1932)
Retired1961
PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)
Int. Tennis HoF1964 (member page)
Singles
Career record649-297 (68.6%)[1]
Career titles43[1]
Highest rankingNo. 1 (1937, A. Wallis Myers)[2]
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenW (1938)
French OpenW (1938)
WimbledonW (1937, 1938)
US OpenW (1937, 1938)
Professional majors
US ProW (1940, 1942)
Wembley ProW (1939)
French ProW (1939)
Doubles
Career record0–0
Highest rankingNo. 1 (1942, Ray Bowers)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian OpenSF (1938)
WimbledonW (1937, 1938)
US OpenW (1936, 1938)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
WimbledonW (1937, 1938)
US OpenW (1937, 1938)

Budge is also the only man to have achieved the Triple Crown (winning singles, men's doubles and mixed doubles at the same tournament) on three separate occasions (Wimbledon in 1937 and 1938, and the US Championships in 1938), and the only man to have achieved it twice in one year. Budge was the world Number 1 amateur in 1937 and 1938 and world Number 1 professional in 1939, 1940 and 1942.

Early life

Budge was born in Oakland, California, the son of Scottish immigrant and former soccer player John "Jack" Budge, who had played several matches for the Rangers reserve team before emigrating to the United States, and Pearl Kincaid Budge.[6] Growing up, he played a variety of sports before taking up tennis at age 13 at the urging of his older brother, Lloyd, who played tennis for the University of California team.[7] He also had an older sister. He was red-headed, tall and slim, and his height would eventually help what is still considered one of the most powerful serves of all time.[8] Budge studied at the University of California, Berkeley in late 1933 but left to play tennis with the U.S. Davis Cup auxiliary team.

Amateur career

Accustomed to hard-court surfaces in his native California, Budge had difficulty playing on the grass courts in the east.

1932

Budge reached the semi finals of the West Canada championships in July, where he lost in five sets to Henry Prusoff. "The Oakland youngster carried brawny Hank Prusoff of Seattle to five sets, surprising most of the onlookers, including the tournament favorite from Puget Sound. The scores were 6-2, 3-6, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, with Budge playing a calm and collected game all the way and letting the hardhitting Prusoff make the errors. The chop stroke of the Seattle man worked to perfection, particularly In the last set, and he always seemed to have something in reserve."[9]

1933

At the Del Monte championships in May, Budge beat Wallace Bates in straight sets in final.[10] In July, Budge beat John Murio in the final of the California State championship. "Tennis fans will be talking for days of the men's singles event and of Budge, whom the experts candidly admit "has everything." Not only has he the strokes of a champion, but the presence and strategy of one far beyond his years. Murio's most burning drives failed to ruffle one of the flaming red hairs on his head".[11] In the final of the Colorado championships in Denver in July, Budge beat Jack Tidball in five sets.[12]

1934

Budge beat Bud Chandler in the final in five sets to retain his California State championship title in June. "Chandler went to the net often throughout the match, while Budge elected to play a baseline game almost exclusively, going to the webbing only when forced to by chop or cross court shots; Chandler, exhausted after his gruelling five-set match with John Murio in the semi-final on Saturday, fought largely on his nerve against the Champion, and at the end of yesterday's strenuous competition again was completely exhausted."[13]

1935

Budge beat Gene Mako in the final of the Palm Springs tournament in April.[14] Budge beat Frank Shields in the final of the Newport Casino tournament in August.[15] In the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September, Budge was leading 2 sets to 1 against Roderich Menzel, when Menzel retired, in order to preserve his energy for a mixed doubles match.[16] Budge beat Bobby Riggs in the final of the Pacific Coast championships in October.[17]

1936

In January, Budge beat Walter Senior in the final of the Northern California indoor event.[18] In April Budge won the North and south tournament at Pinehurst beating Hal Surface in three-straight sets for the loss of just one game with a "superb exhibition of speed and control".[19] In June, Budge beat Dave Jones in the final of Queen's club tournament.[20] Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Eastern championships in August.[21] Budge beat Perry in the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September.[22] In October, Budge beat Walter Senior in the final of the Pacific Coast championships.[23] In December Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Southern California midwinter tournament.[24]

1937

In February, Budge beat Bryan Grant in the final of the Miami tournament.[25] In June, Budge beat Bunny Austin in the final at Queen's club tournament. "Seldom has a star of Austin's standing absorbed so crushing a defeat in full view of the public."[26] Budge swept Wimbledon, winning the singles (beating Gottfried von Cramm in straight sets in the final), the men's doubles title with Gene Mako, and the mixed doubles crown with Alice Marble. In August, Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Newport Casino tournament.[27] Budge beat von Cramm in the U. S. Championships final which "was a strange see-saw affair in which Budge twice lapsed from his normally brilliant genius guided game".[28] Budge beat von Cramm again in the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September.[29] Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Pacific Coast tournament in October.[30] In December Budge won the Victorian championships beating John Bromwich in the final in a match in which "the hot, humid weather proved trying for the players".[31] Budge gained the most fame for his match that year against von Cramm in the Davis Cup inter-zone finals against Germany. Trailing 1–4 in the final set, he came back to win 8–6. His victory allowed the US team to advance and to then win the Davis Cup for the first time in 12 years. For his efforts, he was named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year and he became the first tennis player ever to be voted the James E. Sullivan Award as America's top amateur athlete. Budge was ranked World No. 1 amateur by A. Wallis Myers of The Daily Telegraph,[32] Mervyn Weston, Daily Telegraph (Sydney),[33] Pierre Gillou,[34] Ned Potter,[35] The Times,[36] Harry Hopman,[37][38] Alfred Chave, The Telegraph (Brisbane)[39] and Pierre Goldschmidt, L'Auto.[40]

1938

In 1938, Budge dominated amateur tennis defeating John Bromwich in the Australian final, Roderick Menzel in the French final, Henry "Bunny" Austin at Wimbledon, where he never lost a set (he also won the doubles and mixed doubles), and Gene Mako in the U.S. Championships final (winning doubles and mixed doubles also), to become the first person ever to win the Grand Slam in tennis. He also is the youngest man in history to complete the "Career Grand Slam" (the four majors in one's career) and "Full (Grand) Slam" (four majors held at one time (in row)). He completed that on June 11, 1938, in winning the French singles, two days before his 23rd birthday. Budge beat Ladislav Hecht in the final of the Czech championships in Prague in July.[41] Budge beat Sidney Wood in the final of the Newport Casino tournament in August.[42] Budge was ranked World No. 1 amateur by Ray Bowers,[43] A. Wallis Myers of The Daily Telegraph,[44] Pierre Gillou,[45] Ned Potter,[46] Pierre Goldschmidt, L'Auto,[47] The Times (London),[48] F. Gordon Lowe of The Scotsman,[48] Dr. G. H. McElhone of The Sydney Morning Herald,[49] "International" of The Referee,[50] Mervyn Weston, Daily Telegraph (Sydney),[51] Jack Crawford[52] and Alfred Chave, The Telegraph (Brisbane).[53]

Professional career

1939

Budge turned professional in October 1938 after winning the Grand Slam, and thereafter played mostly head-to-head matches. In 1939, he beat the two reigning kings of professional tennis, Ellsworth Vines, 22 matches to 17, and Fred Perry, 28 matches to 8.[54][55][56] That year, he also won two major pro tournaments, the French Pro Championship over Vines and the Wembley Pro tournament over Hans Nüsslein. He also finished in first place on the European tour in the summer that also featured Vines, Tilden and Stoefen. Budge was ranked World No. 1 pro by Bowers,[57] Didier Poulain of L'Auto[58] and Alfred Chave, The Telegraph (Brisbane).[59]

1940

There was no World series professional tour in 1940 but seven principal tournaments. Budge kept his world crown by winning four of these events: the Southeastern Pro at Miami Beach (beating Perry in the final),[60] the North & South Pro at Pinehurst (beating Dick Skeen in the final),[61] the National Open at White Sulphur Springs (beating Bruce Barnes in the final)[62] and the United States Pro Championship (beating Perry in the final). Budge was ranked World No. 1 pro by Bowers.[63]

On July 29, 1940, Budge played an exhibition match in front of 2,000 people at the Cosmopolitan Club in Harlem, New York City against the American Tennis Association's top player Jimmie McDaniel. This is believed to be the first interracial tennis match played before a large audience to take place in the United States.[64][65]

1941

In 1941, Budge played another major tour beating the 48-year-old Bill Tilden, the outcome being 47–6[66] plus one tie. Budge (who had only recently left hospital) lost his opening match in the U. S. Pro championships to John Faunce. "You see, Don was in the hospital a couple of weeks ago fell down some stairs and banged up his nose and left ear. He didn't have his court legs today and naturally that was my cue to make him run and. believe me, I never hit better drop shots in my life than I hit today. I could put that ball on a dime!" said Faunce afterwards.[67]

1942

In 1942, Budge won his last major tour over Bobby Riggs, Frank Kovacs, Perry and Les Stoefen. He also won the U.S. Pro at Forest Hills, crushing Riggs 6–2, 6–2, 6–2 in the final. The crowd booed when Riggs was denied a request to wear spiked shoes.[68] After that many of the top pros, including Budge, became involved in World War 2. Budge was ranked World No. 1 pro by Bowers[69] and by the USPLTA.[70]

Military service

 
Don Budge at the White City Stadium, Sydney in December 1937

In 1942, Budge joined the United States Army Air Forces to serve in World War II. At the beginning of 1943, in an obstacle course, he tore a muscle in his shoulder. In his book 'A Tennis Memoir' page 144 he said:

The tear didn't heal, and the scar tissue that was formed complicated the injury and made it even serious. Nevertheless ... I was able to carry on with my military duties ... as long as two years afterwards, in the spring of '45, I was given a full month's medical leave so that I could go to Berkeley and have an osteopath, Dr. J. LeRoy Near, work with me.

This permanently hindered his playing abilities. During his wartime duty he played some exhibitions for the troops in particular during the summer 1945 with the war winding down, Budge played in a US Army (Budge-Frank Parker) – US Navy (Riggs – Wayne Sabin) competition under the Davis Cup format: the main confrontations were the Budge-Riggs meetings knowing that both Americans were the best players in the world in 1942 just before being enlisted in the U.S. Armed Forces and again when they came back to the professional circuit in 1945. In the first match, on the island of Guam, Budge trounced Riggs 6–2, 6–2. On the island of Peleliu, Budge won again 6–4, 7–5. Riggs won the next two matches against Budge, 6–1, 6–1 (island of Ulithi) and 6–3, 4–6, 6–1 (island of Saipan). Budge confided in Parker his disbelief at losing two matches in a row to Riggs. In the fifth and final match on the island of Tinian, scheduled for the first week of August 1945, Riggs defeated Budge 6–8, 6–1, 8–6. This was the first time Budge had been beaten by Riggs in a series (Riggs also won three matches out of five against the amateur Parker, both holder and future titlist of the U.S. Amateur Nationals at Forest Hills) thereby giving Riggs an important psychological edge in their forthcoming peacetime tours.[71]

Post war

1946

In 1946, Budge lost narrowly to Riggs in their U.S. tour, 24 matches to 22. Riggs thereby established himself as the world No. 1. According to Kramer,

Bobby played to Budge's shoulder, lobbed him to death, won the first twelve matches, thirteen out of the first fourteen, and then hung on to beat Budge, twenty-four matches to twenty-two. At the age of thirty, Don Budge was very nearly a has-been. That was the way pro tennis worked then.

The hierarchy was confirmed at the U.S. Pro, held at Forest Hills where Riggs easily defeated Budge in the last round. There was a tournament circuit in 1946. Budge won events at Memphis in June (beating Riggs in the final),[72] Richmond in June (beating Riggs in the final),[73] Philadelphia in July (beating Van Horn in the final)[74] and San Francisco in October (beating Riggs in the final).[75] Budge finished second in the points table behind Riggs.[76]

1947

In 1947 Budge beat Riggs in two European tours, one early in the year and one in the summer. According to Riggs, Budge still had a very powerful, very deadly overhead and rather than winning outright very many points with his lobbing, he actually achieved two other goals: his constant lobbing led Budge to play somewhat deeper at the net than he would have otherwise, thereby making it easier for Riggs to hit passing shots for winners; and the constant lobbing helped to wear Budge down by forcing him to run back to the backline time after time.[71] Riggs stayed the pro king by defeating Budge in the U.S. Pro final in five sets, so Riggs would face Kramer on the big tour in 1948.

1948-1961

Budge reached two more U.S. Pro finals, losing in 1949 at Forest Hills to Riggs and in 1953 in Cleveland to Pancho Gonzales. In 1954, Budge recorded his last significant victory in a North American tour with Pancho Gonzales, Pancho Segura, and Frank Sedgman when, in Los Angeles, he defeated Gonzales, by then the best player in the world. In April 1955 Budge won the U. S. Pro Clay Court Championships at Fort Lauderdale beating Riggs in the final.[77] Budge was playing very infrequently by now. He continued playing until 1961, when he lost in the Southern Pro final to Jack Arkinstall in straight sets. "He still hits a wonderful backhand, but he's five years older than I am and I guess I just got around too fast for him," said Arkinstall.[78]

Later years and honors

He appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1948 and the Steve Allen Plymouth Show in 1951. He appeared as himself in the 1953 film Pat and Mike.[79]

After retiring from competition, Budge turned to coaching and conducted tennis clinics for children. According to Riggs' 1949 autobiography as of that writing, Budge owned a laundry in New York with Sidney Wood as well as a bar in Oakland. A gentleman on and off the court, he was much in demand for speaking engagements and endorsed various lines of sporting goods. With the advent of the Open era in tennis, in 1968 he returned to play at Wimbledon in the Veteran's doubles. In 1973, at the age of 58, he and former champion Frank Sedgman teamed up to win the Veteran's Doubles Championship at Wimbledon before an appreciative crowd.

Budge was the resident tennis pro at the Montego Bay Racquet Club in Jamaica in 1977. In October 1978 he became the tennis pro at the Cambridge Towers Hotel in Las Vegas.[80] After a few months he was terminated but he sued the owner for breach of his five-year contract and was awarded $455,041.[81]

Budge was inducted into the National Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame, now the International Tennis Hall of Fame, at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1964.[82][80] He was elected to the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1992.[7] The once-gravel tennis courts at Bushrod Park in north Oakland, which he played on as a youth, are named for him.[83]

He is referenced in the 1977 Broadway musical Annie in the song "I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here." When Annie says she's never picked up a tennis racket, Daddy Warbucks' secretary tells an underling: "Have an instructor here at noon. Oh, and get that Don Budge fellow if he's available."[84] The reference is technically an anachronism, as the story is set in 1933, at which time Budge was an undergraduate at Berkeley and had not yet achieved prominence.

Personal life

He wed Deirdre Conselman (1922-1978), the daughter of screenwriter and cartoonist William Conselman, at St. Chrysostom's Episcopal Church in Chicago on June 2, 1941.[85] In his later years he lived in Dingman's Ferry, Pennsylvania, with his second wife, Loriel.[86]

In December 1999, Budge was injured in an automobile accident from which he never fully recovered. He died on January 26, 2000, at a nursing home in Scranton, Pennsylvania, aged 84.[87] He had two sons, David and Jeffrey.[87]

Assessment

Budge is a consensus pick for being one of the greatest players of all time. He had a graceful, overpowering backhand that he hit with a slight amount of topspin and that, combined with his quickness and his serve, made him the best player of his time. E. Digby Baltzell wrote in 1994 that Budge and Laver "have usually been rated at the top of any all-time World Champions list, Budge having a slight edge."[88] Will Grimsley wrote in 1971 that Budge "is considered by many to be foremost among the all-time greats."[89] Paul Metzler, in his analysis of ten of the all-time greats, singles out Budge as the greatest player before World War II, and gives him second place overall behind Jack Kramer.[90] In 1978, Ellsworth Vines ranked his all-time top 10 in Tennis Myth and Method and rated Budge number one.[91]

Jack Kramer himself has written that Budge was, in the long run, the greatest player who ever lived although Ellsworth Vines topped him when at the height of his game.[92] Kramer said:

Budge was the best of all. He owned the most perfect set of mechanics and he was the most consistent... Don was so good that when he toured with Sedgman, Gonzales, and Segura in 1954 at the age of 38, none of those guys could get to the net consistently off his serve—and Sedgman, as quick a man who ever played the game, was in his absolute prime then. Don could keep them pinned to the baseline with his backhand too.

In his 1979 autobiography, 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, and Pancho Gonzales. All of these sources were written, after Rod Laver completed his second, and Open, Grand Slam in 1969.

In 1983, Fred Perry ranked the greatest male players of all time and put them in to two categories, before World War 2 and after. Perry's pre-WWII nominees all below Tilden and excluding himself “Budge Cochet Ellsworth Vines ’so powerful!’ Gottfried von Cramm Jack Crawford Jan Sato Jean Borotra Bunny Austin Roderick Menzel Baron Umberto de Morpurgo”.[93]

In early 1986 Inside Tennis, a magazine edited in Northern California, devoted parts of four issues to a lengthy article called "Tournament of the Century", an imaginary tournament to determine the greatest of all time. 25 players in all were named by the 37 experts in their lists of the ten best. The magazine then ranked them in descending order by total number of points assigned. The top eight players in overall points, with their number of first-place votes, were: Rod Laver (9), John McEnroe (3), Don Budge (4), Jack Kramer (5), Björn Borg (6), Pancho Gonzales (1), Bill Tilden (6), and Lew Hoad (1). McEnroe was still an active player and Laver and Borg had only recently retired. In the imaginary tournament, Laver beat McEnroe in the finals in five sets.

In 1988, a panel consisting of Bud Collins, Cliff Drysdale, and Butch Buchholz ranked their top five male tennis players of all time. Drysdale listed Budge number three behind Laver and Borg. Buchholz and Collins did not include Budge on their lists.[94]

More recently, an Associated Press poll conducted in 1999 ranked Budge fifth, following Laver, Pete Sampras, Tilden, and Borg. Even more recently, in 2006, a panel of former players and experts was asked by TennisWeek to assemble a draw for a fantasy tournament to determine who was the greatest of all time. The top eight seeds were Roger Federer, Laver, Sampras, Borg, Tilden, Budge, Kramer, and McEnroe.

In the early years of the 21st century, Sidney Wood compiled his list of the Greatest Players of All Time (later published posthumously in a memoir "The Wimbledon final that never was and other tennis tales from a bygone era"). Wood first entered Wimbledon in 1927 and won the title in 1931. "From that time on, through to the late 1970s (doubles only towards the end), I was privileged to compete against virtually every top player in the world" said Wood. Wood ranked Budge number one in his list, saying the decision was a "no-brainer" and said Budge was "recognized by his peers as the one player to have commanded not only every shot in the book for every surface, but also to have been blessed with the single most destructive tennis weapon ever- a bludgeon backhand struck with a sixteen ounce 'Paul Bunyan' bat."[95]

Major finals

Grand Slam tournaments

Singles: 7 (6 titles, 1 runner-up)

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Loss 1936 U.S. Championships Grass   Fred Perry 2–6, 6–2, 8–6, 1–6, 10–8
Win 1937 Wimbledon Grass   Gottfried von Cramm 6–3, 6–4, 6–2
Win 1937 U.S. Championships (2) Grass   Gottfried von Cramm 6–1, 7–9, 6–1, 3–6, 6–1
Win 1938 Australian Championships Grass   John Bromwich 6–4, 6–2, 6–1
Win 1938 French Championships Clay   Roderich Menzel 6–3, 6–2, 6–4
Win 1938 Wimbledon Championships (2) Grass   Bunny Austin 6–1, 6–0, 6–3
Win 1938 U.S. Championships (3) Grass   Gene Mako 6–3, 6–8, 6–2, 6–1

Doubles: 7 (4 titles, 3 runner-ups)

Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 1935 U.S. Championships Grass   Gene Mako   Wilmer Allison
  John Van Ryn
2–6, 3–6, 6–2, 6–3, 1–6
Win 1936 U.S. Championships Grass   Gene Mako   Wilmer Allison
  John Van Ryn
6–4, 6–2, 6–4
Win 1937 Wimbledon Grass   Gene Mako   Pat Hughes
  Raymond Tuckey
6–0, 6–4, 6–8, 6–1
Loss 1937 U.S. Championships Grass   Gene Mako   Henner Henkel
  Gottfried von Cramm
4–6, 5–7, 4–6
Loss 1938 French Championships Clay   Gene Mako   Bernard Destremau
  Yvon Petra
6–3, 3–6, 7–9, 1–6
Win 1938 Wimbledon Grass   Gene Mako   Henner Henkel
  George von Metaxa
6–4, 6–3, 3–6, 8–6
Win 1938 U.S. Championships Grass   Gene Mako   John Bromwich
  Adrian Quist
6–3, 6–2, 6–1

Pro Slam tournaments

Singles: 8 (4 titles, 4 runner-ups)

Result Year Championship Opponent Score
Win 1939 Wembley Pro   Hans Nüsslein 13–11, 2–6, 6–4
Win 1939 French Pro Championship   Ellsworth Vines 6–2, 7–5, 6–3
Win 1940 US Pro Championships   Fred Perry 6–3, 5–7, 6–4, 6–3
Win 1942 US Pro Championships   Bobby Riggs 6–2, 6–2, 6–2
Loss 1946 US Pro Championships   Bobby Riggs 3–6, 1–6, 1–6
Loss 1947 US Pro Championships   Bobby Riggs 6–3, 3–6, 8–10, 6–4, 3–6
Loss 1949 US Pro Championships   Bobby Riggs 7–9, 6–3, 3–6, 5–7
Loss 1953 US Pro Championships   Pancho Gonzales 6–4, 4–6, 5–7, 2–6

Performance timeline

Don Budge joined professional tennis in 1939 and was unable to compete in the Grand Slam tournaments.

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# DNQ A NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
Tournament Amateur career Professional career Titles / Played Career win–loss Career win %
'34 '35 '36 '37 '38 '39 '40 '41 '42 '43 '44 '45 '46 '47 '48 '49 '50 '51 '52 '53 '54 '55
Grand Slam tournaments 6 / 11 58–5 92.06
Australian Championships A A A A W A A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 1 / 1 5–0 100.00
French Championships A A A A W A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 1 / 1 6–0 100.00
Wimbledon A SF SF W W A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 2 / 4 24–2 92.31
U.S. Championships 4R QF F W W A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A 2 / 5 23–3 88.46
Pro Slam tournaments 4 / 18 40–14 74.07
U.S. Pro A A A A A A W 1R W A NH A F F SF F A SF A SF F SF A QF 2 / 12 27–10 72.97
French Pro A A A A A W Not Held 1 / 1 3–0 100.00
Wembley Pro A A NH A NH W Not Held SF SF A SF SF NH 1 / 5 10–4 71.43
Total: 10 / 29 98–19 83.76

Single titles

Amateur era

Singles (1934–1938) : 26 titles

Date Event Surface Runner up Score
1934 June 18 California State, Berkeley Hard   Edward Chandler 6–4, 5–7, 7–5, 3–6, 7–5
1935 March 26 Palm Springs Invitation, California Hard   Gene Mako 6–2, 6–2
August 12 Casino Trophy, Newport Grass   Frank Shields 6–3, 5–7, 3–6, 8–6, 6–1
September 16 Pacific Southwest, Los Angeles Hard   Roderich Menzel 1–6, 11–9, 6–3 ab.
September 23 Pacific Coast, Berkeley Hard   Bobby Riggs 6–0, 6–2, 7–9, 6–4
1936 January 13 Northern California, San Francisco   Walter Senior 6–4, 6–1, 6–3
April 13 North & South Tournament, Pinehurst   Hal Surface 6–0, 6–0, 6–1
June 8 Queen's Club Grass Court, London Grass   David Jones 6–4, 6–3
August 3 Eastern Grass Court Championships, Rye Grass   Bobby Riggs 6–8, 6–2, 6–4, 6–3
September 13 Pacific Southwest, Los Angeles Hard   Fred Perry 6–2, 4–6, 6–2, 6–3
September 18 Pacific Coast, Berkeley Hard   Walter Senior 6–1, 6–0, 6–3
December 26 Southern California, Los Angeles   Bobby Riggs 6–4, 6–4
1937 February 1 Surf Club, Miami   Brian Grant 6–3, 2–6, 6–4, 6–4
June 14 Queen's Club Grass Court, London Grass   Henry Austin 6–1, 6–2
June 22 Wimbledon, London Grass   Gottfried von Cramm 6–3, 6–4, 6–2
August 16 Casino Trophy, Newport Grass   Bobby Riggs 6–4, 6–8, 6–1, 6–2
September 2 US Championships, Forest Hills Grass   Gottfried von Cramm 6–1, 7–9, 6–1, 3–6, 6–1
September 20 Pacific Southwest, Los Angeles Hard   Gottfried von Cramm 2–6, 7–5, 6–4, 7–5
October 4 Pacific Coast, Berkeley Hard   Bobby Riggs 4–6, 6–3, 6–2, 6–4
December 6 Victorian Championships, Melbourne Grass   John Bromwich 8–6, 6–3, 9–7
1938 January 21 Australian Championships, Adelaide Grass   John Bromwich 6–4, 6–2, 6–1
June 2 French Championships, Paris Clay   Roderich Menzel 6–3, 6–2, 6–4
June 20 Wimbledon, London Grass   Henry Austin 6–1, 6–0, 6–3
July 5 Prague International, Prague   Ladislav Hecht 6–1, 6–4, 6–4
August 15 Casino Trophy, Newport Grass   Sidney Wood 6–3, 6–3, 6–2
September 8 US Championships, Forest Hills Grass   Gene Mako 6–3, 6–8, 6–2, 6–1

Records

  • These records were attained in pre-Open Era of tennis.
  • Records in bold indicate peer-less achievements.
Championship Years Record accomplished Player tied Ref
Grand Slam tournaments 1938 Calendar Year Grand Slam winning all 4 Major singles titles Rod Laver [82]
Grand Slam tournaments 1937–38 6 consecutive Grand Slam singles titles Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1938 Youngest men's player in tennis history to achieve the Grand Slam (23 years, 3 months) Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1937–38 Youngest men's player in tennis history to achieve the Full Grand Slam (22 years, 11 months) Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1937–38 Youngest men's player in tennis history to achieve the Career Grand Slam (22 years, 11 months) Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1937–38 3 times achieved the "Triple Crown" winning singles, doubles and mixed doubles titles at one Grand Slam event Wimbledon (1937–38) US Championships (1938) Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1937–38 37 match win streak in consecutive tournaments Stands alone [96]
Grand Slam tournaments 1934–38 92.06% (58–5) Career winning percentage Stands alone
Grand Slam tournaments 1938 100% (24–0) Single Season winning percentage Rod Laver
Jimmy Connors
Grand Slam tournaments 1934–38 91.22% (52–5) Career Grass Court winning percentage Stands alone
All tournaments 1937–38 14 consecutive tournament wins Stands alone [97]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Don Budge: Career match record". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  2. ^ United States Lawn Tennis Association (1972). Official Encyclopedia of Tennis (First Edition), p. 425.
  3. ^ Larry Schwartz. "In big matches, he wouldn't budge". ESPN. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  4. ^ Joel Drucker (September 1, 2013). "Oakland's Tennis Revolutionary". Jim McLennan - Essential Tennis Instruction. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
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  47. ^ "Le classement mondial des joueurs et joueuses, consacre la supériorité sans précédent d'un pays : les Etats-Unis" [The world rankings of male and female players consecrate the unprecedented superiority of one country: the United States]. L'Auto (in French). September 29, 1938. p. 3.
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  92. ^ In his 1979 autobiography, Kramer considered the best player ever to have beaten 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, and Pancho 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, and Jimmy Connors. He felt unable to rank Henri Cochet and René Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best.
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  94. ^ "The Miami News, 10 March 1988". newspapers.com.
  95. ^ "World Tennis Magazine, December 16, 2011". worldtennismagazine.com.
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Sources

  • Sporting Gentlemen: Men's Tennis from the Age of Honor to the Cult of the Superstar, (1994), E. Digby Baltzell
  • Tennis: Its History, People and Events, (1971), Will Grimsley
  • Tennis Styles and Stylists, (1969), Paul Metzler
  • The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9)
  • Tennis Is My Racket, (1949), Bobby Riggs

Further reading

  • Fisher, Marshall Jon (2009). A Terrible Splendor: Three Extraordinary Men, a World Poised for War and the Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played. ISBN 978-0-307-39394-4

External links

budge, john, donald, budge, june, 1915, january, 2000, american, tennis, player, most, famous, first, tennis, player, male, female, still, only, american, male, grand, slam, four, grand, slam, events, consecutively, overall, budge, second, complete, career, gr. John Donald Budge June 13 1915 January 26 2000 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 3 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 consecutively a men s record 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 4 5 Don BudgeFull nameJohn Donald BudgeCountry sports United StatesBorn 1915 06 13 June 13 1915Oakland CaliforniaDiedJanuary 26 2000 2000 01 26 aged 84 Scranton PennsylvaniaHeight6 ft 1 in 185 cm Turned pro1938 amateur tour from 1932 Retired1961PlaysRight handed one handed backhand Int Tennis HoF1964 member page SinglesCareer record649 297 68 6 1 Career titles43 1 Highest rankingNo 1 1937 A Wallis Myers 2 Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian OpenW 1938 French OpenW 1938 WimbledonW 1937 1938 US OpenW 1937 1938 Professional majorsUS ProW 1940 1942 Wembley ProW 1939 French ProW 1939 DoublesCareer record0 0Highest rankingNo 1 1942 Ray Bowers Grand Slam doubles resultsAustralian OpenSF 1938 WimbledonW 1937 1938 US OpenW 1936 1938 Grand Slam mixed doubles resultsWimbledonW 1937 1938 US OpenW 1937 1938 Budge is also the only man to have achieved the Triple Crown winning singles men s doubles and mixed doubles at the same tournament on three separate occasions Wimbledon in 1937 and 1938 and the US Championships in 1938 and the only man to have achieved it twice in one year Budge was the world Number 1 amateur in 1937 and 1938 and world Number 1 professional in 1939 1940 and 1942 Contents 1 Early life 2 Amateur career 3 Professional career 4 Military service 5 Post war 6 Later years and honors 7 Personal life 8 Assessment 9 Major finals 9 1 Grand Slam tournaments 9 1 1 Singles 7 6 titles 1 runner up 9 1 2 Doubles 7 4 titles 3 runner ups 9 2 Pro Slam tournaments 9 2 1 Singles 8 4 titles 4 runner ups 10 Performance timeline 11 Single titles 11 1 Amateur era 12 Records 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life EditBudge was born in Oakland California the son of Scottish immigrant and former soccer player John Jack Budge who had played several matches for the Rangers reserve team before emigrating to the United States and Pearl Kincaid Budge 6 Growing up he played a variety of sports before taking up tennis at age 13 at the urging of his older brother Lloyd who played tennis for the University of California team 7 He also had an older sister He was red headed tall and slim and his height would eventually help what is still considered one of the most powerful serves of all time 8 Budge studied at the University of California Berkeley in late 1933 but left to play tennis with the U S Davis Cup auxiliary team Amateur career EditAccustomed to hard court surfaces in his native California Budge had difficulty playing on the grass courts in the east 1932Budge reached the semi finals of the West Canada championships in July where he lost in five sets to Henry Prusoff The Oakland youngster carried brawny Hank Prusoff of Seattle to five sets surprising most of the onlookers including the tournament favorite from Puget Sound The scores were 6 2 3 6 6 3 2 6 6 2 with Budge playing a calm and collected game all the way and letting the hardhitting Prusoff make the errors The chop stroke of the Seattle man worked to perfection particularly In the last set and he always seemed to have something in reserve 9 1933At the Del Monte championships in May Budge beat Wallace Bates in straight sets in final 10 In July Budge beat John Murio in the final of the California State championship Tennis fans will be talking for days of the men s singles event and of Budge whom the experts candidly admit has everything Not only has he the strokes of a champion but the presence and strategy of one far beyond his years Murio s most burning drives failed to ruffle one of the flaming red hairs on his head 11 In the final of the Colorado championships in Denver in July Budge beat Jack Tidball in five sets 12 1934Budge beat Bud Chandler in the final in five sets to retain his California State championship title in June Chandler went to the net often throughout the match while Budge elected to play a baseline game almost exclusively going to the webbing only when forced to by chop or cross court shots Chandler exhausted after his gruelling five set match with John Murio in the semi final on Saturday fought largely on his nerve against the Champion and at the end of yesterday s strenuous competition again was completely exhausted 13 1935Budge beat Gene Mako in the final of the Palm Springs tournament in April 14 Budge beat Frank Shields in the final of the Newport Casino tournament in August 15 In the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September Budge was leading 2 sets to 1 against Roderich Menzel when Menzel retired in order to preserve his energy for a mixed doubles match 16 Budge beat Bobby Riggs in the final of the Pacific Coast championships in October 17 1936In January Budge beat Walter Senior in the final of the Northern California indoor event 18 In April Budge won the North and south tournament at Pinehurst beating Hal Surface in three straight sets for the loss of just one game with a superb exhibition of speed and control 19 In June Budge beat Dave Jones in the final of Queen s club tournament 20 Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Eastern championships in August 21 Budge beat Perry in the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September 22 In October Budge beat Walter Senior in the final of the Pacific Coast championships 23 In December Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Southern California midwinter tournament 24 1937In February Budge beat Bryan Grant in the final of the Miami tournament 25 In June Budge beat Bunny Austin in the final at Queen s club tournament Seldom has a star of Austin s standing absorbed so crushing a defeat in full view of the public 26 Budge swept Wimbledon winning the singles beating Gottfried von Cramm in straight sets in the final the men s doubles title with Gene Mako and the mixed doubles crown with Alice Marble In August Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Newport Casino tournament 27 Budge beat von Cramm in the U S Championships final which was a strange see saw affair in which Budge twice lapsed from his normally brilliant genius guided game 28 Budge beat von Cramm again in the final of the Pacific Southwest tournament in September 29 Budge beat Riggs in the final of the Pacific Coast tournament in October 30 In December Budge won the Victorian championships beating John Bromwich in the final in a match in which the hot humid weather proved trying for the players 31 Budge gained the most fame for his match that year against von Cramm in the Davis Cup inter zone finals against Germany Trailing 1 4 in the final set he came back to win 8 6 His victory allowed the US team to advance and to then win the Davis Cup for the first time in 12 years For his efforts he was named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year and he became the first tennis player ever to be voted the James E Sullivan Award as America s top amateur athlete Budge was ranked World No 1 amateur by A Wallis Myers of The Daily Telegraph 32 Mervyn Weston Daily Telegraph Sydney 33 Pierre Gillou 34 Ned Potter 35 The Times 36 Harry Hopman 37 38 Alfred Chave The Telegraph Brisbane 39 and Pierre Goldschmidt L Auto 40 1938In 1938 Budge dominated amateur tennis defeating John Bromwich in the Australian final Roderick Menzel in the French final Henry Bunny Austin at Wimbledon where he never lost a set he also won the doubles and mixed doubles and Gene Mako in the U S Championships final winning doubles and mixed doubles also to become the first person ever to win the Grand Slam in tennis He also is the youngest man in history to complete the Career Grand Slam the four majors in one s career and Full Grand Slam four majors held at one time in row He completed that on June 11 1938 in winning the French singles two days before his 23rd birthday Budge beat Ladislav Hecht in the final of the Czech championships in Prague in July 41 Budge beat Sidney Wood in the final of the Newport Casino tournament in August 42 Budge was ranked World No 1 amateur by Ray Bowers 43 A Wallis Myers of The Daily Telegraph 44 Pierre Gillou 45 Ned Potter 46 Pierre Goldschmidt L Auto 47 The Times London 48 F Gordon Lowe of The Scotsman 48 Dr G H McElhone of The Sydney Morning Herald 49 International of The Referee 50 Mervyn Weston Daily Telegraph Sydney 51 Jack Crawford 52 and Alfred Chave The Telegraph Brisbane 53 Professional career Edit1939Budge turned professional in October 1938 after winning the Grand Slam and thereafter played mostly head to head matches In 1939 he beat the two reigning kings of professional tennis Ellsworth Vines 22 matches to 17 and Fred Perry 28 matches to 8 54 55 56 That year he also won two major pro tournaments the French Pro Championship over Vines and the Wembley Pro tournament over Hans Nusslein He also finished in first place on the European tour in the summer that also featured Vines Tilden and Stoefen Budge was ranked World No 1 pro by Bowers 57 Didier Poulain of L Auto 58 and Alfred Chave The Telegraph Brisbane 59 1940There was no World series professional tour in 1940 but seven principal tournaments Budge kept his world crown by winning four of these events the Southeastern Pro at Miami Beach beating Perry in the final 60 the North amp South Pro at Pinehurst beating Dick Skeen in the final 61 the National Open at White Sulphur Springs beating Bruce Barnes in the final 62 and the United States Pro Championship beating Perry in the final Budge was ranked World No 1 pro by Bowers 63 On July 29 1940 Budge played an exhibition match in front of 2 000 people at the Cosmopolitan Club in Harlem New York City against the American Tennis Association s top player Jimmie McDaniel This is believed to be the first interracial tennis match played before a large audience to take place in the United States 64 65 1941In 1941 Budge played another major tour beating the 48 year old Bill Tilden the outcome being 47 6 66 plus one tie Budge who had only recently left hospital lost his opening match in the U S Pro championships to John Faunce You see Don was in the hospital a couple of weeks ago fell down some stairs and banged up his nose and left ear He didn t have his court legs today and naturally that was my cue to make him run and believe me I never hit better drop shots in my life than I hit today I could put that ball on a dime said Faunce afterwards 67 1942In 1942 Budge won his last major tour over Bobby Riggs Frank Kovacs Perry and Les Stoefen He also won the U S Pro at Forest Hills crushing Riggs 6 2 6 2 6 2 in the final The crowd booed when Riggs was denied a request to wear spiked shoes 68 After that many of the top pros including Budge became involved in World War 2 Budge was ranked World No 1 pro by Bowers 69 and by the USPLTA 70 Military service Edit Don Budge at the White City Stadium Sydney in December 1937 In 1942 Budge joined the United States Army Air Forces to serve in World War II At the beginning of 1943 in an obstacle course he tore a muscle in his shoulder In his book A Tennis Memoir page 144 he said The tear didn t heal and the scar tissue that was formed complicated the injury and made it even serious Nevertheless I was able to carry on with my military duties as long as two years afterwards in the spring of 45 I was given a full month s medical leave so that I could go to Berkeley and have an osteopath Dr J LeRoy Near work with me This permanently hindered his playing abilities During his wartime duty he played some exhibitions for the troops in particular during the summer 1945 with the war winding down Budge played in a US Army Budge Frank Parker US Navy Riggs Wayne Sabin competition under the Davis Cup format the main confrontations were the Budge Riggs meetings knowing that both Americans were the best players in the world in 1942 just before being enlisted in the U S Armed Forces and again when they came back to the professional circuit in 1945 In the first match on the island of Guam Budge trounced Riggs 6 2 6 2 On the island of Peleliu Budge won again 6 4 7 5 Riggs won the next two matches against Budge 6 1 6 1 island of Ulithi and 6 3 4 6 6 1 island of Saipan Budge confided in Parker his disbelief at losing two matches in a row to Riggs In the fifth and final match on the island of Tinian scheduled for the first week of August 1945 Riggs defeated Budge 6 8 6 1 8 6 This was the first time Budge had been beaten by Riggs in a series Riggs also won three matches out of five against the amateur Parker both holder and future titlist of the U S Amateur Nationals at Forest Hills thereby giving Riggs an important psychological edge in their forthcoming peacetime tours 71 Post war Edit1946In 1946 Budge lost narrowly to Riggs in their U S tour 24 matches to 22 Riggs thereby established himself as the world No 1 According to Kramer Bobby played to Budge s shoulder lobbed him to death won the first twelve matches thirteen out of the first fourteen and then hung on to beat Budge twenty four matches to twenty two At the age of thirty Don Budge was very nearly a has been That was the way pro tennis worked then The hierarchy was confirmed at the U S Pro held at Forest Hills where Riggs easily defeated Budge in the last round There was a tournament circuit in 1946 Budge won events at Memphis in June beating Riggs in the final 72 Richmond in June beating Riggs in the final 73 Philadelphia in July beating Van Horn in the final 74 and San Francisco in October beating Riggs in the final 75 Budge finished second in the points table behind Riggs 76 1947In 1947 Budge beat Riggs in two European tours one early in the year and one in the summer According to Riggs Budge still had a very powerful very deadly overhead and rather than winning outright very many points with his lobbing he actually achieved two other goals his constant lobbing led Budge to play somewhat deeper at the net than he would have otherwise thereby making it easier for Riggs to hit passing shots for winners and the constant lobbing helped to wear Budge down by forcing him to run back to the backline time after time 71 Riggs stayed the pro king by defeating Budge in the U S Pro final in five sets so Riggs would face Kramer on the big tour in 1948 1948 1961Budge reached two more U S Pro finals losing in 1949 at Forest Hills to Riggs and in 1953 in Cleveland to Pancho Gonzales In 1954 Budge recorded his last significant victory in a North American tour with Pancho Gonzales Pancho Segura and Frank Sedgman when in Los Angeles he defeated Gonzales by then the best player in the world In April 1955 Budge won the U S Pro Clay Court Championships at Fort Lauderdale beating Riggs in the final 77 Budge was playing very infrequently by now He continued playing until 1961 when he lost in the Southern Pro final to Jack Arkinstall in straight sets He still hits a wonderful backhand but he s five years older than I am and I guess I just got around too fast for him said Arkinstall 78 Later years and honors EditHe appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1948 and the Steve Allen Plymouth Show in 1951 He appeared as himself in the 1953 film Pat and Mike 79 After retiring from competition Budge turned to coaching and conducted tennis clinics for children According to Riggs 1949 autobiography as of that writing Budge owned a laundry in New York with Sidney Wood as well as a bar in Oakland A gentleman on and off the court he was much in demand for speaking engagements and endorsed various lines of sporting goods With the advent of the Open era in tennis in 1968 he returned to play at Wimbledon in the Veteran s doubles In 1973 at the age of 58 he and former champion Frank Sedgman teamed up to win the Veteran s Doubles Championship at Wimbledon before an appreciative crowd Budge was the resident tennis pro at the Montego Bay Racquet Club in Jamaica in 1977 In October 1978 he became the tennis pro at the Cambridge Towers Hotel in Las Vegas 80 After a few months he was terminated but he sued the owner for breach of his five year contract and was awarded 455 041 81 Budge was inducted into the National Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame now the International Tennis Hall of Fame at Newport Rhode Island in 1964 82 80 He was elected to the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1992 7 The once gravel tennis courts at Bushrod Park in north Oakland which he played on as a youth are named for him 83 He is referenced in the 1977 Broadway musical Annie in the song I Think I m Gonna Like It Here When Annie says she s never picked up a tennis racket Daddy Warbucks secretary tells an underling Have an instructor here at noon Oh and get that Don Budge fellow if he s available 84 The reference is technically an anachronism as the story is set in 1933 at which time Budge was an undergraduate at Berkeley and had not yet achieved prominence Personal life EditHe wed Deirdre Conselman 1922 1978 the daughter of screenwriter and cartoonist William Conselman at St Chrysostom s Episcopal Church in Chicago on June 2 1941 85 In his later years he lived in Dingman s Ferry Pennsylvania with his second wife Loriel 86 In December 1999 Budge was injured in an automobile accident from which he never fully recovered He died on January 26 2000 at a nursing home in Scranton Pennsylvania aged 84 87 He had two sons David and Jeffrey 87 Assessment EditBudge is a consensus pick for being one of the greatest players of all time He had a graceful overpowering backhand that he hit with a slight amount of topspin and that combined with his quickness and his serve made him the best player of his time E Digby Baltzell wrote in 1994 that Budge and Laver have usually been rated at the top of any all time World Champions list Budge having a slight edge 88 Will Grimsley wrote in 1971 that Budge is considered by many to be foremost among the all time greats 89 Paul Metzler in his analysis of ten of the all time greats singles out Budge as the greatest player before World War II and gives him second place overall behind Jack Kramer 90 In 1978 Ellsworth Vines ranked his all time top 10 in Tennis Myth and Method and rated Budge number one 91 Jack Kramer himself has written that Budge was in the long run the greatest player who ever lived although Ellsworth Vines topped him when at the height of his game 92 Kramer said Budge was the best of all He owned the most perfect set of mechanics and he was the most consistent Don was so good that when he toured with Sedgman Gonzales and Segura in 1954 at the age of 38 none of those guys could get to the net consistently off his serve and Sedgman as quick a man who ever played the game was in his absolute prime then Don could keep them pinned to the baseline with his backhand too In his 1979 autobiography 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 and Pancho Gonzales All of these sources were written after Rod Laver completed his second and Open Grand Slam in 1969 In 1983 Fred Perry ranked the greatest male players of all time and put them in to two categories before World War 2 and after Perry s pre WWII nominees all below Tilden and excluding himself Budge Cochet Ellsworth Vines so powerful Gottfried von Cramm Jack Crawford Jan Sato Jean Borotra Bunny Austin Roderick Menzel Baron Umberto de Morpurgo 93 In early 1986 Inside Tennis a magazine edited in Northern California devoted parts of four issues to a lengthy article called Tournament of the Century an imaginary tournament to determine the greatest of all time 25 players in all were named by the 37 experts in their lists of the ten best The magazine then ranked them in descending order by total number of points assigned The top eight players in overall points with their number of first place votes were Rod Laver 9 John McEnroe 3 Don Budge 4 Jack Kramer 5 Bjorn Borg 6 Pancho Gonzales 1 Bill Tilden 6 and Lew Hoad 1 McEnroe was still an active player and Laver and Borg had only recently retired In the imaginary tournament Laver beat McEnroe in the finals in five sets In 1988 a panel consisting of Bud Collins Cliff Drysdale and Butch Buchholz ranked their top five male tennis players of all time Drysdale listed Budge number three behind Laver and Borg Buchholz and Collins did not include Budge on their lists 94 More recently an Associated Press poll conducted in 1999 ranked Budge fifth following Laver Pete Sampras Tilden and Borg Even more recently in 2006 a panel of former players and experts was asked by TennisWeek to assemble a draw for a fantasy tournament to determine who was the greatest of all time The top eight seeds were Roger Federer Laver Sampras Borg Tilden Budge Kramer and McEnroe In the early years of the 21st century Sidney Wood compiled his list of the Greatest Players of All Time later published posthumously in a memoir The Wimbledon final that never was and other tennis tales from a bygone era Wood first entered Wimbledon in 1927 and won the title in 1931 From that time on through to the late 1970s doubles only towards the end I was privileged to compete against virtually every top player in the world said Wood Wood ranked Budge number one in his list saying the decision was a no brainer and said Budge was recognized by his peers as the one player to have commanded not only every shot in the book for every surface but also to have been blessed with the single most destructive tennis weapon ever a bludgeon backhand struck with a sixteen ounce Paul Bunyan bat 95 Major finals EditGrand Slam tournaments Edit Singles 7 6 titles 1 runner up Edit Result Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreLoss 1936 U S Championships Grass Fred Perry 2 6 6 2 8 6 1 6 10 8Win 1937 Wimbledon Grass Gottfried von Cramm 6 3 6 4 6 2Win 1937 U S Championships 2 Grass Gottfried von Cramm 6 1 7 9 6 1 3 6 6 1Win 1938 Australian Championships Grass John Bromwich 6 4 6 2 6 1Win 1938 French Championships Clay Roderich Menzel 6 3 6 2 6 4Win 1938 Wimbledon Championships 2 Grass Bunny Austin 6 1 6 0 6 3Win 1938 U S Championships 3 Grass Gene Mako 6 3 6 8 6 2 6 1Doubles 7 4 titles 3 runner ups Edit Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 1935 U S Championships Grass Gene Mako Wilmer Allison John Van Ryn 2 6 3 6 6 2 6 3 1 6Win 1936 U S Championships Grass Gene Mako Wilmer Allison John Van Ryn 6 4 6 2 6 4Win 1937 Wimbledon Grass Gene Mako Pat Hughes Raymond Tuckey 6 0 6 4 6 8 6 1Loss 1937 U S Championships Grass Gene Mako Henner Henkel Gottfried von Cramm 4 6 5 7 4 6Loss 1938 French Championships Clay Gene Mako Bernard Destremau Yvon Petra 6 3 3 6 7 9 1 6Win 1938 Wimbledon Grass Gene Mako Henner Henkel George von Metaxa 6 4 6 3 3 6 8 6Win 1938 U S Championships Grass Gene Mako John Bromwich Adrian Quist 6 3 6 2 6 1Pro Slam tournaments Edit Singles 8 4 titles 4 runner ups Edit Result Year Championship Opponent ScoreWin 1939 Wembley Pro Hans Nusslein 13 11 2 6 6 4Win 1939 French Pro Championship Ellsworth Vines 6 2 7 5 6 3Win 1940 US Pro Championships Fred Perry 6 3 5 7 6 4 6 3Win 1942 US Pro Championships Bobby Riggs 6 2 6 2 6 2Loss 1946 US Pro Championships Bobby Riggs 3 6 1 6 1 6Loss 1947 US Pro Championships Bobby Riggs 6 3 3 6 8 10 6 4 3 6Loss 1949 US Pro Championships Bobby Riggs 7 9 6 3 3 6 5 7Loss 1953 US Pro Championships Pancho Gonzales 6 4 4 6 5 7 2 6Performance timeline EditDon Budge joined professional tennis in 1939 and was unable to compete in the Grand Slam tournaments Key W F SF QF R RR Q DNQ A NH W winner F finalist SF semifinalist QF quarterfinalist R rounds 4 3 2 1 RR round robin stage Q qualification round DNQ did not qualify A absent NH not held SR strike rate events won competed W L win loss record Tournament Amateur career Professional career Titles Played Career win loss Career win 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55Grand Slam tournaments 6 11 58 5 92 06Australian Championships A A A A W A A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 1 1 5 0 100 00French Championships A A A A W A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 1 1 6 0 100 00Wimbledon A SF SF W W A Not Held A A A A A A A A A A 2 4 24 2 92 31U S Championships 4R QF F W W A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A 2 5 23 3 88 46Pro Slam tournaments 4 18 40 14 74 07U S Pro A A A A A A W 1R W A NH A F F SF F A SF A SF F SF A QF 2 12 27 10 72 97French Pro A A A A A W Not Held 1 1 3 0 100 00Wembley Pro A A NH A NH W Not Held SF SF A SF SF NH 1 5 10 4 71 43Total 10 29 98 19 83 76Single titles EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Amateur era Edit Singles 1934 1938 26 titles Date Event Surface Runner up Score1934 June 18 California State Berkeley Hard Edward Chandler 6 4 5 7 7 5 3 6 7 51935 March 26 Palm Springs Invitation California Hard Gene Mako 6 2 6 2August 12 Casino Trophy Newport Grass Frank Shields 6 3 5 7 3 6 8 6 6 1September 16 Pacific Southwest Los Angeles Hard Roderich Menzel 1 6 11 9 6 3 ab September 23 Pacific Coast Berkeley Hard Bobby Riggs 6 0 6 2 7 9 6 41936 January 13 Northern California San Francisco Walter Senior 6 4 6 1 6 3April 13 North amp South Tournament Pinehurst Hal Surface 6 0 6 0 6 1June 8 Queen s Club Grass Court London Grass David Jones 6 4 6 3August 3 Eastern Grass Court Championships Rye Grass Bobby Riggs 6 8 6 2 6 4 6 3September 13 Pacific Southwest Los Angeles Hard Fred Perry 6 2 4 6 6 2 6 3September 18 Pacific Coast Berkeley Hard Walter Senior 6 1 6 0 6 3December 26 Southern California Los Angeles Bobby Riggs 6 4 6 41937 February 1 Surf Club Miami Brian Grant 6 3 2 6 6 4 6 4June 14 Queen s Club Grass Court London Grass Henry Austin 6 1 6 2June 22 Wimbledon London Grass Gottfried von Cramm 6 3 6 4 6 2August 16 Casino Trophy Newport Grass Bobby Riggs 6 4 6 8 6 1 6 2September 2 US Championships Forest Hills Grass Gottfried von Cramm 6 1 7 9 6 1 3 6 6 1September 20 Pacific Southwest Los Angeles Hard Gottfried von Cramm 2 6 7 5 6 4 7 5October 4 Pacific Coast Berkeley Hard Bobby Riggs 4 6 6 3 6 2 6 4December 6 Victorian Championships Melbourne Grass John Bromwich 8 6 6 3 9 71938 January 21 Australian Championships Adelaide Grass John Bromwich 6 4 6 2 6 1June 2 French Championships Paris Clay Roderich Menzel 6 3 6 2 6 4June 20 Wimbledon London Grass Henry Austin 6 1 6 0 6 3July 5 Prague International Prague Ladislav Hecht 6 1 6 4 6 4August 15 Casino Trophy Newport Grass Sidney Wood 6 3 6 3 6 2September 8 US Championships Forest Hills Grass Gene Mako 6 3 6 8 6 2 6 1Records EditThese records were attained in pre Open Era of tennis Records in bold indicate peer less achievements Championship Years Record accomplished Player tied RefGrand Slam tournaments 1938 Calendar Year Grand Slam winning all 4 Major singles titles Rod Laver 82 Grand Slam tournaments 1937 38 6 consecutive Grand Slam singles titles Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1938 Youngest men s player in tennis history to achieve the Grand Slam 23 years 3 months Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1937 38 Youngest men s player in tennis history to achieve the Full Grand Slam 22 years 11 months Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1937 38 Youngest men s player in tennis history to achieve the Career Grand Slam 22 years 11 months Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1937 38 3 times achieved the Triple Crown winning singles doubles and mixed doubles titles at one Grand Slam event Wimbledon 1937 38 US Championships 1938 Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1937 38 37 match win streak in consecutive tournaments Stands alone 96 Grand Slam tournaments 1934 38 92 06 58 5 Career winning percentage Stands aloneGrand Slam tournaments 1938 100 24 0 Single Season winning percentage Rod LaverJimmy ConnorsGrand Slam tournaments 1934 38 91 22 52 5 Career Grass Court winning percentage Stands aloneAll tournaments 1937 38 14 consecutive tournament wins Stands alone 97 See also EditAll time tennis records men s singles Open Era tennis records men s singlesReferences Edit a b Don Budge Career match record thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved September 22 2021 United States Lawn Tennis Association 1972 Official Encyclopedia of Tennis First Edition p 425 Larry Schwartz In big matches he wouldn t budge ESPN Retrieved January 17 2017 Joel Drucker September 1 2013 Oakland s Tennis Revolutionary Jim McLennan Essential Tennis Instruction Retrieved January 17 2017 Michael Gray January 27 2000 Don Budge Obituary The Guardian Retrieved January 17 2017 Craig Jim Scotland s Sporting Curiosities Birlinn Edinburgh 2005 a b Budge s legacy lives on SFGATE January 27 2000 Retrieved September 11 2021 Bob Oats May 29 1988 The Best Ever Strong Case Made for Don Budge Who Won Tennis Grand Slam 50 Years Ago Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 24 2017 Don Budge gives Prusoff hard battle The Vancouver Daily Province July 9 1932 p 7 via Newspapers com The Los Angeles Evening Post May 31 1933 via Newspapers com Oakland Tribune July 3 1933 via Newspapers com Los Angeles Times July 23 1933 via Newspapers com Oakland Tribune June 25 1934 via Newspapers com The Courier Journal Louisville April 2 1935 via Newspapers com Star Press Muncie August 18 1935 via Newspapers com Pomona Progress Bulletin September 24 1935 via Newspapers com Oakland Tribune October 7 1935 via Newspapers com The San Francisco Examiner January 27 1936 via Newspapers com Los Angeles Times April 18 1936 via Newspapers com The Observer June 21 1936 via Newspapers com Belvidere Daily Republican August 18 1936 via Newspapers com Charlotte Observer September 28 1936 via Newspapers com Oakland Tribune October 12 1936 via Newspapers com Los Angeles Times January 3 1937 via Newspapers com The Santa Maria Times February 8 1937 via Newspapers com The Baltimore Sun June 20 1937 via Newspapers com Journal and Courier Lafayette August 23 1937 via Newspapers com Honolulu Star Bulletin September 13 1937 via Newspapers com The Richmond Item September 26 1937 via Newspapers com The Boston Globe October 5 1937 via Newspapers com The Age Melbourne December 13 1937 via Newspapers com World Rankings Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate September 23 1937 p 11 via National Library of Australia BEST TENNIS PLAYERS OF THE YEAR The Argus Melbourne No 28 416 Victoria Australia September 17 1937 p 22 Retrieved November 22 2021 via National Library of Australia Les 10 Meilleures M Pierre Gillou President de la Federation Francaise de Lawn Tennis communique son classement annuel qu il a elabore pour L Auto The 10 Best Mr Pierre Gillou President of the French Lawn Tennis Federation gives his annual ranking which he has explained for L Auto L Auto in French September 15 1937 p 1 Potter E C September 20 1931 Merrihew S W ed The World s First Tens of 1937 American Lawn Tennis Vol 31 New York p 36 Lawn Tennis World Rankings Auckland Star Vol 68 no 224 September 21 1937 HOPMAN S WORLD RANKINGS The Herald Melbourne No 18825 Victoria Australia September 16 1937 p 45 Retrieved November 25 2021 via National Library of Australia Hopman Ranks Tennis Stars The Herald Melbourne No 18825 Victoria Australia September 16 1937 p 48 Retrieved November 25 2021 via National Library of Australia WORLD TENNIS RANKING Telegraph Brisbane Queensland Australia September 17 1937 p 15 CITY FINAL LAST MINUTE NEWS Retrieved November 29 2021 via National Library of Australia SCHEMA deux classements OVERVIEW two rankings L Auto in French August 10 1937 p 3 The Daily Item Sunbury July 11 1938 via Newspapers com Asheville Citizen Times August 21 1938 via Newspapers com Bowers Ray History of the Pro Tennis Wars Chapter IX Readying for Budge 1938 Archived from the original on November 9 2005 via tennisserver com BROMWICH RANKED BELOW AUSTIN The Sun Sydney No 9139 New South Wales Australia April 21 1939 p 16 LATE FINAL EXTRA Retrieved November 22 2021 via National Library of Australia Les Dix Meilleurs Du Tennis Classement de M P Gillou The Ten Best in Tennis Rankings by Mr P Gillou L Auto in French September 27 1938 pp 1 3 Potter E C October 20 1938 Merrihew S W ed Two World s First Tens American Lawn Tennis Vol 32 p 30 Le classement mondial des joueurs et joueuses consacre la superiorite sans precedent d un pays les Etats Unis The world rankings of male and female players consecrate the unprecedented superiority of one country the United States L Auto in French September 29 1938 p 3 a b RANKINGS TENNIS PLAYERS The Sydney Morning Herald No 31 439 New South Wales Australia October 6 1938 p 15 Retrieved November 17 2021 via National Library of Australia FIRST TEN The Sydney Morning Herald No 31 431 New South Wales Australia September 27 1938 p 15 Retrieved November 28 2021 via National Library of Australia World Tennis Rankings Waikato Times Vol 123 no 20635 October 22 1938 p 23 World First Tens Suggested The Argus Melbourne No 28 735 Victoria Australia September 27 1938 p 20 Retrieved November 28 2021 via National Library of Australia 1938 Tennis Ranking Surprising The Daily Telegraph Sydney Vol IV no 27 New South Wales Australia April 22 1939 p 18 Retrieved November 27 2021 via National Library of Australia Americans Lead World Tennis Telegraph Brisbane Queensland Australia September 30 1938 p 15 SECOND EDITION Retrieved November 29 2021 via National Library of Australia Budge Wins 6 2 6 2 6 3 Don Beats Vines in Montreal and Will Arrive Here Today The New York Times March 7 1939 Retrieved March 18 2012 Budge Triumphs 8 6 6 2 Don Beats Perry for 28th Time at White Plains The New York Times May 9 1939 Retrieved March 18 2012 Collins Bud 2008 The Bud Collins History of Tennis An Authoritative Encyclopedia and Record Book New Chapter Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 942257 41 0 Bowers Ray History of the Pro Tennis Wars Chapter X Budge s Great Pro Year 1939 Archived from the original on March 21 2006 via tennisserver com Il y avait des lecons a prendre hier au stade Roland Garros There were some lessons to learn yesterday at Roland Garros stadium L Auto in French July 3 1939 p 5 Californians Head the World Tennis Rankings Telegraph Brisbane Queensland Australia September 22 1939 p 13 SECOND EDITION Retrieved November 28 2021 via National Library of Australia The Miami Herald February 26 1940 The Nebraska State Journal April 22 1940 The Lincoln Star April 29 1940 Bowers Ray History of the Pro Tennis Wars Chapter XI America 1940 1941 Archived from the original on November 11 2006 via tennisserver com Shmerler Cindy February 11 2021 Overlooked No More Jimmie McDaniel Tennis Player Who Broke Barriers The New York Times Retrieved August 17 2022 Doug Smith February 15 2022 Jimmie McDaniel vs Don Budge A milestone match USTA thetennisbase com The Chicago Tribune 28 May 1941 newspapers com The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 5 July 1942 newspapers com Bowers Ray History of the Pro Tennis Wars Chapter XII America 1942 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 via tennisserver com Don Budge Rated No 1 Among Pros Los Angeles Times December 13 1942 p 28 a b Riggs Bobby 1949 Tennis Is My Racket New York pp 166 167 The Philadelphia Inquirer 17 June 1946 newspapers com Valley Times North Hollywood 24 June 1946 newspapers com The Philadelphia Inquirer 8 July 1946 newspapers com The Fort Worth Star Telegram 21 October 1946 newspapers com The History of Professional Tennis Joe McCauley 2003 reprint p 43 Nashville Banner 18 April 1955 newspapers com The Courier Journal Louisville 12 October 1961 newspapers com Don Budge IMDb Retrieved September 11 2021 a b Nancy Snider Is Betrothed to Jeffrey Budge The New York Times January 14 1979 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 11 2021 Donald Budge Plaintiff appellee v Troy v Post Defendant appellant 643 F 2d 372 5th Cir 1981 Justia Law Retrieved September 11 2021 a b Finn Robin January 27 2000 Don Budge First to Win Tennis s Grand Slam Dies at 84 The New York Times Retrieved October 31 2015 Dragin Burt March 10 2000 Budge Who Leaves His Legacy on Oakland Tennis Courts SFGATE Retrieved September 11 2021 I Think I m Gonna Like it Here lyrics by from Annie soundtrack www stlyrics com Retrieved September 11 2021 HD Stock Video Footage Tennis player Don Budge weds Deirdre Conselman at Chrysostom Church in Chicago Illinois www criticalpast com Retrieved September 11 2021 Silverman Al January 27 2004 It s Not Over Til It s Over The Stories Behind Most Magnificent Heart Stopping Sports Miracles of Our Time ABRAMS ISBN 978 1 4683 0431 2 a b Finn Robin January 27 2000 Don Budge First to Win Tennis s Grand Slam Dies at 84 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 11 2021 Baltzell E Digby Sporting Gentlemen Men s Tennis from the Age of Honor to the Cult of the Superstar Grimsley Will Tennis Its History People and Events Metzler Paul Tennis Styles and Stylists Tennis Myth and Method Ellsworth Vines amp Gene Vier 1978 Viking Press p 6 In his 1979 autobiography Kramer considered the best player ever to have beaten 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 and Pancho 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 Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors He felt unable to rank Henri Cochet and Rene Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best The Miami Herald 25 April 1983 newspapers com The Miami News 10 March 1988 newspapers com World Tennis Magazine December 16 2011 worldtennismagazine com Djokovic Begins Historic Quest At Wimbledon Association of Tennis Professionals June 27 2016 Retrieved June 27 2016 Robrish Dan January 27 2000 Tennis Great Budge Dies First Grand Slam Winner Dead at 84 The Washington Post Retrieved October 29 2015 Sources Edit Sporting Gentlemen Men s Tennis from the Age of Honor to the Cult of the Superstar 1994 E Digby Baltzell Tennis Its History People and Events 1971 Will Grimsley Tennis Styles and Stylists 1969 Paul Metzler The Game My 40 Years in Tennis 1979 Jack Kramer with Frank Deford ISBN 0 399 12336 9 Tennis Is My Racket 1949 Bobby RiggsFurther reading EditFisher Marshall Jon 2009 A Terrible Splendor Three Extraordinary Men a World Poised for War and the Greatest Tennis Match Ever Played ISBN 978 0 307 39394 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Don Budge Don Budge at the Association of Tennis Professionals Don Budge at the International Tennis Federation Don Budge at the Davis Cup Don Budge at the International Tennis Hall of Fame Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Don Budge amp oldid 1137229464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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