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Lew Hoad

Lewis Alan Hoad (23 November 1934 – 3 July 1994) was an Australian tennis player whose career ran from 1950 to 1973. Hoad won four Major singles tournaments as an amateur (the Australian Championships, French Championships and two Wimbledons). 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.

Lew Hoad
Hoad at the 1954 Davis Cup
Full nameLewis Alan Hoad
Country (sports) Australia
Born(1934-11-23)23 November 1934
Glebe, Australia
Died3 July 1994(1994-07-03) (aged 59)
Fuengirola, Spain
Height1.79 m (5 ft 10+12 in)
Turned pro1957 (amateur tour from 1950)
Retired1973
PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)
Int. Tennis HoF1980 (member page)
Singles
Career record937–592 (61.2%) [1]
Career titles52 [1]
Highest rankingNo. 1 (1953, Philippe Chatrier)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenW (1956)
French OpenW (1956)
WimbledonW (1956, 1957)
US OpenF (1956)
Other tournaments
Professional majors
US ProF (1958, 1959)
Wembley ProF (1961, 1962, 1963)
French ProF (1958, 1960)
Other pro events
TOCW (1958AU, 1959FH)
Doubles
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian OpenW (1953, 1956, 1957)
French OpenW (1953)
WimbledonW (1953, 1955, 1956)
US OpenW (1956)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Australian OpenF (1955)
French OpenW (1954)
WimbledonSF (1953, 1954, 1955)
US OpenF (1952, 1956)
Team competitions
Davis CupW (1952, 1953, 1955, 1956)

Hoad was ranked the world No. 1 amateur in 1953 by Harry Hopman, by Noel Brown and by the editors of Tennis de France, and also in 1956 by Lance Tingay, by Ned Potter, and by Tennis de France. He was ranked the world No. 1 professional for 1959 in Kramer's Ampol point ranking system, and by Robert Barnes (Kramer's Australian manager).

Serious back problems plagued Hoad throughout his career, possibly caused by a weight-lifting exercise that he devised in 1954. The back injury became particularly intense following the 1956 Wimbledon championships, continued periodically, and led to his semi-retirement from tennis in 1967. Afterwards, he made sporadic appearances at tournaments, enticed by the advent of the Open Era in 1968 and was seeded No. 7 for the 1968 Wimbledon Championships and seeded No. 12 for the 1970 French Open.

Following his retirement in 1973, Hoad and his wife Jenny Staley Hoad constructed, owned and operated a tennis resort, Lew Hoad's Campo de Tenis and Lew Hoad Tennis Village in Fuengirola, Spain, near Málaga. Hoad died of leukaemia on 3 July 1994.

Early life and career

 
Hoad at age 15 competing at Kooyong in Inter State Tennis in 1949

Lewis Hoad[a] was born on 23 November 1934, in the working-class Sydney inner suburb of Glebe, the eldest of three sons of tramway electrician Alan Hoad and his wife Ailsa Lyle Burbury.[2] Hoad started playing tennis at age five with a racket gifted by a local social club.[3] As a young child, he would wake up at 5 a.m. and hit tennis balls against a wall and garage door until the neighbours complained, and he was allowed to practice on the courts of the Hereford Tennis Club behind the house.[4][5] At age 10 he competed in the seaside tournament at Manly in the under 16 category.[6]

In his youth, Hoad often played Ken Rosewall, and they became known as the Sydney "twins", although they had very different physiques, personalities and playing styles. Their first match in Sydney in January 1947 (when both were aged 12) was played as an opener of an exhibition match between Australia and America. Rosewall won 6–0, 6–0.[7] Hoad built up great physical strength, especially in his hands and arms, by training at a police boys' club, where he made a name as a boxer. Hoad was about 12 when he was introduced to Adrian Quist, a former Australian tennis champion and then general manager of the Dunlop sports goods company. Quist played a couple of sets with Hoad and was impressed by his natural ability. When Hoad was 14 he left school and joined the Dunlop payroll, following the pattern of that 'shamateur' era when most of Australia's brightest tennis prospects were employed by sporting goods companies.[8]

Hoad had just turned 15 when he and Rosewall were selected to play for New South Wales in an interstate contest against Victoria.[9] In November 1949, Hoad won the junior title at the New South Wales Championships, and the same weekend, he also competed in the final of the junior table tennis championship in Sydney.[10][11]

Tennis career

Amateur career: 1950–1957

1950

Hoad lost to Dick Savitt in four sets in round one of the New South Wales State championships in November. In his match report, Adrian Quist said, "Hoad played well, and held a lead of 4-2 in the third set after winning the second. At present he makes too many errors. He will have to learn good control from the ground before his game will reach great heights."[12] Hoad reached the semi-finals of County of Cumberland championships in Sydney in December, losing to Bill Sidwell.[13] "It was apparent from the start of play that Sidwell did not intend to take the youngster lightly. He served with pressure and followed the majority of his returns to the net. The first set was very evenly contested. Had Hoad not fallen into easy errors he may well have won the opening set. The experience of Sidwell, however, prevailed during the important exchanges", said Adrian Quist.[14]

1951

Hoad's first Grand Slam tournament appearance was at the 1951 Australian Championships held in January at the White City Tennis Club in Sydney. He won his first match against Ronald McKenzie in straight sets but lost in the following round to defending champion and countryman Frank Sedgman.[15] It was the only Grand Slam tournament he played that year. Hoad won his first men's singles title, the Brisbane Exhibition tournament at Milton, on grass, on 11 August 1951, defeating Rosewall in the final in four sets.[16] In September, Hoad won New South Wales hardcourt championships beating George Worthington in the final.[17]

1952

In 1952, Hoad reached the third round of the Australian Championships in Adelaide. In April, he was selected by the Australasian Lawn Tennis Association as member of the team to play in overseas tournaments.[18] In May, before departing to Europe, he won the singles title at the Australian Hardcourt Championships on clay after a five-set win in the final against Rosewall.[19] Hoad, who had never played a tournament on European red clay courts, received a walkover in the first round of the French Championships and lost in straight sets to sixth-seeded and 1947 and 1951 finalist Eric Sturgess.[20][18] In only their second appearance as a doubles team at a Grand Slam event, Hoad and Rosewall reached the French semifinal.[21] Hoad lost in the quarterfinal of the Belgian championships in Brussels in early June, where he was defeated by Budge Patty.[22] Hoad's first entry at the grass court Queen's Club Championship in June 1952 ended in the quarterfinal against eventual champion Frank Sedgman.[23] A week later, he played his first match at the Wimbledon Championships defeating Beppe Merlo in a nervous and unimpressive five-set encounter.[24][25] Wins against Rolando Del Bello and Freddie Huber were followed by a fourth round loss against second-seeded and eventual finalist Jaroslav Drobný.[26] Hoad and Rosewall caused an upset when they defeated second-seeded Gardnar Mulloy and Dick Savitt in the third round of the doubles event, but lost in the semifinal against Vic Seixas and Eric Sturgess.[27][28][29]

After a semifinal result at the Swedish championships in July, and an exhibition between Australia and West Germany, Hoad and the Australian team traveled to the United States under the guidance of coach Harry Hopman.[30][31] As a preparation for his first U.S. Championships he played the Meadow Club Invitational (Southampton), Eastern Grass Court Championships (South Orange), and Newport Invitational before teaming up with Rosewall to reach the semifinal of the U.S. National Doubles Championships in Brookline.[32][33][34] Hoad was the eighth seeded foreign player at the U.S. Championships.[b][36] He won four matches to reach his first Grand Slam quarterfinal but due in part to making 64 errors could not overcome Sedgman who would win the tournament without losing a set.[37][38][39] With Thelma Coyne Long he reached the final of the mixed doubles event, the first Grand Slam final of his career, but they lost in straight sets to Doris Hart and Frank Sedgman.[40] An early loss at the Pacific Southwest Championships in September concluded his first overseas tour.[41] In September, he was jointly ranked No. 10 in the world for 1952 with Rosewall by Lance Tingay of The Daily Telegraph.[42][43]

1953
 
Hoad in 1953

Hoad started 1953 poorly in the singles with a second-round exit against Clive Wilderspin at the Australian Championships in Melbourne after playing an uncharacteristic baseline game.[44][45] He was more successful in doubles where he and Rosewall became the youngest team to win the Australian doubles title after a victory in the final against Mervyn Rose and Don Candy.[46] In March, Hoad defended his singles title at the Australian Hardcourt Championships, defeating Rosewall in a five set semifinal in which he survived six matchpoints, and 34-year-old John Bromwich in the final.[47][48][49] Two weeks later, Hoad lost the final of the N.S.W. Hardcourt Championships against Mervyn Rose.[50] Hoad's second overseas tour started in late April, and after an exhibition in Cairo at the Gezira Sporting Club, he reached the final at Italian Championships in Rome losing to Drobný in straight sets but won the doubles title with Rosewall.[51][52][53] At the French Championships in May, Hoad was seeded fourth and made it to the quarterfinals in which he lost to Vic Seixas due to overhitting and an unreliable serve.[54][55] Hoad and Rosewall won the doubles title with a three-set win in the final against countrymen Rose and Wilderspin.[56] In June Hoad's attacking serve-and-volley game proved too good for Wimbledon favorite Rosewall in the final of the Queen's Club Championship and he won the tournament without losing a set.[57][58] At Wimbledon, Hoad was seeded sixth, and as at the French, Vic Seixas defeated him in the quarterfinal, this time in a close five-set match that ended on a Hoad double fault.[59][60] In an all-Australian doubles final Hoad and Rosewall defeated Hartwig and Rose.[61] Hoad lost to Enrique Morea in the final of the Dutch Championships in mid July.[62] He won his first title on U.S. soil in South Orange at the Eastern Grass Court Championships in mid August, defeating compatriot Rex Hartwig in the final.[63][64] In the semifinal against Rosewall, he pulled a back muscle.[65] Hoad and Rosewall's hopes of winning the doubles Grand Slam, two years after fellow Australians Ken McGregor and Frank Sedgman had first achieved that feat, were dashed when they lost surprisingly in the third round of the U.S. Doubles Championships.[66] At the U.S. Championships[67] Hoad (second foreign seed) won four matches to reach the semifinal where for the third time in 1953 he lost in a Grand Slam event to Vic Seixas.[68] Following his defeat, and that of Rosewall in the other semifinal, there was criticism in the press that both 18-year-old players were physically and mentally worn out due to the intensive schedule imposed by coach Harry Hopman.[69][70] In September, Seixas again beat Hoad, this time in the semifinal of the Pacific Southwest Championships in Los Angeles.[71]

Hoad was rested a few weeks upon his return to Australia and then won the Queensland Championships in early November in a 41-minute final against Hartwig.[72][73] Two weeks later, Hoad won the N.S.W. Championships after four-set victories over Tony Trabert in the semi-final and over Rosewall in the final in front of a 10,000 Sydney crowd but had trouble with a sore right elbow.[74][75][76] In early December at the Victorian Championships he defeated Rosewall in the final.[77] The much anticipated Davis Cup challenge round match against the challenging team from the United States took place at the Melbourne Kooyong Stadium in late December. Surprisingly Hartwig was selected to partner Hoad in the doubles instead of Rosewall, a decision widely criticized in the press.[78] In the opening singles matches, Hoad defeated Seixas, his nemesis that season, in straight sets, while Trabert defeated Rosewall, also in straight sets. Hoad and Hartwig lost the doubles match against Seixas and Trabert and Australia trailed 1–2 at the start of the final day.[79][80][81][82] Hoad is remembered for his match as a 19-year-old amateur against the United States champion Tony Trabert. In front of a 17,000 crowd, Hoad defeated Trabert in five sets to help his country retain the Cup.[c][84][85] It was seen as one of the best Davis Cup matches in history.[86][87] Directly following the final, Hoad received his call-up papers for National Service.[88]

Hoad was ranked world No. 5 amateur for 1953 by Lance Tingay in his September rankings.[d][91][42] At the end of the year, Hoad was ranked world No. 1 amateur for the complete season of 1953 by Harry Hopman,[92] by Noel Brown[93] and by the editors of Tennis de France, published by Philippe Chatrier.[94][95] Tingay stated in September 1954 that Hoad in 1953 had "played so well during the Australian season that his status as best in the world was axiomatic." He added that for the 1954 season, "His form since has been almost disastrous. Hoad's decline has been a mystery."[96] Hoad was the youngest tennis player ever at 19 years 38 days to achieve world No. 1 rankings, a record which still stands.

1954
 
Ken Rosewall (left) and Hoad at the 1954 Davis Cup challenge-round match against the US at White City, Sydney

In January, Hoad played just one tournament before entering his National Service training. At the South Australian Championships in Adelaide he reached the final but sub-par play led to a straight-sets defeat to Trabert.[97] On 13 January, Hoad joined the 13th National Service Training battalion in Ingleburn for a period of 98 days and commented that "It will be a welcome break from tennis".[98] As a consequence, Hoad was unable to participate in the Australian Championships. At the end of February, Hoad received a leave from service to play for the Australian team at Kooyong stadium in the third Test match against South Africa in front of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh. He won a singles match against Abe Segal, won a doubles match with Rosewall and lost a mixed-doubles match with his girlfriend Jenny Staley.[99][100][101] When Hoad returned to service, he was bitten by a spider while on maneuvers which caused him to become ill and hospitalized him for ten days.[102] He spent two days in coma which was not made public.[103]

While he was in service, Hoad devised a weight-lifting exercise, doing push-ups with round 50 lb. weights placed on his back, which Hoad later believed probably initiated his back trouble. Hoad left the National Service at the end of April and his third overseas tour with an Australian team started on 5 May.[104] For the first time in his career, Hoad was the top-seeded player at a Grand Slam tournament at the French Championships but he lost in the fourth round to 40-year-old Gardnar Mulloy.[105][106] Hoad lost the doubles final with Rosewall to Seixas and Trabert in 56 minutes. Partnering Maureen Connolly, who had won the women's singles title, Hoad won the mixed-doubles final against Jacqueline Patorni and Rex Hartwig.[107] In June, Hoad overcame countryman Rose in the final of the Queen's Club Championship to successfully defend his title.[108] Hoad was seeded second behind Trabert at Wimbledon Championships.[109] In the fourth round, Hoad avenged his loss to Mulloy at the French Championships, defeating him in four sets.[110] In the quarterfinal the powerful service and excellent returns of Drobný proved too much for Hoad and he was beaten in straight sets within an hour.[111] Hoad and Rosewall were unable to defend their Wimbledon doubles title after losing in fives sets in the semifinal to Seixas and Trabert.[112] A surprise loss against Roger Becker in the semifinal at the Midlands Counties Championships in Birmingham was followed in mid-July by winning the singles title at the Swiss Championships in Gstaad.[113][114] As in the previous year, Hoad met Rosewall in the Eastern Grass Court Championships in August, this time in the final, and again the titleholder was victorious, overpowering Rosewall to win the singles title in three straight sets.[115] At Newport in mid August, Hoad was beaten by 17-year-old compatriot Roy Emerson who won the deciding set 8–6.[116][117] For the third time in 1954, Seixas and Trabert defeated Hoad and Rosewall at a Grand Slam doubles event, winning the U.S. Doubles Championships in Brookline.[118]

 
Hoad at Kooyong in 1954

Hoad, no. 1 foreign seed at the U.S. Championships, lost to Ham Richardson in a five-set quarterfinal.[119][120] His lackluster form continued when he was defeated by unseeded Luis Ayala in the quarterfinal of the Pacific Southwest Championships in mid-September.[121] After returning to Australia at the end of September, Hoad scheduled extra practice to work on his serve and volley but subsequently lost to Don Candy in the semifinal of the Sydney Metropolitan Championships.[122][123] In early November, matters briefly improved. In the final of the Queensland Championships in Brisbane, he overcame a sunstroke and the loss of sets three and four by 0–6 to defeat Hartwig in five sets.[124] In mid-November, he was upset by veteran John Bromwich who better exploited the windy conditions in the quarterfinal of the N.S.W. Championships.[125][126] At the Victorian Championships, the last significant tournament before the Davis Cup Challenge Round, Hoad was defeated in straight sets in the semifinal by Seixas. As in the previous match against Sven Davidson he showed such poor form and at times an apparent lack of interest that he was jeered by the crowd and several left after he smashed a ball into the stands.[127][128][129] The 1954 Davis Cup Challenge Round was played on 27–29 December on the grass courts at the White City Stadium in Sydney between title holders Australia and the United States. Hoad lost the first rubber to Trabert, in front of a record crowd of 25,000, in a high-quality four-set match.[130][131] Rosewall also lost his singles match and the United States won back the cup after Seixas and Trabert defeated Hoad and Rosewall in four sets in the doubles rubber.[132]

In a season review article in the Dunlop Lawn Tennis Annual & Almanack editor and former tennis player G.P. Hughes mentioned that "Hoad in particular had a bad year".[133] In a 1956 interview, Hoad admitted that especially in 1954 he often got fed-up with tennis and didn't care whether he played or not.[134] In September, Hoad's world ranking had slipped to No. 7 in Tingay's ranking. Tingay, Chatrier and other writers ranked Hoad world No. 5 in a collaborative ranking.[135][136][137][e] However, Hoad was ranked world No. 4 in Ned Potter's rankings for 1954 in World Tennis, which was a higher ranking than Potter had given Hoad in 1953 at No. 5.[139]

1955

Hoad was unable to play the South Australian tennis championship in early January due to a torn ligament.[140] To some surprise he entered the mixed doubles event at the 1955 Australian Championships with his girlfriend Jenny Staley and the pair finished as runner-ups to Thelma Coyne Long and George Worthington.[141] In the singles event, Hoad reached his first Grand Slam tournament final after solid wins over Seixas (quarterfinal) and Hartwig (semifinal). In the final Rosewall's accuracy and control were too strong for him and he lost in three straight sets.[142] Hoad did not participate in the French Championships as the Davis Cup team that he was part of only left for Europe at the end of May during the Championships.[143] In the singles final of the Queen's Club Championship in mid-June Hoad, who was married earlier that day, lost his service seven times and lost to Rosewall in two straight sets but won the doubles event with Hartwig.[144][145] Hoad was the fourth-seeded player at the Wimbledon Championships at the end of June. In his quarterfinal match against seventh-seeded Budge Patty, his game lacked accuracy and he conceded a break in each set resulting in a loss in straight sets.[146]

Having lost the Davis Cup in 1954, Australia had to play through the 1955 Davis Cup preliminary rounds to challenge holders United States. In July, Australia defeated Mexico, Brazil and Canada to win the Americas Zone and subsequently beat Japan and Italy in the Inter-zone matches in August.[147] In the Challenge Round at the West Side Tennis Club, Forest Hills from 26 to 28 August, Hoad defeated the French and Wimbledon champion Trabert in four sets in his first singles rubber and with Hartwig won the doubles match to reclaim the Davis Cup for Australia. These were the first ever tennis matches televised in color, on the first national color broadcast by NBC television.[148][149][150]

Hoad was no. 2 foreign seed at the U.S. Championships held from 2 to 11 September, immediately after the Davis Cup Challenge Round, on the muddy courts of Forest Hills. In the quarterfinal, he lost his service three times in succession in the third set and suffered a straight-sets defeat in 50 minutes against Trabert, the first-seeded U.S. player, and eventual champion.[151] In his first significant tournament after the U.S. Championships, Hoad won the New South Wales Championships in November after a win in the final against Rosewall.[152][153] In December, he won the singles title at the Victorian Championships after a tough five-sets final win over 19-year old Ashley Cooper.[154] In September, he was ranked No. 3 in the world according to Tingay,[42] and was ranked world No. 3 for 1955 by Ned Potter in World Tennis.[155]

1956
 
Hoad (left) and Rosewall playing doubles at the Wimbledon Championships in the mid-fifties

Hoad started the year with a five-set defeat in the final of the South Australian Championships against countryman Neale Fraser.[156] At the following Manly tournament, the crowd overflowed the stands during the final hindering Rosewall's "baseline defensive game" more than Hoad's attacking style, resulting in a straight-sets win for Hoad in 35 minutes.[157] At the Australian Championships in Brisbane, Hoad overcame a two sets to one deficit against Mervyn Rose in the quarterfinal and beat Neale Fraser in the semifinal to reach his second consecutive Australian final, where he overcame titleholder Rosewall in four sets to win his first Grand Slam singles title.[158][159] He won the doubles title with Rosewall against Don Candy and Mervyn Rose. At the beginning of March, Hoad and his wife left for an overseas private tour (a tour sanctioned but not organised by the Australian tennis federation).[160][161] First stop of the tour was Cairo where Hoad won the singles title at the Egyptian Championships against Sven Davidson followed by a tournament win in Alexandria over Fred Kovaleski.[162][163] At Monte Carlo in late March, he was surprisingly beaten by Tony Vincent in the quarterfinal.[164] In the Australian ranking published in April, reflecting the season until the end of March, Hoad overtook Rosewall as No. 1.[165] Singles titles at the Lebanese Championships and at the Connaught Club in Essex followed in April but the month ended with a semifinal loss to Ham Richardson at the British Hard Court Championships in Bournemouth.[166][167][168]

Hoad won his first Italian Championships on red clay at the Foro Italico in Rome in early May when he outplayed Sven Davidson in straight sets.[169] At the French Championships at Roland Garros, Hoad survived a five-set scare against Robert Abdesselam in the third round before winning the final against Sven Davidson in straight sets to claim his second consecutive Grand Slam singles title.[170][171] Unknown to the public, Hoad had stayed up the night previous to the final, invited by a Russian diplomat, and was drunk when he came home. An intensive workout by Rod Laver got him into a state that allowed him to play the final.[172] Following the win in Paris, Hoad stated his intention to remain amateur after 1956, "Even if I win the three big tournaments,[173] even if Kramer raised his offer, I still wouldn't turn pro for at least two or three seasons."[174] In May, Hoad won the International Golden Ball tournament in Wiesbaden, West Germany after a straight-sets victory in the final over Art Larsen but at the Trofeo Conde de Godó in Barcelona, he lost in the quarterfinal to Bob Howe.[175][176] As a preparation for Wimbledon, Hoad played the singles event at the Northern Championships in Manchester but lost to 34-year old Jaroslav Drobný in the final 7–5 in the deciding set.[177][178] Hoad was seeded first for the Wimbledon Championships. He lost two sets en route to the final, one to Mal Anderson in the quarterfinal and one to Ham Richardson in the semifinal. In the final he faced Rosewall. In the first all-Australian final since 1922, Hoad was victorious in four sets to gain his first Wimbledon and third successive Grand Slam championship title.[179][180][181] Hoad also won the doubles title with Rosewall, their third Wimbledon title, defeating Orlando Sirola and Nicola Pietrangeli in the final in straight sets.[182] Following his Wimbledon title he lost in the semi-final of the Midlands tournament to Mike Davies.[183] In August, Hoad won the singles title at the German Championships, on clay at Hamburg, with a four-set defeat of Orlando Sirola in the final.[184]

Immediately after Wimbledon, Hoad experienced severe pain and stiffness in his lower back, at a level higher than before the tournament.[185] He arranged to travel to the U.S. by boat on the RMS Queen Mary rather than suffer a long plane trip.[185] However, the pain continued and reduced the level of his play for the remainder of the year and into 1957.[186]

After arrival in New York on 21 August, Hoad travelled to Brookline to partner Rosewall in the U.S. Doubles Championships which they won to complete their career doubles Grand Slam. From there he went to the Forest Hills stadium in New York to play his first match in the singles U.S. Championships. He had missed the preparatory grass court tournament at Newport.[187] Having won the first three stages of the Grand Slam, Hoad was favoured to win the fourth and then turn professional for a lucrative contract offered by Jack Kramer, although Hoad himself claimed that he never thought about the Grand Slam and did not hear of it before he arrived in New York. Hoad lost the U.S. Championships final at Forest Hills in four sets to Rosewall.[188] Hoad and Rosewall won the doubles title against Seixas and Richardson.[189] In September Hoad defeated Luis Ayala in the semifinal and Sven Davidson in a four set final at the O'Keefe Invitational at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club in Rosedale, Toronto on red clay [190] and at the Pacific Southwest Championships, the last leg of his overseas tour, Hoad was beaten by Alex Olmedo in the third round.[191][192] In November he lost the final of the Queensland Championships to Ashley Cooper in five sets and was hindered by numbness in the serving arm between the elbow and the wrist.[193] In mid December Hoad and Rosewall competed in the final of the Victorian Championships which was their last final as amateurs as Rosewall turned professional at the end of the month. The final started late due to rain and was stopped due to darkness at two sets to one for Hoad but the following day Rosewall won the last two sets and the title.[194][195] In late December, Hoad was part of the Australian Davis Cup team which defended the Cup in the Challenge Round against the United States. Hoad was confined to bed with back pain for the two days prior to the Davis Cup matches, and was relieved to find that he could play well.[196] In his last Davis Cup appearance, Hoad won both his singles rubbers, against Herbie Flam and Seixas, as well as his doubles match with Rosewall to help Australia to a 5–0 victory.[197][198]

Hoad was ranked world No. 1 amateur by Lance Tingay in September,[42] by Ned Potter in October in World Tennis[199] and at the end of the year by Tennis de France.[200] Hoad won 16 tournaments in 1956, and 17 doubles titles.[8]

1957

Hoad played poorly in early 1957, due to back trouble, and was placed in an upper body cast for six weeks, following which he slowly returned to tennis competition in April 1957.[196] He then experienced a period of pain-free playing for 11 months. He won the Northern Championships in Manchester, beating Ramanathan Krishnan in the final. Hoad won his second successive Wimbledon singles title, defeating Ashley Cooper in a straight-sets final that lasted 57 minutes.

Professional career: 1957–1973

1957

After winning the 1957 Wimbledon title, Hoad turned professional by signing a two-year contract with Kramer for a record guarantee of US$125,000, or AUS£55,500, which included a US$25,000 bonus for winning the 1957 Wimbledon singles title.[201][202][203] This was the highest guarantee that would be given to an amateur turning pro, with Laver receiving the second highest.[204] Hoad's business relationship with Kramer in 1957 and later was congenial and smooth compared to the experiences of Pancho Gonzales. Hoad would later claim, "I never had a problem with Jack Kramer."[205]

On 14 July 1957, Hoad won his debut match as a professional against Frank Sedgman at the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions, broadcast live nationally on the CBS television network.[206][207] He won his next match, against Pancho Segura, but lost the last three to finish joint third in the round robin event behind Gonzales and Sedgman.[208][209] After Forest Hills, Hoad commented on the difference between amateur and professional tennis: "It's an entirely different league. These pros make mistakes but they don't make them on vital points. That's the difference.".[210] At the following Masters round robin tournament played on cement courts at the Los Angeles Tennis Club he lost all six of his matches to finish in last place, commenting "I don't like cement courts...".[211][212][213] After these defeats Kramer commented that Hoad would have to change his playing style: "His second serve is too shallow. His opponents massacre it. He must shorten his backhand or play deeper in his returning service." Kramer stated that there was a psychological factor connected with Hoad's defeats “as he never has done well on these courts in Los Angeles and thinks they are his jinx. But, wait until he gets going in the indoor circuit, and then you’ll see an entirely different player, both mentally and physically.”​[214]

In September Hoad embarked on a four-month 4-man tour of Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Australia together with Kramer (Sedgman replaced Kramer in Australia), Rosewall, and Segura. Kramer and Hoad were interviewed live on BBC television. Kramer gave his estimation of Hoad's game: "I feel that he's potentially the best player that tennis might ever have." Kramer cited Hoad's recent marathon win over Rosewall at The Hague on red clay as evidence of improvement in his play.[215] At the Wembley Indoor Pro Championships in late September, Kramer eliminated Hoad, defeating him in straight sets,[216][217] and Kramer also defeated Gonzales for third place. The two players would be Kramer's headliners in the upcoming world pro tennis championship tour. In the 4-man tour of 1957, Hoad finished with slight edges over the other players, 16–15 over Rosewall, 16–14 over Kramer, 13–9 over Segura, 4–2 over Sedgman.[202][218][219][220] Hoad was ranked combined world No. 3 behind Gonzales and Sedgman and ahead of Rosewall and Segura for 1957 by Quist.[221]

1958

In 1958 a projected series of 100 head-to-head matches was commenced between Hoad and the reigning champion of professional tennis, Pancho Gonzales, together with an undercard series between Trabert and Segura.[222][223] The series started in January in a number of Australian cities in stadiums on grass courts with mostly a best-of-five set format, and in New Zealand for three matches with a best-of-three set format, and at the end of the Australasian subtour, Hoad was leading 8 to 5. Most venues reported record crowds, including the first Kooyong encounter, which Hoad won in a 3 and 3/4 hour, four-sets, 80-games marathon in front of 12,000 spectators.[224][225] From 5 to 4 down in New Zealand, Hoad launched a 15 to 3 winning streak against Gonzales (including the non-tour Kooyong Tournament of Champions deciding match and the third-place match at Sydney Masters[226]). In February, the series continued in the United States, mostly in indoor venues and local gyms with a best-of-three set format, played on a portable canvas surface.[227] Hoad would experience a thigh injury in May and June.[228] But Hoad won 18 of the first 27 matches, and in late February Gonzales had, according to Kramer, the look of a "beaten man".[229] However, after they played an outdoor match on 1 March on a chilly night in Palm Springs, Hoad's back stiffened which affected him significantly for the rest of the series. Twice Hoad was forced to take time off to rest his back and was substituted for in his absence by Rosewall and Trabert. From 9–18 Gonzales surged to a 26–23 lead, and at the end of the series on 8 June, he had defeated Hoad by 51 matches to 36.[230][231][232]

In late 1958, Jack Kramer was asked which of the many "World Professional Championships" tournaments he considered deserving of the title, and he named four tournaments under his own aegis: Forest Hills, L.A. Masters, Kooyong and Sydney White City.[233] Hoad won three of these eight tournaments in 1958/59.[234] For the 1958/1959 seasons, Kramer had a troupe of professional champions that included 11 Hall of Fame players,[f] under contract, and he designed a series of tournaments to provide a format in which all of them could participate. In January 1958, Hoad won the Kooyong Tournament of Champions in Melbourne, the richest tournament of the year. The tournament was funded by the Australian oil company Ampol.[235] Hoad defeated Gonzales and Sedgman in deciding matches, and won all five of his matches in the round-robin event. During the world championship tour in the U.S. in May, the four players participated in the Cleveland event. In the final at Cleveland on 5 May, Hoad lost a two-set lead against Gonzales while struggling with his leg-muscle injury.[236] Hoad dropped out of the tour in late May to rest his thigh injury.[236] At the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions in June 1958, Hoad's thigh injury healed in time for his final match which he won against Gonzales on the final day.[237] However, Gonzales won the event with a better overall round-robin record. At Roland Garros in September, Hoad won his quarterfinal against Trabert, and his semifinal against Gonzales.[238] While leading in the final against Rosewall, Hoad wrenched his back reaching for a ball, and could not play well in the remainder of the match.[239] He had to default the Wembley Pro tournament in September due to an "arthritic" back.[240] Hoad rested for the next three months and did not play again until 1959.[238] Jack March ranked Hoad world No. 2 professional tennis player behind Gonzales for 1958.[241] Jack Kramer ranked Hoad No. 4 for 1958, with Gonzales first, Sedgman second, Rosewall third.[242]

1959

In early 1959, it was announced that the Australian oil company Ampol,[g] would provide an award of AUS£2,500 (US$5,600), plus the Ampol Open Trophy, to the "acknowledged world's best tennis player", adjudged from a world series of tournaments managed by Jack Kramer.[243] All of the best pros would be ranked by a point system[244][h] which would determine the seeding list for all tournaments.[245][246] The first five tournaments of the series were played in Australia on a portable outdoor wooden plywood court,[247] playing slow on a sand/paint surface for traction, but with no sliding possible.[248] Hoad began the series slowly, hampered by an elbow injury.[249] At the end of January, Hoad defeated Rosewall and Cooper to win at Perth and in February 1959, he defeated Rosewall in three sets to win the South Australian Pro[250] tournament at the Norwood Cricket Oval in Adelaide.[251] This gave Hoad the lead in Ampol bonus points after the first group of five tournaments, a lead which he would not relinquish until the Ampol Open Trophy series ended in January 1960.[252]

In the four-man 1959 Kramer World Professional Championship Tour, which ran from 20 February – 31 May in North America, Hoad built a lead of 12 to 5 in his series of matches against Gonzales, after a win in Newcastle, Pennsylvania in late April.[253] Gonzales stated that "I had blisters under my blisters from the punishment" on that tour.[254] However, the daily grind of the tour began to cause a renewal of Hoad's back trouble,[255] and he finally won against Gonzales by 15 matches to 13. He also won his head-to-head's with newly turned pro Ashley Cooper (18–2) and Mal Anderson (9–5). With a win–loss record of 42–20 he finished second in the four-man tour behind Gonzales (47–15).[256][257] The championship was based on money won.[258] This would be the only 4-man world professional championship tour in which the winner would have a losing record against one of the other players, and the second-place finisher would have winning records against all of the other players. Four-man world championship tours were held in 1942, 1954, 1959, and 1960.[259] In late April the players in the 4-man tour played in the Cleveland event, and Hoad lost the final to Gonzales in three straight sets.[257]

The L.A. Masters round robin from 5–14 June, was held at the L.A. Tennis Club on concrete, and was part of the Ampol series. Hoad and Gonzales both finished with five wins and one loss, but Gonzales won the title on account of his victory over Hoad in their head-to-head match, which had been the first match for both in the event.[260][252] During the tournament, Hoad received several Hollywood offers for screen tests, but turned them down with the comment "What do I want with money?".[261] At the O'Keefe Professional Championships on red clay at Toronto Lawn Tennis Club from 16 to 21 June, also part of the Ampol series, Hoad lost to Sedgman and Rosewall lost to Trabert. Gonzales won the tournament by beating Cooper, Trabert and Sedgman.[252]

The Forest Hills Tournament of Champions[262] from 23 to 28 June, played on grass at the Forest Hills stadium in New York, and part of the Ampol series, awarded the largest winners' cheques of the season. Hoad defeated Mal Anderson in the quarterfinal, Rosewall in the semifinal in four sets and Gonzales in the final, also in four sets, to claim the title.[252] Gonzales appeared tired near the end of the match, but had declared in an interview prior to the final, "I feel fit, very fit. Until Hoad beats me, I'm not worried."[263] In the August 1959 issue of World Tennis, Riggs wrote of the Forest Hills final, "the match signified the end of an era. The great Gonzales who had dominated professional tennis for four years had been decisively beaten..."[264]

In August 1959, Hoad defeated Cawthorn and Worthington to reach the final of the Slazenger Pro Championships in Eastbourne, but lost to Cooper in the final.[265][266][267] In September, Hoad lost to Sedgman in the semifinal of the French Pro at Roland Garros, part of the Ampol series, but defeated Rosewall in a playoff for third place. At the Wembley Indoor Championships, part of the Ampol series, Hoad was upset by Segura in the second round, and Segura eventually lost the final to Anderson in a close match. In the Grand Prix de Europe tour from August to October, which excluded Roland Garros and Wembley, Hoad finished in third place behind Sedgman and Rosewall (Gonzales defaulted the European tour).

Hoad won the Perth and Adelaide Memorial Drive events in November and December to begin the final group of Ampol tournaments, which were played on grass courts in tennis stadiums.[246] At the Sydney White City Tournament of Champions from 8–13 December, Hoad injured his hip in the semifinal against Anderson,[268] and lost the final to Gonzales in straight sets.[269] At Brisbane Milton Courts from 15 to 19 December, Rosewall defeated Hoad in the semifinal and Gonzales in the final in long matches.[269] The final event of the Ampol Open Trophy series, the Qantas International Kooyong Championships at Melbourne, began on 26 December 1959.[270] With a victory at Kooyong, either Hoad or Gonzales would have won the series. Gonzales decided to return to the U.S. for the holidays to be with his fiancée, although Kramer had warned that "it could cost Gonzales AUS£5,000 by going home for Christmas."[271][272] Gonzales thereby defaulted the Ampol series to Hoad. On 24 December, the day following Gonzales' departure, Hoad announced that he would not participate in the upcoming 4-man tour in January 1960.[273] On 2 January 1960, Hoad defeated Rosewall in a three-and-a-half hour, four-set match to win the Kooyong tournament,[i][275] a match which Kramer acclaimed as one of the best ever played.[270] With Hoad's successful defence of the Kooyong title also came the Ampol Open Trophy win and bonus money award.[244]

The Ampol Open Trophy "world series"[276][277][246] or "world's open tennis championship" (it was named "open" in case open tennis arrived, which it did not for some years)[278][244][246] had consisted of 15 tournaments around the world between 10 January 1959 and 2 January 1960.[j] Hoad finished first in the series with 51 bonus points, ahead of Gonzales (43 points) and Rosewall (41 points).[k][279][270][280] [l] The Melbourne Age stated, Hoad "was crowned the new world professional tournament champion at Kooyong" by winning the Ampol world series.[270] The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Hoad had won "the title of world's top professional tennis player" and was "the game's top money-earner" for 1959.[285][270][286] French language L'Impartial on 6 January 1960 stated "Lewis Hoad world champion", the win at Kooyong "allows him at the same time to claim the world title for 1959".[287] In an advertisement in World Tennis magazine in June 1960, Hoad was described as "world champion Lew Hoad".[288] Kramer's brochure described the Ampol series with the term "World Championship Tennis".[289][290] There had also been references of Gonzales between January and April 1960 being described variously that he was "world professional tennis champion, will defend his title",[291] was advertised as "WORLD PRO CHAMPION",[292] was "world professional champion",[293] "goes after an unprecedented sixth straight world crown",[294] was "perennial professional champion",[295] was described in UPI newswire reports as "world professional tennis champion since 1954",[296][297] "titleholder" of the "world professional tennis championship" [298] and that Gonzales with "five world series championships as his record, defeated Ken Rosewall at Cairns last night in straight sets and added further to his claims for his sixth successive world title".[299] On 15 January 1960, Lawn Tennis and Badminton said Hoad was taking a six-month rest and the article stated "J. Kramer is urging Hoad not to take this step, as during this year he will have his best chance of taking R. A. Gonzales' world professional title from him".[300]

Kramer's office reported that in 1959 Hoad had won his personal series of matches against Gonzales 24 to 23.[285][270]

Kramer placed Hoad in fourth place in his personal world professional rating for 1959, the same ranking which Kramer awarded to Hoad in 1958 and 1960. Jack March ranked Hoad second behind Gonzales for 1959, the same ranking which he had given Hoad for 1958.[301] Robert Roy in the French sportspaper L'Équipe ranked Hoad fifth as of mid-December, behind Gonzales, Sedgman, Rosewall, and Trabert.[245][302] Kramer's Australian tennis agent Bob Barnes placed Hoad in first spot, corresponding to Hoad's standing on the official Ampol ranking, with Gonzales second, Rosewall third, Sedgman fourth, and Trabert fifth. [303] Mal Anderson, in a conversation in World Tennis, recalled that "Kramer established a point system to decide the best players...Lew finished ahead of Pancho" followed by Rosewall, Sedgman, and Trabert.[304]

1960

Hoad decided not to play in the 4-man 1960 world championship tour and took a three-month layoff at the beginning of 1960 to rest his back and spend time with his family.[305][285] When he returned to play,[306] he was rusty, slow, and carried some extra weight, but he gradually recovered his form. He won a New Zealand tour in April, over Anderson, Sedgman, and Cooper.[274] In May, Hoad commenced his participation in Kramer's tournament series for 1960, which used a point system to rank the players.[307] Gonzales withdrew from the tournament series just before it began. Hoad lost a five-set final to Rosewall at the Melbourne Olympic Pool where a court was set up on the drained pool floor.[308] Hoad, Rosewall, and most of the pros did not play in the Cleveland World Pro which, as in 1959, was not a part of Kramer's tournament series. However, Hoad and Trabert played a match in Cincinnati, Trabert's home town, won by Hoad, just before the Cleveland event, where Trabert would be runner-up to Olmedo.[309] Hoad won tournament finals in June at Santa Barbara, California and in September at Geneva, Switzerland, both over Rosewall, but appeared out of condition in the Roland Garros final against Rosewall.[310] At the Wembley Indoor Championships that year, Hoad was again upset by Segura in the second round. In late 1960, Hoad won the inaugural Japanese Professional Championships in Tokyo, beating Rosewall, Cooper, and Gimeno.[311] The event drew 7,000 fans for each of the four evenings of play, with the Crown Prince and Princess in attendance the first evening.[312] In the final, Hoad prevailed at 13–11 in the fifth set over Rosewall, saving three match points.[312] Following the marathon Tokyo final, Hoad withdrew from the remaining tournaments in the point series with back trouble, and the final projected tournament in Australia was not played.[307][313] The final results of Kramer's tournament series for 1960 are unknown. Hoad and Gonzales did not play against each other in 1960. Hoad was ranked world No. 2 professional tennis player behind Gonzales in a newspaper report.[314]

1961
 
Hoad and Robert Haillet (right) at the Professional Championship in Noordwijk, Netherlands in August 1961

Hoad played a few one-set matches on the 1961 Professional World Series tour in January, but soon withdrew because of a broken left foot and was substituted for by first Trabert and then Sedgman.[315][316] He finished fourth in a tour of five Soviet cities in July, behind Trabert, Buchholz, and Segura, returning to play after his broken foot had healed.[317] In late August and September, Hoad and Gonzales played a ten-match best-of-three sets tour of Britain and Ireland, with Buchholz and Davies playing the undercard matches.[318] Hoad won his series against Gonzales by a score of six matches to four.[319][320] Hoad won four of the five matches in the series which were played on grass.[321][322] In September, Hoad lost in the first round of the French Pro to Luis Ayala.[323] At the Wembley Pro, Hoad defeated Gonzales in a four-set semifinal. In the final against Rosewall, in the second game of the match, Hoad pulled his back while running for a backhand volley and suffered a recurrence of his old back injury, and could no longer run, losing in four sets.[324] In November, Hoad won the fifth and deciding rubber for Australia against the United States in the final of the inaugural Kramer Cup (the pro equivalent of the Davis Cup) by beating Trabert in four sets. Trabert said afterwards: "Trying to stop Lew in that final set was like fighting a machine gun with a rubber knife".[325] Robert Roy in L'Équipe ranked Hoad as the third-best player of the year.[326] In July 1961 Gardnar Mulloy rated Hoad as world No. 1 ahead of Gonzales, and the favourite to win a prospective open Wimbledon.[327]

1962

There was no official pro championship tour in 1962, as Laver and Emerson had declined to accept pro offers made by Kramer at the 1961 Wimbledon. Kramer resigned as tour promoter and director. From 14 to 17 March 1962, Hoad won the Adelaide Professional Championships, beating Rosewall, Gimeno, and Sedgman, the final against Rosewall very close. In late August, Hoad played a five-match, best-of-three sets tour in Britain against Trabert, defeating Trabert at Nottingham, Edinburgh, Bournemouth, and Dublin, while Trabert won at Scarborough.[328] Hoad won the professional tournament in Zürich in September 1962 by a win in the final against Pancho Segura.[329] In late September, Hoad lost to Rosewall in a 3+14-hour, four-set final at Wembley.[330] Hoad and Rosewall teamed to win the doubles final at both Roland Garros and Wembley. In October, Hoad was awarded the Facis Trophy for winning the pro tour of Italy.[331] In the 1962 Kramer Cup tournament, in best-of-five set formats, Hoad defeated Gimeno in the semifinal tie in Turin, Italy on clay, and Hoad won the opening match of the final at Adelaide in December against Olmedo on grass.[332] In an interview in 1980, Hoad stated that "I finally finished playing seriously, in about 1962".[220] Hoad was voted the world No. 1 professional tennis player for 1962 in a UPI poll of 85 U.S. sports editors held at the end of January 1963 following the Australian tour.[333]

1963

In January 1963, Hoad and Rosewall guaranteed the contract of new pro Rod Laver. Hoad defeated Laver 8–0[m] in an Australian tour, some of their matches played to best-of-five and televised from sold-out stadiums.[338][339][340] On Laver's pro debut on 5 January, Hoad beat Laver at White City stadium in Sydney on a "slippery" grass surface.[341] Their match at the Kooyong stadium in Melbourne on grass was a close contest, with Laver extending Hoad to five sets before losing. After the Australian series, Hoad was inactive for five months, partly due to a shoulder injury.[342][343] Hoad did not plan to participate in the World Tour for 1963.[204] On his return in June, he lost to Laver in the semifinal of the Adler Pro, and at the Forest Hills U.S. Pro tournament he lost to Buchholz in the first round. The Forest Hills event did not have a television contract, was a financial failure, and the players, with the exception of Gonzales, were not paid.[42][344] At the French Pro indoor event at Stade Coubertin in September, Hoad was defeated in straight sets by Rosewall in the semifinal and lost the third place play-off against Sedgman. At the Wembley Pro, he reached the final after surviving a marathon semifinal against Buchholz in which he strained his leg muscle and was limping throughout most of the match. McCauley acclaimed the semi-final with Buchholz "one of the best contests ever staged at Wembley".[345] Hoad was tired and sluggish in the final,[345] which again he lost to Rosewall, this time in four sets.[346] At the Tokyo Japanese Pro in November, Hoad defeated Rosewall in the preliminary round, but lost the third place match to Sedgman, Buchholz defeating Laver in the final.[347] At the end of the World Championship Tour earlier in the season, Laver had finished second and was officially ranked the No. 2 professional player behind Rosewall.[348] Hoad did not play in the World Tour, and was not officially ranked.

1964–67

In February and March 1964, Hoad played a 16-day 24-match best-of-three sets tour of New Zealand with Laver, Rosewall, and Anderson. Hoad and Laver both finished on top with seven wins and five losses, but Hoad won first place with a 3 to 1 head-to-head score against Laver.[349] [350] In late September 1964, Hoad and Gonzales played a four match best-of-three sets head-to-head series in Britain, at Brighton, Carlyon Bay (Cornwall), Cardiff (Wales), and Glasgow (Scotland). Hoad won at Carlyon Bay and Cardiff, while Gonzales won at Brighton and Glasgow.[351][352][353] Hoad experienced foot trouble in 1964 and finished in sixth place in the tournament series point system.[354] In early 1965, much of his large right toe was removed, and he was only able to play a limited schedule thereafter.[355] Hoad won his final victories against Laver in January 1966 at White City in Sydney, his home town, defeating him in straight sets, and at Forest Hills, New York in a round robin match in June 1966.[356]

After the expiration of his seven-year contract on 14 November 1966,[357] Hoad withdrew from competitive play for ten months. Hoad and his wife invested in the construction and development of a tennis club resort and a related residential complex in southern Spain. He returned unexpectedly to participate in the Wimbledon Pro tournament in late August 1967.[358] The Wimbledon Pro was a three-day BBC televised tournament organised by the All-England Club as a trial for "open" tennis and as such the first Wimbledon tournament open to male professional tennis players. Hoad was one of the eight players invited for the singles event and despite being in semi-retirement and without competitive play for ten months,[359] he won his first match against Gonzales in three sets.[360] The BBC television commentator called it "the finest match ever seen on these hallowed grounds."[361] This would be the last match on grass between Hoad and Gonzales, with Hoad holding a lifetime edge on grass over Gonzales of 21 matches to 14.[362][363][364] With little energy left he lost the semifinal to Rosewall in two straight sets.[365] Hoad played for an eight-week period on the pro tour in 1967, and then retired permanently from regular competitive tennis play.[366]

Open era 1968–1973

Back problems plagued Hoad throughout his career and forced his retirement from the tennis tour in October 1967 but the advent of the Open Era enticed him to make sporadic appearances at tournaments.[367] Hoad lost in the final of the Irish Championships at Dublin in July 1968 to Tom Okker in straight sets, hampered by a thigh injury.[368] In November 1969, Hoad won the Dewar Cup Aberavon singles title, part of the Dewar Cup indoor circuit, defeating Mark Cox in the semifinal[369] and Bob Hewitt in the final, both wins in two straight sets.[370][371] At the 1970 Italian Open, he lost in the third round in four sets to Alex Metreveli. At the 1970 French Open, he defeated Charlie Pasarell in four close sets, and reached the fourth round before succumbing to eventual finalist Željko Franulović. At Wimbledon that year he lost in the second round to Ismail El Shafei.[372]

Hoad won his final tournament singles title on 7 August 1971, the Playmon Fiesta 71, on red clay at Benidorm, Spain.[373] He defeated Antonio Muñoz in the semifinal and Manuel Santana in the final. This would mark a twenty-year span during which Hoad won singles titles in tennis, between the ages of 16 and 36, dating back to the Brisbane tournament of August 1951. In spring 1972, Hoad played the doubles final at Italian Open with Frew McMillan against Ilie Năstase and Ion Ţiriac. Hoad/McMillan led 2–0 in sets but retired at 3–5 down in the fifth set in protest of the poor light conditions and the antics of the Rumanian pair.[374][375] At the end of June, at the age of 37, Hoad made his final Wimbledon appearance losing in the first round to Jürgen Fassbender in four sets.[376] Hoad's final match was a second round loss as a result of a retirement to Fassbender in Johannesburg in November 1973.[377]

From 1970 to 1974, Hoad was the coach of the Spanish Davis Cup team.[378]

According to notes for a 1970 British Pathé documentary film about Hoad's tennis ranch, Hoad had "made about GBP 350,000 as a professional".[379] Per a 1977 newspaper interview, “Throughout his career, Hoad earned a total of £250,000, less than many pros collect in a year now. He received £150 for his Wimbledon victories; the payoff now is £17,500.”[380]

Career summary

Hoad's win–loss ratio for 1956 in all matches was 114/129 or 88%.[381] His win ratio in 1958 was 41% (winning 64 of 155 matches).[382] However, Hoad's win rates on the world championship tour that year (36/87 or 41%) and in the 1959 four-man tour (68%) compare favourably to Rosewall's percentages on the 1957 world championship tour (34%) and on the 1960 four man tour (56%).[383] In the 1959 Ampol Open Trophy tournament series, Hoad's winning percentage was 71% (36/51) compared to Gonzales' 72% (26/36) and Rosewall's 62% (26/42). Gonzales defaulted three Ampol tournaments and played 15 fewer matches than Hoad in the tournament series.[284] For the 1959 season as a whole, Hoad had a 24 to 23 edge in wins against Gonzales, a consistency which surpasses any other opponent of Gonzales during his world champion years.[270] Hoad's lifetime edge over Gonzales on grass was 21 wins to 14 losses (60%).[384] Hoad trails Rosewall lifetime in grasscourt matches, 17 to 27, Hoad's results declining after 1961.[385] Hoad was 15 wins and 18 losses against Rosewall lifetime in grass court tournament play (1951–1967). Hoad was 17 wins and 21 losses lifetime on clay against Rosewall, and 10 wins and 13 losses lifetime on clay against Trabert.[385][386] Lifetime on all surfaces, primarily indoor, in approximate numbers, Hoad trails Gonzales 78–104 and trails Rosewall 51–84.[387] In the five Tournament of Champions events from 1957 to 1959 in which both players were entered, Hoad held a 3 to 2 edge over Gonzales in head-to-head play, all on grass.[388]

On the head-to-head tours of the era (1958, 1959, 1961), Hoad compiled 57 wins and 68 losses against Gonzales, the best head-to-head showing of any pro against the reigning champion Gonzales. In the 1959 Ampol series, Hoad's record was 3 wins and 5 losses against Gonzales.[389][284] However, Hoad was more consistent than Gonzales against the other ten players in the Ampol series, winning 33 of 43 matches (77%), while Gonzales won 21 of 28 (75%), and this gave Hoad the overall victory in the series. Hoad won six tournaments compared to Gonzales' four, and he had 6 wins and 2 losses against Rosewall on the 1959 Ampol series, while Gonzales had 1 win and 3 losses against Rosewall. Hoad had a 15–13 edge over Gonzales in their meetings on the 4-man championship tour of 1959, but Hoad was deprived of overall victory on this tour because he was less consistent than Gonzales when facing the rookie pros, Mal Anderson and Ashley Cooper. Hoad's combined record against the rookies was 27–7 compared to Gonzales’ 34–0.[261]

Hoad was a dominant doubles player. He won nine Grand Slam doubles titles, including one Mixed doubles title, and a Career Grand Slam in men's doubles. Hoad won 21 major men's doubles titles over 14 seasons (eight Grand Slam, thirteen Pro Slam), a pre-Open era record, shared with Rosewall. He also won the 1959 Forest Hills TOC doubles title. Rosewall won 24 major men's doubles titles over 20 seasons, and Mike Bryan won 18 over 15 seasons. Hoad and Rosewall together as a doubles team won 15 major doubles titles (six Grand Slam plus nine Pro Slam), one fewer than the Bryan brothers at 16. Hoad and Trabert won four major doubles titles together (three French Pro, one Wembley Pro) plus the 1959 Forest Hills TOC doubles title. Hoad won a record seven French Pro men's doubles titles, and consecutively.

Playing style

Strength of arm and wrist played an important part in Hoad's game, as he often drove for winners rather than rallying and waiting for the "right" opportunity, though he also had the skill to win the French Championships on the slower clay court. Hoad played right-handed and had a powerful serve and groundstrokes. Hoad's game was reported to lack consistency in some accounts.[390][391][392] At times Hoad had difficulty maintaining concentration.[393][394][395] According to Kramer, "Hoad had the loosest game of any good kid I ever saw. There was absolutely no pattern to his game.... He was the only player I ever saw who could stand six or seven feet behind the baseline and snap the ball back hard, crosscourt. He'd try for winners off everything, off great serves, off tricky short balls, off low volleys. He hit hard overspin drives, and there was no way you could ever get him to temporise on important points."[396]

Hoad was runner-up for the Australian junior table tennis championship in 1951, and developed strong wrists and arms through heavy weight-lifting regimes.[397] Hoad would use wrist strength in his strokes to make last split-second changes in racquet direction. He would saw off about an inch from the ends of his racquet handles, which were short to begin with, and move the grip higher to wield his racquets as if they were ping-pong bats.[398] Hoad would use wrist action to give heavy topspin to his groundstrokes.[399]

Assessment

By journalists

In The Encyclopedia of Tennis (1973) veteran sportswriters Allison Danzig and Lance Tingay as well as tennis coach, writer and former player Harry Hopman listed their personal choices of the ten greatest players in tennis history. Only Tingay included Hoad in his list,[n] ranking him in fifth position, behind Tilden, Budge, Laver and Gonzales.[400]

Max Robertson, tennis author and commentator, rated Hoad as the best post-war Wimbledon player, followed by Gonzales and Laver, in his 1977 book Wimbledon 1877–1977.[401] In his second book about Wimbledon, Wimbledon – Centre Court of the Game (1981) his list was unchanged but in the second edition in 1987 he listed Hoad second behind Boris Becker.[402][403]

In 100 Greatest of All Time, a 2012 television series broadcast by the Tennis Channel, Hoad was ranked the 19th greatest male player, just behind fellow Australian John Newcombe at 18th, and just ahead of tour promoter Jack Kramer, who had signed Hoad to the professional ranks, at 21st, and Hoad's longtime tennis rival Gonzales at 22nd.[404]

In 2016, tennis journalist Richard Evans stated that in his judgment Hoad was the greatest player in the world before the emergence of Federer,[405] and "was without question the strongest man who ever played the game."[397]

In 2017, tennis journalist Shuvam Chakraborty stated that "winning the biggest titles has always been a hallmark of greatness for players throughout the ages. But for [the] old pros, if you ask them who the greatest player of their day was, they will all say one man – Lew Hoad." And "compared to some of his contemporaries, Hoad’s resume may not stand out. However, his peaks might have been the highest of all time. His peers would certainly agree with that."[406]

In 2021, tennis journalist Rémi Bourrières (Former Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Tennis Magazine (2007-2019)) ranked Hoad at No. 3 among the pre-Open players, behind Tilden and Budge.[407] Bourrières ranking was (1) Tilden (2) Budge (3) Hoad (4) Gonzales (5) Perry (6) Cochet (7) Lacoste (8) Santana (9) Renshaw (10) Ashe. Bourrières summarized Hoad as: "This tall blond man with the physique of an Apollo and almost animal strength was perhaps the best of that glorious Australian generation that was to dominate the world in the middle of the 20th century: Laver, Rosewall and others."

By players

Fred Perry in 1978 "put Borg in a class with Jack Kramer, Lew Hoad, Pancho Gonzales and Ellsworth Vines".[408] In 1983 Perry listed his greatest male players of all time and listed them in two categories, before World War 2 and after. Perry's modern best behind Laver: "Borg, McEnroe, Connors, Hoad, Jack Kramer, John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall, Manuel Santana". Perry stated "the match I’d love to see would be Lew Hoad against Borg. Hoad was better than most thought. He hit so hard and so quickly off the ground he would have stretched Borg."[409]

Don Budge stated, “If Lew Hoad was on, you may as well just go home or have tea, because you weren’t going to beat him.”[410] Budge did not include Hoad in his top five greatest of all-time list in a 1975 newspaper interview, citing (1) Ellsworth Vines (2) Jack Kramer (3) Fred Perry (4) Bill Tilden and (5) Rod Laver.[411]

In July 1961, Gardnar Mulloy ranked Hoad as the greatest player of the time, based on his results against Gonzales, and named Hoad as the favourite to win a prospective open Wimbledon.[412]

Kramer had a negative assessment of Hoad's consistency. Although Kramer ranked him one of the 21 best players of all time, albeit in his second echelon, he also writes that "when you sum Hoad up, you have to say that he was overrated. He might have been the best, but day-to-day, week-to-week, he was the most inconsistent of all the top players."[413] Kramer compared Hoad to Ellsworth Vines. "Both were very strong guys. Both succeeded at a very young age.... Also, both were very lazy guys. Vines lost interest in tennis (for golf) before he was thirty, and Hoad never appeared to be very interested. Despite their great natural ability, neither put up the outstanding records that they were capable of. Unfortunately, the latter was largely true because both had physical problems."[414] However, Kramer had a positive evaluation of Hoad's game when motivated, “When Lew felt like playing, man, he was really something. I never saw anybody who could snap the ball back hard off both sides from way behind the baseline for winners the way he did.”[410] Kramer stated in 1981, "Everybody loved Hoad, even Pancho Gonzales. They should put that on Lew's tombstone as the ultimate praise for the man.... Even when Hoad was clobbering Gonzales, Gorgo wanted his respect and friendship."[415]

Gonzales stated that Hoad was the toughest, most skillful adversary that he had ever faced and stated in a 1995 interview that "He was the only guy who, if I was playing my best tennis, could still beat me.".[416][417] "I think his game was the best game ever. Better than mine. He was capable of making more shots than anybody. His two volleys were great. His overhead was enormous. He had the most natural tennis mind with the most natural tennis physique."[396] In a 1970 interview he stated that "Hoad was probably the best and toughest player when he wanted to be. After the first two years on the tour, his back injury plagued him so much that he lost the desire to practice. He was the only man to beat me in a head-to-head tour, 15 to 13."[418] In a 1975 issue of Sports Illustrated, Arthur Ashe was quoted as relating a remark which Pancho Gonzales had said to him, "If there was ever a Universe Davis Cup, and I had to pick one man to represent Planet Earth, I would pick Lew Hoad in his prime."[419]

In a 1963 article in World Tennis, Rosewall judged Gonzales to be a notch above Hoad but stated that "...the latter is the greatest of all time when he is 'on'."[420] In 2010, Rosewall ranked Hoad at the top of his personal list of the top four greatest tennis players of all time, ahead of Gonzales, Laver, and Federer.[406] However, in 2017, Rosewall was asked the question in Italian publication Corriere della Sera if he believed Roger Federer was the greatest of all time and he replied "there is no doubt. I challenge anyone to argue otherwise".[421]

Hoad gave his own rankings in a 1980 interview, ranking Emerson and Borg at the top in terms of major tournaments won. However, Hoad claimed that "the only way to really assess players is to play them", rating Gonzales as the best player of those whom he had played against.[220]

In 1988, a panel consisting of Bud Collins, Cliff Drysdale, and Butch Buchholz ranked the top three male tennis players as Laver, Borg and McEnroe. Buchholz ranked Laver, Borg, Rosewall, Gonzales, and McEnroe as his top five choices, while Drysdale ranked Hoad tied with Connors in fifth place behind Laver, Borg, Budge, and McEnroe.[422] However, in 2007 Buchholz ranked Hoad as the greatest player of their time, but said he was injury prone and not exactly a model of fitness. Buchholz stated that "If you had an Earth vs. Mars match, and had to send one man to represent the planet, I would send Hoad."[335] Buchholz had played the undercard matches on Hoad's 1961 British tour against Gonzales, and Hoad's 1963 Australian tour against Laver.

Frew McMillan stated his opinion of Hoad in 2001. "The finest player of all time? Possibly. At his best certainly the greatest of the greats that I have seen. Light on his feet yet with the punching power of a fierce fighter. I could marvel at Rod Laver and McEnroe, their flair and artistic strength, but Hoad's ruthless efficiency would take my breath away."[423]

Gordon Forbes gave his opinion in a 2009 interview. "The best they knew? Hoad, says Forbes. Better than Rod Laver? “Hoad was much stronger, bigger. They were both magicians but Hoad was the best.”"[424]

Rod Laver in 2012 ranked Hoad as the greatest player of the 'past champions' era of tennis, while ranking Federer as the greatest player of the Open Era. Laver described Hoad's strengths of "power, volleying and explosiveness" as justification of his accolade.[425] In July 2012, when Federer won his seventh Wimbledon singles championship, Laver said "Roger Federer certainly is my claim to be the best of all time if there is such a thing"[426] and in January 2018, at the Australian Open won by Federer, Laver said "For me, I think Roger Federer is certainly the greatest player that has come along" and "He's stood the test of time – that's probably the one thing that puts you in that category of the best ever."[427][428] However, in a January 2019 interview, Laver stated that Hoad was "the best player who ever held a racquet. He had every shot in the book and he could overpower anyone. He was so strong."[429] Pancho Gonzales made a similar remark about Hoad, "He was such a strong son****...when he tried, you just couldn't beat him. He hit the ball harder than anyone I ever played."[398]

Personal life

 
Hoad and Jennifer Staley (right) at the Davis Cup Ball on 30 December 1953

Hoad proposed to his girlfriend, Australian tennis player Jenny Staley, on her 21st birthday party in March 1955 and they planned to announce their engagement in June in London while both were on an overseas tour.[430] After arrival in London Jenny discovered that she was pregnant and the couple decided to get married straight away.[431] The marriage took place the following day on 18 June 1955 at St Mary's Church, Wimbledon, in London, on the eve of Wimbledon fortnight.[432][433][434] They had two daughters and a son.

After announcing his retirement in 1967, due to persistent back problems, Hoad moved to Fuengirola, Spain, near Málaga, where he and his wife constructed, owned and operated a tennis resort, Lew Hoad's Campo de Tenis,[367][435] and the accompanying residential complex of apartments and penthouse properties, Lew Hoad Tennis Village.[436] For more than thirty years they entertained personal friends such as actors Stewart Granger, Sean Connery, Richard Burton, Peter Ustinov, Deborah Kerr and her husband writer Peter Viertel, actor Kirk Douglas, singer Frank Sinatra and saxophonist Stan Getz. [437][438][439] Hoad's son Peter stated, "My dad was extremely well connected."[440] The athletic club including the wedding/event facilities were acquired by Spanish investors in 2005, and in 2021 were rumoured to be for sale at 10 million euros.[441] The Lew Hoad Club currently has seven tennis courts and six paddle courts, outdoor pool and gym. Weddings and events are a specialty, plus an annual ITF seniors tennis tournament and an annual IBP women's tournament.

In September 1978, Hoad's back problem was successfully treated with spinal fusion surgery, and he was relieved of pain. There had been two ruptured discs and a herniation. The doctor asked one of Hoad's friends, "How on earth did this man walk, let alone play tennis?"[442] In a 1980 interview, Hoad claimed that "my back is marvelous now....it's absolutely perfect now."[443]

Hoad was diagnosed with a rare and incurable form of leukaemia on 13 January 1994 which caused his death on 3 July 1994. Press reports of a heart attack were incorrect. Hoad's personal physician specialist was his own son-in-law Dr. Manuel Benavides, who explained the cause of death.[444][445][446][447] A book co-written with Jack Pollard and titled My Game ("The Lew Hoad story" in the USA) was published in 1958. In 2002, Pollard teamed up with his widow, Jenny, to write My Life With Lew.

Honours

Hoad was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, in 1980 and in December 1985 was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame.[396] In January 1995 he was posthumously inducted into the Tennis Australia Hall of Fame together with friend and rival Ken Rosewall.[448]

The ITF organises a seniors tournament in his honour called The Lew Hoad Memorial ITF Veterans Tournament, which is hosted by the Lew Hoad Campo de Tenis.[449] The Kooyong Classic at Kooyong Stadium, the principal warm-up event for the Australian Open, awards the Lew Hoad Memorial Trophy to the winner of the men's singles.[450] Kooyong stadium was the site of some of Hoad's greatest victories.

The Lewis Hoad Reserve in Sydney and the Lew Hoad Avenue in Baton Rouge, Louisiana are named after him.[451][452]

Performance timeline

Singles

Hoad joined the professional tennis circuit in 1957 and as a consequence was banned from competing in 42 Grand Slam tournaments until the start of the Open Era at the 1968 French Open.

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.
1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 SR W–L Win %
Grand Slam tournaments 4 / 26 84–22 79%
Australian 2R 3R 2R A F W SF not eligible A A A A 1 / 6 15–5 75%
French A 2R QF 4R A W 3R not eligible A A 4R A A 1 / 6 16–5 76%
Wimbledon A 4R QF QF QF W W not eligible 3R A 2R A 1R 2 / 9 32–7 82%
U.S. A QF SF QF SF F not eligible A A A A A 0 / 5 21–5 81%
Pro Slam tournaments 0 / 22 30–22 58%
U.S. Pro A A A A A A A F F A A A QF QF A QF A 0 / 5 6–5 55%
French Pro NH NH NH NH NH A NH F SF F 1R 1R SF QF A A QF 0 / 8 12–8 60%
Wembley Pro A A A NH NH A QF A QF QF F F F QF A SF 1R 0 / 9 12–9 57%
Win–loss 1–1 8–4 13–4 10–3 12–3 24–1 10–3 5–2 5–3 3–2 3–2 3–2 5–3 2–3 0–0 3–2 1–2 2–1 0–0 4–2 0–0 0–1 4 / 48 114–44 72%

Grand Slam and Pro Slam finals

Singles

Grand Slam finals (4–2)

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Loss 1955 Australian Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall 7–9, 4–6, 4–6
Win 1956 Australian Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall 6–4, 3–6, 6–4, 7–5
Win 1956 French Championships Clay   Sven Davidson 6–4, 8–6, 6–3
Win 1956 Wimbledon Grass   Ken Rosewall 6–2, 4–6, 7–5, 6–4
Loss 1956 US Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall 6–4, 2–6, 3–6, 3–6
Win 1957 Wimbledon Grass   Ashley Cooper 6–2, 6–1, 6–2

Pro Slam finals (0–7)

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Loss 1958 French Pro Clay   Ken Rosewall 6–3, 2–6, 4–6, 0–6
Loss 1958 US Pro Indoor   Pancho Gonzales 6–3, 6–4, 12–14, 1–6, 4–6
Loss 1959 US Pro Indoor   Pancho Gonzales 4–6, 2–6, 4–6
Loss 1960 French Pro Clay   Ken Rosewall 2–6, 6–2, 2–6, 1–6
Loss 1961 Wembley Pro Indoor   Ken Rosewall 3–6, 6–3, 2–6, 3–6
Loss 1962 Wembley Pro Indoor   Ken Rosewall 4–6, 7–5, 13–15, 5–7
Loss 1963 Wembley Pro Indoor   Ken Rosewall 4–6, 2–6, 6–4, 3–6

Doubles: 13 (8 titles, 5 runner-ups)

Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1953 Australian Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall   Don Candy
  Mervyn Rose
9–11, 6–4, 10–8, 6–4
Win 1953 French Championships Clay   Ken Rosewall   Mervyn Rose
  Clive Wilderspin
6–2, 6–1, 6–1
Win 1953 Wimbledon Grass   Ken Rosewall   Rex Hartwig
  Mervyn Rose
6–4, 7–5, 4–6, 7–5
Loss 1954 French Championships Clay   Ken Rosewall   Vic Seixas
  Tony Trabert
4–6, 2–6, 1–6
Loss 1954 U.S. National Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall   Vic Seixas
  Tony Trabert
6–3, 4–6, 6–8, 3–6
Loss 1955 Australian Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall   Vic Seixas
  Tony Trabert
3–6, 2–6, 6–2, 6–3, 1–6
Win 1955 Wimbledon Grass   Rex Hartwig   Neale Fraser
  Ken Rosewall
7–5, 6–4, 6–3
Win 1956 Australian Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall   Don Candy
  Mervyn Rose
10–8, 13–11, 6–4
Loss 1956 French Championships Clay   Ashley Cooper   Don Candy
  Robert Perry
5–7, 3–6, 3–6
Win 1956 Wimbledon Grass   Ken Rosewall   Orlando Sirola
  Nicola Pietrangeli
7–5, 6–2, 6–1
Win 1956 U.S. National Championships Grass   Ken Rosewall   Hamilton Richardson
  Vic Seixas
6–2, 6–2, 3–6, 6–4
Win 1957 Australian Championships Grass   Neale Fraser   Mal Anderson
  Ashley Cooper
6–3, 8–6, 6–4
Loss 1957 Wimbledon Grass   Neale Fraser   Budge Patty
  Gardnar Mulloy
10–8, 4–6, 4–6, 4–6

Mixed doubles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)

Other important finals

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Win 1959 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions Grass   Pancho Gonzales 6–1, 5–7, 6–2, 6–1

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Lewis Hoad was named after the American actor Lewis Stone.[2]
  2. ^ The U.S. Championships used separate seeding lists for U.S. and foreign players between 1927, the first year seeding were used, and 1956.[35]
  3. ^ Ken Rosewall won the deciding rubber, played on the next day due to rain, against Vic Seixas in four sets.[83]
  4. ^ The annual Tingay September amateur rankings from 1952–1967 were also published in USLTA/USTA official encyclopedias,[89] Bud Collins' tennis encyclopedia in the 1985 and later editions, the Italian annual Almanacco illustrato del tennis and other publications.[90]
  5. ^ An alternative ranking compiled by an international team of tennis writers placed Hoad as No.5.[138]
  6. ^ The 11 members of the International Tennis Hall of Fame on the 1959/60 Ampol world series, all of whom won major singles titles, were Hoad, Gonzales, Rosewall, Sedgman, Trabert, Segura, Anderson, Cooper, Rose, McGregor, Olmedo
  7. ^ "Caltex" was the name used by the Ampol company from 1997 until 2020. The company then officially rebranded as "Ampol Ltd." in May 2020.
  8. ^ The 13 players on the 1959 Ampol Open Trophy world series of tournaments were Hoad, Gonzales, Rosewall, Sedgman, Trabert, Anderson, Segura, Cooper, Rose, McGregor, Hartwig, Olmedo, Giammalva
  9. ^ Hoad and Rosewall both had a 4–1 win–loss record but Hoad finished first due to his win over Rosewall.[274]
  10. ^ According to the Kramer Tour brochure for 1959, the 15 tournaments were Melbourne (Olympic Velodrome) (10 Jan), Brisbane (20 Jan), Perth (26 Jan), Sydney (Marks Athletic Field) (4 Feb), Adelaide (Norwood Cricket Oval) (11 Feb), L.A. Masters (L.A. Tennis Club) (5 Jun), Toronto (Toronto Lawn Tennis Club) (16 Jun), New York City (Forest Hills) (23 Jun), Paris (Roland Garros) (8 Sep), London (Wembley) (19 Sep), Perth (26 Nov), Adelaide (Memorial Drive Tennis Club) (1 Dec), Sydney (White City) (8 Dec), Brisbane (Milton Courts) (15 Dec), Melbourne (Kooyong) (26 Dec)
  11. ^ Final Ampol Points List: L. Hoad (51) P. Gonzales (43) K. Rosewall (41) F. Sedgman (32) T. Trabert (25) P. Segura (14) M. Anderson (14) A. Cooper (8) Olmedo (1) M. Rose (1) Hartwig (0) McGregor (0) Giammalva (0)
  12. ^ Hoad won six of the 15 tournaments and 71% (36/51) of his matches in the series,[281][282] while Gonzales won four tournaments and 72% (26/36) of his matches,[283] and Rosewall won two tournaments and 62% (26/42) of his matches in the series.[284] Sedgman (Melbourne), Trabert (Roland Garros) and Anderson (Wembley) each won one Ampol world series tournament. Gonzales defaulted three Ampol tournaments, and played 15 fewer matches than Hoad. Hoad was three wins and five losses in matches against Gonzales in the Ampol series, although Hoad and Gonzales were two wins and two losses against each other in tournament deciding matches. Hoad won six of his eight matches against Rosewall on the Ampol series.[284]
  13. ^ Laver, in statements made in interviews from June 2017 and November 2019, claimed that after turning pro he lost the first 13 matches which he played against Hoad, although he did not specify these as all being part of the 1963 Australian tour. Buchholz (in 2007), who played the undercard on the tour, claimed that Hoad won 13 consecutive matches over Laver. In a book published in 2020, Laver stated "during that Australian tour, I played Lew eight times and he won every match".[334][335][336][337]
  14. ^ Hopman left both of his "Tennis Twins", Hoad and Rosewall, off his selection and ranked Tilden, Budge, Perry, Laver, Cochet, Lacoste, H. Doherty, Vines as his first nine and listed Gonzales and Emerson in shared tenth position. Danzig rated Tilden, Cochet, Budge, Lacoste, Kramer, Perry, Johnston, Laver and Vines at the top of his list, and also listed Gonzales and Emerson in shared tenth position.[400]

References

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  2. ^ a b Hoad & Pollard (2002), p. 3.
  3. ^ Davidson (1970), pp. 105, 106.
  4. ^ Hoad & Pollard (2002), pp. 3, 4.
  5. ^ Davidson (1970), p. 106.
  6. ^ "School for Tennis Juniors". The Sydney Morning Herald. 28 December 1944. p. 5. Retrieved 14 June 2014 – via Trove.
  7. ^ Muscles, Ken Rosewall as told to Richard Naughton, Slattery Media Group, 2012, p. 17
  8. ^ a b Alan Trengove (5 July 1994). "Obituary: Lew Hoad". The Independent. Archived from the original on 14 June 2022.
  9. ^ "Rosewall, Hoad in state team". The Sydney Morning Herald. 25 November 1949. p. 10 – via Trove.
  10. ^ "N.S.W. Tennis Titles". The Barrier Miner. 26 November 1949. p. 1 – via Trove.
  11. ^ "Table Tennis". The Sunday Herald. 27 November 1949. p. 12 Section: Sporting Section – via Trove.
  12. ^ "Larsen well below form". The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 November 1950. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Tennis County of Cumberland Championships". The Sydney Morning Herald. 29 December 1950. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Sidwell was determined". The Sydney Morning Herald. 29 December 1950. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
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  21. ^ "French Cheer Hoad, Rosewall After Brilliant Win". The Northern Star. 31 May 1952. p. 5 – via Trove.
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  26. ^ Davidson (1970), p. 110.
  27. ^ Davidson (1970), pp. 110, 111.
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  45. ^ "Instructions beat Hoad". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 January 1953. p. 7 – via Trove.
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  47. ^ "Hoad Proves Too Strong For Bromwich In Final". The Sunday Herald. 15 March 1953. p. 6 Section: Sports Section – via Trove.
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  49. ^ "Hoad Saved Six Match Points". The Queensland Times (Daily ed.). 13 March 1953. p. 3 – via Trove.
  50. ^ "Rose in first major win". Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate. 24 March 1953. p. 10 – via Trove.
  51. ^ "Austn. tennis stars to play in Cair". The Dubbo Liberal and Macquarie Advocate. 30 April 1953. p. 3 – via Trove.
  52. ^ "Australians Should Do Well On Tennis Tour". The Sunday Herald. 26 April 1953. p. 11 Section: Sporting Section – via Trove.
  53. ^ "Hoad trounced by Drobny in singles". The Mercury. 13 May 1953. p. 28 – via Trove.
  54. ^ "Tennis World:". The Mirror. 16 May 1953. p. 20 – via Trove.
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  57. ^ "Hoad is too good for Rosewall". The Advocate. 22 June 1953. p. 10 – via Trove.
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  59. ^ "Rosewall seeded Wimbledon No. 1". The Advocate. 17 June 1953. p. 20 – via Trove.
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  63. ^ "Hoad Stops Hartwig's Winning Run". The Advertiser. 11 August 1953. p. 13 – via Trove.
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  71. ^ "Rosewall Beats Trabert". The Advertiser. 21 September 1953. p. 3 – via Trove.
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  75. ^ "Heat treatments for Hoads elbow". The Sydney Morning Herald. 23 November 1953. p. 8 – via Trove.
  76. ^ "Hoad Has Sore Elbow". The Sydney Morning Herald. 21 November 1953. p. 1 – via Trove.
  77. ^ "Hoad beats Rosewall; both in great form". The Mail. 5 December 1953. p. 42 – via Trove.
  78. ^ "Australia's Cup doubles pairing roasted overseas". Lithgow Mercury. 30 December 1953. p. 1 – via Trove.
  79. ^ "Selectors should resign says Davis Cup critic". The Dubbo Liberal and Macquarie Advocate. 30 December 1953. p. 1 – via Trove.
  80. ^ "Tennis Critics Hit at "Boner"". Goulburn Evening Post (Daily and Evening ed.). 30 December 1953. p. 3 – via Trove.
  81. ^ "The Cup selectors' "Mistake"". The Canberra Times. 30 December 1953. p. 2 – via Trove.
  82. ^ ""Biggest tragedy of tennis"". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 December 1953. p. 1 – via Trove.
  83. ^ "Rosewall's great battle". The News. 31 December 1953. p. 16 – via Trove.
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  86. ^ "'Topped all games'". The Argus. 31 December 1953. p. 13 – via Trove.
  87. ^ Davidson (1970), p. 105.
  88. ^ Davidson (1970), p. 114.
  89. ^ Official Encyclopedia of Tennis, United States Lawn Tennis Association (1972)
  90. ^ The Guinness Book of Tennis Facts and Feats, Lance Tingay (1983)
  91. ^ "Trabert is No. 1 tennis player". The Advocate. 16 September 1953. p. 16 – via Trove.
  92. ^ "HOAD JUST HEADS TRABERT". The Herald (Melbourne). No. 23, 912. Victoria, Australia. 15 January 1954. p. 13. Retrieved 25 November 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  93. ^ "Revised World Rankings". World Tennis. Vol. 1, no. 10. New York. March 1954. p. 12.
  94. ^ Philippe Chatrier, ed. (February 1954). "Annual rankings". Tennis de France. No. 10. pp. 3, 4, 5.
  95. ^ The Tennis de France rankings for 1953 were determined by Philippe Chatrier and his editorial team, results as follows 1) Hoad 2) Trabert 3) Rosewall 4) Seixas 5) Drobny 6) Patty 7) Rose 8) Larsen 9) Nielsen 10) Davidson
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  180. ^ "Lew Hoad at Wimbledon crushes Rosewall for singles title". Ottawa Citizen. 6 July 1956.
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  190. ^ New York Times, 14 September 1956, p. 18
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  194. ^ "The rains came to rob Rosewall". The Argus. 17 December 1956. p. 16 – via Trove.
  195. ^ "Tennis writer Ron asks: Why make enemies, Mr. Hoad?". The Argus. 18 December 1956. p. 18 – via Trove.
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  197. ^ Davis Cup 1956. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JwWJ1I9kSxA
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  205. ^ Bud Lessor Oral History Archive, International Tennis Hall of Fame, 12 July 1980.
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  209. ^ "Gonzales thinks he can beat Hoad consistently". Bergen Evening Record. 22 July 1957. p. 13 – via Newspapers.com.
  210. ^ "Gonzales Beats Hoad In Stirring Game". The Canberra Times. 23 July 1957. p. 11 – via Trove.
  211. ^ "Lew Hoad loses for 7th time". The Canberra Times. 2 August 1957. p. 19 – via National Library of Australia.
  212. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 77–78, 206.
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  214. ^ "Kramer still has hopes Hoad will be a Pro star". Wilmington Morning News. 3 August 1957. p. 19 – via Newspapers.com.
  215. ^ "Interviews with Lew Hoad and Jack Kramer". Getty Images. 9 September 1957.
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  217. ^ "Kramer, Rosewall win". Richmond-Times Dispatch. 26 September 1957. p. 26 – via Newspapers.com. Jack Kramer, United States tennis promoter, and former Davis Cupper, defeated Lew Hoad of Australia, 6–1, 10–8, in the first round of a professional indoor tennis tournament at Wembley Stadium Wednesday.
  218. ^ Manila Times, 23 November 1957
  219. ^ 1957 4-man Tour Doubles Match. https://www.filmothek.bundesarchiv.de/video/586301
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  225. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 82.
  226. ^ Sydney Morning Herald, 4 February 1958, p. 13 "Kramer said he would ask Gonzales to count the Masters 3rd place match in the world 100-match series."
  227. ^ "The Montana Standard". 28 January 1958 – via Newspapers.com.."The experts advise against taking too seriously the fact that Pancho Gonzales, world's top professional player, is trailing Lew Hoad after the first few matches in their 100-match international series. They are playing now on grass courts in Australia. Look for Gonzales to begin taking charge when he and Hoad open the United States section of their tour in San Francisco on Feb. 8. Then they will play on indoor surfaces, on which Hoad has had little experience. Gonzales has been playing on indoor surfaces for years and is a master of them."
  228. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 83–84.
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  230. ^ "Gonzales Now Leads Hoad". The Canberra Times. 2 April 1958. p. 20 – via Trove.
  231. ^ "Lew and Pancho serve up tennis at its very best". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 8, no. 24. 16 June 1958.
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  238. ^ a b McCauley (2000), p. 211.
  239. ^ The Times of London, 20–22 September 1958
  240. ^ "Around the World...". World Tennis. Vol. 6, no. 6. November 1958. p. 50.
  241. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 88.
  242. ^ The Press (Christchurch), 6 March 1959, p.6 "Sportsman's notebook"
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  247. ^ Sydney Morning Herald, 2 February 1959
  248. ^ Kramer 1959 winter tour brochure
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  253. ^ L'Impartial, Saturday, 25 April 1959. p. 7
  254. ^ New York Times, 23 January 1970, p. 56
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  256. ^ "Around the World...". World Tennis. Vol. 7, no. 2. July 1959. pp. 61, 67.
  257. ^ a b McCauley (2000), pp. 92, 212.
  258. ^ Associated Press news release, 1 June 1959. "(AP) — Pancho Gonzales is the world professional tennis champion for the fifth straight year. Gonzales clinched the title Saturday and then defeated his main rival, Lew Hoad, in the final match of their tour, 6–3, 15–13, Sunday. Gonzales won $29,150 on the tour. Hoad's total was $28,250. The championship is based on money won. Hoad came out on top in matches with Gonzales, 15–13.
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  262. ^ Current designation "WCT Tournament of Champions" by West Side Tennis Club. https://thewestsidetennisclub.com/history-timeline/
  263. ^ TIME magazine, 6 July 1959. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,825754,00.html
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  275. ^ Ottawa Citizen, 4 January 1960, p. 15
  276. ^ Kramer 1959/60 fall tour brochure, "In each tournament conducted in the world series, the players are seeded according to their standings on points."
  277. ^ The Cumberland Argus. 23 September 1959. p. 5 – via Trove. "The world series will wind up at Kooyong, Melbourne..."
  278. ^ "Search for world's best tennis star". The Cumberland Argus. 14 January 1959. p. 9 – via Trove. "'We have therefore framed the scope of this award to provide for an amateur to win in the event of open tournaments being played,' Mr. Walkley said."
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  280. ^ Kramer Tour 1959 brochure
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  286. ^ Arizona Republic, 29 June 1959, "In prize money, Gonzales leads Hoad by only $65, winning $47,640 to Hoad's $47.575. Hoad picked up $3,750 in this tourney, including $750 as a share of the doubles title with Trabert."
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  288. ^ World Tennis, June, 1960. p. 7
  289. ^ Kramer 1959 tour fall brochure. https://douglasstewart.com.au/product/jack-kramer-presents-world-championship-tennis/
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  306. ^ "Writers predict 'cold' future for Wimbledon". St. Joseph Gazette. 8 February 1960. p. 7. Kramer did more than talk yesterday. He signed up Ken Rosewall and Lew Hoad for another seven years
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  308. ^ "Rosewall pro tennis champ". Los Angeles Times. 11 May 1960. p. 4.
  309. ^ From Club Court to Center Court 2010 Edition The Evolution of Professional Tennis in Cincinnati By Phillip S. Smith, p. 27. http://assets.usta.com/assets/663/15/Compendium%2010_reduced.pdf
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  320. ^ "Lew Hoad Wins at St Annes". Lytham Evening Gazette. 11 September 1961.
  321. ^ Hoad won on grass at Bristol, Leeds, Scarborough, and St. Annes, Gonzales won on grass at Dublin. / Scarborough News, 2 September 1961 / Yorkshire Evening Post, 3 September 1961 / St. Annes News 10 September 1961 / Irish Examiner, 27 August 1961
  322. ^ "British Pro Tour". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
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  357. ^ "Writers predict 'cold' future for Wimbledon". St. Joseph Gazette. 8 February 1960. p. 7. Kramer did more than talk yesterday. He signed up Ken Rosewall and Lew Hoad for another seven years
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  390. ^ "How Vic Seixas rates our men". The Mail. 21 August 1954. p. 44 – via Trove.
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  399. ^ TIME magazine, 6 July 1959. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,825754,00.html. "Flatfooted, he can hit a backhand with a flick of his powerful wrist with so much top spin that the ball seems to zoom off the turf like a maddened hornet."
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  416. ^ Dave Anderson (12 March 1995). "The lone wolf faces a match point". The New York Times. p. 3 Section 8.
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  419. ^ Arthur Ashe; Frank Deford (10 March 1975). "A shout for those Aussies". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 42, no. 10. p. 45.
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  424. ^ "Abe Segal & Gordon Forbes: 'Sport was all fun and now it almost isn't at all' Peter Bills, Wednesday 25 March 2009 01:01. https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/columnists/peter-bills/abe-segal-amp-gordon-forbes-sport-was-all-fun-and-now-it-almost-isn-rsquo-t-at-all-1653173.html
  425. ^ "Rod Laver's 10 best past and present players". Herald-Sun. 2012.
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  429. ^ Laver interview with Grantlee Kieza in the "Courier Mail", 26 January 2019
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  433. ^ "Tennis Star Takes Bride In London". Reading Eagle – June 19, 1955. 19 June 1955.
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  435. ^ "Luxury "Campo de Tennis"". The Australian Women's Weekly. 11 June 1969. p. 2 – via Trove.
  436. ^ Lew Hoad Tennis Village. https://intermarbella.com/properties-for-sale-in-lew-hoad-tennis-village-mijas/
  437. ^ Hoad & Pollard (2002), pp. 120–126.
  438. ^ Lew Hoad Tennis and Paddle Club:The Club. https://lew-hoad.com/en/the-club/
  439. ^ "Coaching the rich and famous in Mijas". 17 November 2017.
  440. ^ Margaret Maccoll (26 June 2017). "Tennis in his blood". Noosa Today.
  441. ^ Review of Lew Hoad Resort. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RoEpQ7JJqTQ
  442. ^ Hodgson & Jones (2001), pp. 220, 221.
  443. ^ Bud Lessor Oral History Archive, International Tennis Hall of Fame: interview by Bud Lessor, recorded at International Tennis Hall of Fame, Newport, Rhode Island, 12 July 1980.
  444. ^ Hodgson & Jones (2001), p. 222.
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  446. ^ "Lew Hoad, 59, Tennis Champion of the 1950's". The New York Times. 5 July 1994.
  447. ^
hoad, lewis, alan, hoad, november, 1934, july, 1994, australian, tennis, player, whose, career, from, 1950, 1973, hoad, four, major, singles, tournaments, amateur, australian, championships, french, championships, wimbledons, member, australian, team, that, da. Lewis Alan Hoad 23 November 1934 3 July 1994 was an Australian tennis player whose career ran from 1950 to 1973 Hoad won four Major singles tournaments as an amateur the Australian Championships French Championships and two Wimbledons 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 Lew HoadHoad at the 1954 Davis CupFull nameLewis Alan HoadCountry sports AustraliaBorn 1934 11 23 23 November 1934Glebe AustraliaDied3 July 1994 1994 07 03 aged 59 Fuengirola SpainHeight1 79 m 5 ft 10 1 2 in Turned pro1957 amateur tour from 1950 Retired1973PlaysRight handed one handed backhand Int Tennis HoF1980 member page SinglesCareer record937 592 61 2 1 Career titles52 1 Highest rankingNo 1 1953 Philippe Chatrier Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian OpenW 1956 French OpenW 1956 WimbledonW 1956 1957 US OpenF 1956 Other tournamentsProfessional majorsUS ProF 1958 1959 Wembley ProF 1961 1962 1963 French ProF 1958 1960 Other pro eventsTOCW 1958AU 1959FH DoublesGrand Slam doubles resultsAustralian OpenW 1953 1956 1957 French OpenW 1953 WimbledonW 1953 1955 1956 US OpenW 1956 Grand Slam mixed doubles resultsAustralian OpenF 1955 French OpenW 1954 WimbledonSF 1953 1954 1955 US OpenF 1952 1956 Team competitionsDavis CupW 1952 1953 1955 1956 Hoad was ranked the world No 1 amateur in 1953 by Harry Hopman by Noel Brown and by the editors of Tennis de France and also in 1956 by Lance Tingay by Ned Potter and by Tennis de France He was ranked the world No 1 professional for 1959 in Kramer s Ampol point ranking system and by Robert Barnes Kramer s Australian manager Serious back problems plagued Hoad throughout his career possibly caused by a weight lifting exercise that he devised in 1954 The back injury became particularly intense following the 1956 Wimbledon championships continued periodically and led to his semi retirement from tennis in 1967 Afterwards he made sporadic appearances at tournaments enticed by the advent of the Open Era in 1968 and was seeded No 7 for the 1968 Wimbledon Championships and seeded No 12 for the 1970 French Open Following his retirement in 1973 Hoad and his wife Jenny Staley Hoad constructed owned and operated a tennis resort Lew Hoad s Campo de Tenis and Lew Hoad Tennis Village in Fuengirola Spain near Malaga Hoad died of leukaemia on 3 July 1994 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Tennis career 2 1 Amateur career 1950 1957 2 2 Professional career 1957 1973 3 Career summary 4 Playing style 5 Assessment 5 1 By journalists 5 2 By players 6 Personal life 7 Honours 8 Performance timeline 8 1 Singles 9 Grand Slam and Pro Slam finals 9 1 Singles 9 1 1 Grand Slam finals 4 2 9 1 2 Pro Slam finals 0 7 9 2 Doubles 13 8 titles 5 runner ups 9 3 Mixed doubles 4 1 title 3 runner ups 10 Other important finals 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Sources 13 2 Biographies 14 External linksEarly life and career Edit Hoad at age 15 competing at Kooyong in Inter State Tennis in 1949 Lewis Hoad a was born on 23 November 1934 in the working class Sydney inner suburb of Glebe the eldest of three sons of tramway electrician Alan Hoad and his wife Ailsa Lyle Burbury 2 Hoad started playing tennis at age five with a racket gifted by a local social club 3 As a young child he would wake up at 5 a m and hit tennis balls against a wall and garage door until the neighbours complained and he was allowed to practice on the courts of the Hereford Tennis Club behind the house 4 5 At age 10 he competed in the seaside tournament at Manly in the under 16 category 6 In his youth Hoad often played Ken Rosewall and they became known as the Sydney twins although they had very different physiques personalities and playing styles Their first match in Sydney in January 1947 when both were aged 12 was played as an opener of an exhibition match between Australia and America Rosewall won 6 0 6 0 7 Hoad built up great physical strength especially in his hands and arms by training at a police boys club where he made a name as a boxer Hoad was about 12 when he was introduced to Adrian Quist a former Australian tennis champion and then general manager of the Dunlop sports goods company Quist played a couple of sets with Hoad and was impressed by his natural ability When Hoad was 14 he left school and joined the Dunlop payroll following the pattern of that shamateur era when most of Australia s brightest tennis prospects were employed by sporting goods companies 8 Hoad had just turned 15 when he and Rosewall were selected to play for New South Wales in an interstate contest against Victoria 9 In November 1949 Hoad won the junior title at the New South Wales Championships and the same weekend he also competed in the final of the junior table tennis championship in Sydney 10 11 Tennis career EditAmateur career 1950 1957 Edit 1950Hoad lost to Dick Savitt in four sets in round one of the New South Wales State championships in November In his match report Adrian Quist said Hoad played well and held a lead of 4 2 in the third set after winning the second At present he makes too many errors He will have to learn good control from the ground before his game will reach great heights 12 Hoad reached the semi finals of County of Cumberland championships in Sydney in December losing to Bill Sidwell 13 It was apparent from the start of play that Sidwell did not intend to take the youngster lightly He served with pressure and followed the majority of his returns to the net The first set was very evenly contested Had Hoad not fallen into easy errors he may well have won the opening set The experience of Sidwell however prevailed during the important exchanges said Adrian Quist 14 1951Hoad s first Grand Slam tournament appearance was at the 1951 Australian Championships held in January at the White City Tennis Club in Sydney He won his first match against Ronald McKenzie in straight sets but lost in the following round to defending champion and countryman Frank Sedgman 15 It was the only Grand Slam tournament he played that year Hoad won his first men s singles title the Brisbane Exhibition tournament at Milton on grass on 11 August 1951 defeating Rosewall in the final in four sets 16 In September Hoad won New South Wales hardcourt championships beating George Worthington in the final 17 1952In 1952 Hoad reached the third round of the Australian Championships in Adelaide In April he was selected by the Australasian Lawn Tennis Association as member of the team to play in overseas tournaments 18 In May before departing to Europe he won the singles title at the Australian Hardcourt Championships on clay after a five set win in the final against Rosewall 19 Hoad who had never played a tournament on European red clay courts received a walkover in the first round of the French Championships and lost in straight sets to sixth seeded and 1947 and 1951 finalist Eric Sturgess 20 18 In only their second appearance as a doubles team at a Grand Slam event Hoad and Rosewall reached the French semifinal 21 Hoad lost in the quarterfinal of the Belgian championships in Brussels in early June where he was defeated by Budge Patty 22 Hoad s first entry at the grass court Queen s Club Championship in June 1952 ended in the quarterfinal against eventual champion Frank Sedgman 23 A week later he played his first match at the Wimbledon Championships defeating Beppe Merlo in a nervous and unimpressive five set encounter 24 25 Wins against Rolando Del Bello and Freddie Huber were followed by a fourth round loss against second seeded and eventual finalist Jaroslav Drobny 26 Hoad and Rosewall caused an upset when they defeated second seeded Gardnar Mulloy and Dick Savitt in the third round of the doubles event but lost in the semifinal against Vic Seixas and Eric Sturgess 27 28 29 After a semifinal result at the Swedish championships in July and an exhibition between Australia and West Germany Hoad and the Australian team traveled to the United States under the guidance of coach Harry Hopman 30 31 As a preparation for his first U S Championships he played the Meadow Club Invitational Southampton Eastern Grass Court Championships South Orange and Newport Invitational before teaming up with Rosewall to reach the semifinal of the U S National Doubles Championships in Brookline 32 33 34 Hoad was the eighth seeded foreign player at the U S Championships b 36 He won four matches to reach his first Grand Slam quarterfinal but due in part to making 64 errors could not overcome Sedgman who would win the tournament without losing a set 37 38 39 With Thelma Coyne Long he reached the final of the mixed doubles event the first Grand Slam final of his career but they lost in straight sets to Doris Hart and Frank Sedgman 40 An early loss at the Pacific Southwest Championships in September concluded his first overseas tour 41 In September he was jointly ranked No 10 in the world for 1952 with Rosewall by Lance Tingay of The Daily Telegraph 42 43 1953 Hoad in 1953 Hoad started 1953 poorly in the singles with a second round exit against Clive Wilderspin at the Australian Championships in Melbourne after playing an uncharacteristic baseline game 44 45 He was more successful in doubles where he and Rosewall became the youngest team to win the Australian doubles title after a victory in the final against Mervyn Rose and Don Candy 46 In March Hoad defended his singles title at the Australian Hardcourt Championships defeating Rosewall in a five set semifinal in which he survived six matchpoints and 34 year old John Bromwich in the final 47 48 49 Two weeks later Hoad lost the final of the N S W Hardcourt Championships against Mervyn Rose 50 Hoad s second overseas tour started in late April and after an exhibition in Cairo at the Gezira Sporting Club he reached the final at Italian Championships in Rome losing to Drobny in straight sets but won the doubles title with Rosewall 51 52 53 At the French Championships in May Hoad was seeded fourth and made it to the quarterfinals in which he lost to Vic Seixas due to overhitting and an unreliable serve 54 55 Hoad and Rosewall won the doubles title with a three set win in the final against countrymen Rose and Wilderspin 56 In June Hoad s attacking serve and volley game proved too good for Wimbledon favorite Rosewall in the final of the Queen s Club Championship and he won the tournament without losing a set 57 58 At Wimbledon Hoad was seeded sixth and as at the French Vic Seixas defeated him in the quarterfinal this time in a close five set match that ended on a Hoad double fault 59 60 In an all Australian doubles final Hoad and Rosewall defeated Hartwig and Rose 61 Hoad lost to Enrique Morea in the final of the Dutch Championships in mid July 62 He won his first title on U S soil in South Orange at the Eastern Grass Court Championships in mid August defeating compatriot Rex Hartwig in the final 63 64 In the semifinal against Rosewall he pulled a back muscle 65 Hoad and Rosewall s hopes of winning the doubles Grand Slam two years after fellow Australians Ken McGregor and Frank Sedgman had first achieved that feat were dashed when they lost surprisingly in the third round of the U S Doubles Championships 66 At the U S Championships 67 Hoad second foreign seed won four matches to reach the semifinal where for the third time in 1953 he lost in a Grand Slam event to Vic Seixas 68 Following his defeat and that of Rosewall in the other semifinal there was criticism in the press that both 18 year old players were physically and mentally worn out due to the intensive schedule imposed by coach Harry Hopman 69 70 In September Seixas again beat Hoad this time in the semifinal of the Pacific Southwest Championships in Los Angeles 71 Hoad was rested a few weeks upon his return to Australia and then won the Queensland Championships in early November in a 41 minute final against Hartwig 72 73 Two weeks later Hoad won the N S W Championships after four set victories over Tony Trabert in the semi final and over Rosewall in the final in front of a 10 000 Sydney crowd but had trouble with a sore right elbow 74 75 76 In early December at the Victorian Championships he defeated Rosewall in the final 77 The much anticipated Davis Cup challenge round match against the challenging team from the United States took place at the Melbourne Kooyong Stadium in late December Surprisingly Hartwig was selected to partner Hoad in the doubles instead of Rosewall a decision widely criticized in the press 78 In the opening singles matches Hoad defeated Seixas his nemesis that season in straight sets while Trabert defeated Rosewall also in straight sets Hoad and Hartwig lost the doubles match against Seixas and Trabert and Australia trailed 1 2 at the start of the final day 79 80 81 82 Hoad is remembered for his match as a 19 year old amateur against the United States champion Tony Trabert In front of a 17 000 crowd Hoad defeated Trabert in five sets to help his country retain the Cup c 84 85 It was seen as one of the best Davis Cup matches in history 86 87 Directly following the final Hoad received his call up papers for National Service 88 Hoad was ranked world No 5 amateur for 1953 by Lance Tingay in his September rankings d 91 42 At the end of the year Hoad was ranked world No 1 amateur for the complete season of 1953 by Harry Hopman 92 by Noel Brown 93 and by the editors of Tennis de France published by Philippe Chatrier 94 95 Tingay stated in September 1954 that Hoad in 1953 had played so well during the Australian season that his status as best in the world was axiomatic He added that for the 1954 season His form since has been almost disastrous Hoad s decline has been a mystery 96 Hoad was the youngest tennis player ever at 19 years 38 days to achieve world No 1 rankings a record which still stands 1954 Ken Rosewall left and Hoad at the 1954 Davis Cup challenge round match against the US at White City Sydney In January Hoad played just one tournament before entering his National Service training At the South Australian Championships in Adelaide he reached the final but sub par play led to a straight sets defeat to Trabert 97 On 13 January Hoad joined the 13th National Service Training battalion in Ingleburn for a period of 98 days and commented that It will be a welcome break from tennis 98 As a consequence Hoad was unable to participate in the Australian Championships At the end of February Hoad received a leave from service to play for the Australian team at Kooyong stadium in the third Test match against South Africa in front of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh He won a singles match against Abe Segal won a doubles match with Rosewall and lost a mixed doubles match with his girlfriend Jenny Staley 99 100 101 When Hoad returned to service he was bitten by a spider while on maneuvers which caused him to become ill and hospitalized him for ten days 102 He spent two days in coma which was not made public 103 While he was in service Hoad devised a weight lifting exercise doing push ups with round 50 lb weights placed on his back which Hoad later believed probably initiated his back trouble Hoad left the National Service at the end of April and his third overseas tour with an Australian team started on 5 May 104 For the first time in his career Hoad was the top seeded player at a Grand Slam tournament at the French Championships but he lost in the fourth round to 40 year old Gardnar Mulloy 105 106 Hoad lost the doubles final with Rosewall to Seixas and Trabert in 56 minutes Partnering Maureen Connolly who had won the women s singles title Hoad won the mixed doubles final against Jacqueline Patorni and Rex Hartwig 107 In June Hoad overcame countryman Rose in the final of the Queen s Club Championship to successfully defend his title 108 Hoad was seeded second behind Trabert at Wimbledon Championships 109 In the fourth round Hoad avenged his loss to Mulloy at the French Championships defeating him in four sets 110 In the quarterfinal the powerful service and excellent returns of Drobny proved too much for Hoad and he was beaten in straight sets within an hour 111 Hoad and Rosewall were unable to defend their Wimbledon doubles title after losing in fives sets in the semifinal to Seixas and Trabert 112 A surprise loss against Roger Becker in the semifinal at the Midlands Counties Championships in Birmingham was followed in mid July by winning the singles title at the Swiss Championships in Gstaad 113 114 As in the previous year Hoad met Rosewall in the Eastern Grass Court Championships in August this time in the final and again the titleholder was victorious overpowering Rosewall to win the singles title in three straight sets 115 At Newport in mid August Hoad was beaten by 17 year old compatriot Roy Emerson who won the deciding set 8 6 116 117 For the third time in 1954 Seixas and Trabert defeated Hoad and Rosewall at a Grand Slam doubles event winning the U S Doubles Championships in Brookline 118 Hoad at Kooyong in 1954 Hoad no 1 foreign seed at the U S Championships lost to Ham Richardson in a five set quarterfinal 119 120 His lackluster form continued when he was defeated by unseeded Luis Ayala in the quarterfinal of the Pacific Southwest Championships in mid September 121 After returning to Australia at the end of September Hoad scheduled extra practice to work on his serve and volley but subsequently lost to Don Candy in the semifinal of the Sydney Metropolitan Championships 122 123 In early November matters briefly improved In the final of the Queensland Championships in Brisbane he overcame a sunstroke and the loss of sets three and four by 0 6 to defeat Hartwig in five sets 124 In mid November he was upset by veteran John Bromwich who better exploited the windy conditions in the quarterfinal of the N S W Championships 125 126 At the Victorian Championships the last significant tournament before the Davis Cup Challenge Round Hoad was defeated in straight sets in the semifinal by Seixas As in the previous match against Sven Davidson he showed such poor form and at times an apparent lack of interest that he was jeered by the crowd and several left after he smashed a ball into the stands 127 128 129 The 1954 Davis Cup Challenge Round was played on 27 29 December on the grass courts at the White City Stadium in Sydney between title holders Australia and the United States Hoad lost the first rubber to Trabert in front of a record crowd of 25 000 in a high quality four set match 130 131 Rosewall also lost his singles match and the United States won back the cup after Seixas and Trabert defeated Hoad and Rosewall in four sets in the doubles rubber 132 In a season review article in the Dunlop Lawn Tennis Annual amp Almanack editor and former tennis player G P Hughes mentioned that Hoad in particular had a bad year 133 In a 1956 interview Hoad admitted that especially in 1954 he often got fed up with tennis and didn t care whether he played or not 134 In September Hoad s world ranking had slipped to No 7 in Tingay s ranking Tingay Chatrier and other writers ranked Hoad world No 5 in a collaborative ranking 135 136 137 e However Hoad was ranked world No 4 in Ned Potter s rankings for 1954 in World Tennis which was a higher ranking than Potter had given Hoad in 1953 at No 5 139 1955Hoad was unable to play the South Australian tennis championship in early January due to a torn ligament 140 To some surprise he entered the mixed doubles event at the 1955 Australian Championships with his girlfriend Jenny Staley and the pair finished as runner ups to Thelma Coyne Long and George Worthington 141 In the singles event Hoad reached his first Grand Slam tournament final after solid wins over Seixas quarterfinal and Hartwig semifinal In the final Rosewall s accuracy and control were too strong for him and he lost in three straight sets 142 Hoad did not participate in the French Championships as the Davis Cup team that he was part of only left for Europe at the end of May during the Championships 143 In the singles final of the Queen s Club Championship in mid June Hoad who was married earlier that day lost his service seven times and lost to Rosewall in two straight sets but won the doubles event with Hartwig 144 145 Hoad was the fourth seeded player at the Wimbledon Championships at the end of June In his quarterfinal match against seventh seeded Budge Patty his game lacked accuracy and he conceded a break in each set resulting in a loss in straight sets 146 Having lost the Davis Cup in 1954 Australia had to play through the 1955 Davis Cup preliminary rounds to challenge holders United States In July Australia defeated Mexico Brazil and Canada to win the Americas Zone and subsequently beat Japan and Italy in the Inter zone matches in August 147 In the Challenge Round at the West Side Tennis Club Forest Hills from 26 to 28 August Hoad defeated the French and Wimbledon champion Trabert in four sets in his first singles rubber and with Hartwig won the doubles match to reclaim the Davis Cup for Australia These were the first ever tennis matches televised in color on the first national color broadcast by NBC television 148 149 150 Hoad was no 2 foreign seed at the U S Championships held from 2 to 11 September immediately after the Davis Cup Challenge Round on the muddy courts of Forest Hills In the quarterfinal he lost his service three times in succession in the third set and suffered a straight sets defeat in 50 minutes against Trabert the first seeded U S player and eventual champion 151 In his first significant tournament after the U S Championships Hoad won the New South Wales Championships in November after a win in the final against Rosewall 152 153 In December he won the singles title at the Victorian Championships after a tough five sets final win over 19 year old Ashley Cooper 154 In September he was ranked No 3 in the world according to Tingay 42 and was ranked world No 3 for 1955 by Ned Potter in World Tennis 155 1956 Hoad left and Rosewall playing doubles at the Wimbledon Championships in the mid fifties Hoad started the year with a five set defeat in the final of the South Australian Championships against countryman Neale Fraser 156 At the following Manly tournament the crowd overflowed the stands during the final hindering Rosewall s baseline defensive game more than Hoad s attacking style resulting in a straight sets win for Hoad in 35 minutes 157 At the Australian Championships in Brisbane Hoad overcame a two sets to one deficit against Mervyn Rose in the quarterfinal and beat Neale Fraser in the semifinal to reach his second consecutive Australian final where he overcame titleholder Rosewall in four sets to win his first Grand Slam singles title 158 159 He won the doubles title with Rosewall against Don Candy and Mervyn Rose At the beginning of March Hoad and his wife left for an overseas private tour a tour sanctioned but not organised by the Australian tennis federation 160 161 First stop of the tour was Cairo where Hoad won the singles title at the Egyptian Championships against Sven Davidson followed by a tournament win in Alexandria over Fred Kovaleski 162 163 At Monte Carlo in late March he was surprisingly beaten by Tony Vincent in the quarterfinal 164 In the Australian ranking published in April reflecting the season until the end of March Hoad overtook Rosewall as No 1 165 Singles titles at the Lebanese Championships and at the Connaught Club in Essex followed in April but the month ended with a semifinal loss to Ham Richardson at the British Hard Court Championships in Bournemouth 166 167 168 Hoad won his first Italian Championships on red clay at the Foro Italico in Rome in early May when he outplayed Sven Davidson in straight sets 169 At the French Championships at Roland Garros Hoad survived a five set scare against Robert Abdesselam in the third round before winning the final against Sven Davidson in straight sets to claim his second consecutive Grand Slam singles title 170 171 Unknown to the public Hoad had stayed up the night previous to the final invited by a Russian diplomat and was drunk when he came home An intensive workout by Rod Laver got him into a state that allowed him to play the final 172 Following the win in Paris Hoad stated his intention to remain amateur after 1956 Even if I win the three big tournaments 173 even if Kramer raised his offer I still wouldn t turn pro for at least two or three seasons 174 In May Hoad won the International Golden Ball tournament in Wiesbaden West Germany after a straight sets victory in the final over Art Larsen but at the Trofeo Conde de Godo in Barcelona he lost in the quarterfinal to Bob Howe 175 176 As a preparation for Wimbledon Hoad played the singles event at the Northern Championships in Manchester but lost to 34 year old Jaroslav Drobny in the final 7 5 in the deciding set 177 178 Hoad was seeded first for the Wimbledon Championships He lost two sets en route to the final one to Mal Anderson in the quarterfinal and one to Ham Richardson in the semifinal In the final he faced Rosewall In the first all Australian final since 1922 Hoad was victorious in four sets to gain his first Wimbledon and third successive Grand Slam championship title 179 180 181 Hoad also won the doubles title with Rosewall their third Wimbledon title defeating Orlando Sirola and Nicola Pietrangeli in the final in straight sets 182 Following his Wimbledon title he lost in the semi final of the Midlands tournament to Mike Davies 183 In August Hoad won the singles title at the German Championships on clay at Hamburg with a four set defeat of Orlando Sirola in the final 184 Immediately after Wimbledon Hoad experienced severe pain and stiffness in his lower back at a level higher than before the tournament 185 He arranged to travel to the U S by boat on the RMS Queen Mary rather than suffer a long plane trip 185 However the pain continued and reduced the level of his play for the remainder of the year and into 1957 186 After arrival in New York on 21 August Hoad travelled to Brookline to partner Rosewall in the U S Doubles Championships which they won to complete their career doubles Grand Slam From there he went to the Forest Hills stadium in New York to play his first match in the singles U S Championships He had missed the preparatory grass court tournament at Newport 187 Having won the first three stages of the Grand Slam Hoad was favoured to win the fourth and then turn professional for a lucrative contract offered by Jack Kramer although Hoad himself claimed that he never thought about the Grand Slam and did not hear of it before he arrived in New York Hoad lost the U S Championships final at Forest Hills in four sets to Rosewall 188 Hoad and Rosewall won the doubles title against Seixas and Richardson 189 In September Hoad defeated Luis Ayala in the semifinal and Sven Davidson in a four set final at the O Keefe Invitational at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club in Rosedale Toronto on red clay 190 and at the Pacific Southwest Championships the last leg of his overseas tour Hoad was beaten by Alex Olmedo in the third round 191 192 In November he lost the final of the Queensland Championships to Ashley Cooper in five sets and was hindered by numbness in the serving arm between the elbow and the wrist 193 In mid December Hoad and Rosewall competed in the final of the Victorian Championships which was their last final as amateurs as Rosewall turned professional at the end of the month The final started late due to rain and was stopped due to darkness at two sets to one for Hoad but the following day Rosewall won the last two sets and the title 194 195 In late December Hoad was part of the Australian Davis Cup team which defended the Cup in the Challenge Round against the United States Hoad was confined to bed with back pain for the two days prior to the Davis Cup matches and was relieved to find that he could play well 196 In his last Davis Cup appearance Hoad won both his singles rubbers against Herbie Flam and Seixas as well as his doubles match with Rosewall to help Australia to a 5 0 victory 197 198 Hoad was ranked world No 1 amateur by Lance Tingay in September 42 by Ned Potter in October in World Tennis 199 and at the end of the year by Tennis de France 200 Hoad won 16 tournaments in 1956 and 17 doubles titles 8 1957Hoad played poorly in early 1957 due to back trouble and was placed in an upper body cast for six weeks following which he slowly returned to tennis competition in April 1957 196 He then experienced a period of pain free playing for 11 months He won the Northern Championships in Manchester beating Ramanathan Krishnan in the final Hoad won his second successive Wimbledon singles title defeating Ashley Cooper in a straight sets final that lasted 57 minutes Professional career 1957 1973 Edit 1957After winning the 1957 Wimbledon title Hoad turned professional by signing a two year contract with Kramer for a record guarantee of US 125 000 or AUS 55 500 which included a US 25 000 bonus for winning the 1957 Wimbledon singles title 201 202 203 This was the highest guarantee that would be given to an amateur turning pro with Laver receiving the second highest 204 Hoad s business relationship with Kramer in 1957 and later was congenial and smooth compared to the experiences of Pancho Gonzales Hoad would later claim I never had a problem with Jack Kramer 205 On 14 July 1957 Hoad won his debut match as a professional against Frank Sedgman at the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions broadcast live nationally on the CBS television network 206 207 He won his next match against Pancho Segura but lost the last three to finish joint third in the round robin event behind Gonzales and Sedgman 208 209 After Forest Hills Hoad commented on the difference between amateur and professional tennis It s an entirely different league These pros make mistakes but they don t make them on vital points That s the difference 210 At the following Masters round robin tournament played on cement courts at the Los Angeles Tennis Club he lost all six of his matches to finish in last place commenting I don t like cement courts 211 212 213 After these defeats Kramer commented that Hoad would have to change his playing style His second serve is too shallow His opponents massacre it He must shorten his backhand or play deeper in his returning service Kramer stated that there was a psychological factor connected with Hoad s defeats as he never has done well on these courts in Los Angeles and thinks they are his jinx But wait until he gets going in the indoor circuit and then you ll see an entirely different player both mentally and physically 214 In September Hoad embarked on a four month 4 man tour of Europe Africa the Middle East Asia and Australia together with Kramer Sedgman replaced Kramer in Australia Rosewall and Segura Kramer and Hoad were interviewed live on BBC television Kramer gave his estimation of Hoad s game I feel that he s potentially the best player that tennis might ever have Kramer cited Hoad s recent marathon win over Rosewall at The Hague on red clay as evidence of improvement in his play 215 At the Wembley Indoor Pro Championships in late September Kramer eliminated Hoad defeating him in straight sets 216 217 and Kramer also defeated Gonzales for third place The two players would be Kramer s headliners in the upcoming world pro tennis championship tour In the 4 man tour of 1957 Hoad finished with slight edges over the other players 16 15 over Rosewall 16 14 over Kramer 13 9 over Segura 4 2 over Sedgman 202 218 219 220 Hoad was ranked combined world No 3 behind Gonzales and Sedgman and ahead of Rosewall and Segura for 1957 by Quist 221 1958In 1958 a projected series of 100 head to head matches was commenced between Hoad and the reigning champion of professional tennis Pancho Gonzales together with an undercard series between Trabert and Segura 222 223 The series started in January in a number of Australian cities in stadiums on grass courts with mostly a best of five set format and in New Zealand for three matches with a best of three set format and at the end of the Australasian subtour Hoad was leading 8 to 5 Most venues reported record crowds including the first Kooyong encounter which Hoad won in a 3 and 3 4 hour four sets 80 games marathon in front of 12 000 spectators 224 225 From 5 to 4 down in New Zealand Hoad launched a 15 to 3 winning streak against Gonzales including the non tour Kooyong Tournament of Champions deciding match and the third place match at Sydney Masters 226 In February the series continued in the United States mostly in indoor venues and local gyms with a best of three set format played on a portable canvas surface 227 Hoad would experience a thigh injury in May and June 228 But Hoad won 18 of the first 27 matches and in late February Gonzales had according to Kramer the look of a beaten man 229 However after they played an outdoor match on 1 March on a chilly night in Palm Springs Hoad s back stiffened which affected him significantly for the rest of the series Twice Hoad was forced to take time off to rest his back and was substituted for in his absence by Rosewall and Trabert From 9 18 Gonzales surged to a 26 23 lead and at the end of the series on 8 June he had defeated Hoad by 51 matches to 36 230 231 232 In late 1958 Jack Kramer was asked which of the many World Professional Championships tournaments he considered deserving of the title and he named four tournaments under his own aegis Forest Hills L A Masters Kooyong and Sydney White City 233 Hoad won three of these eight tournaments in 1958 59 234 For the 1958 1959 seasons Kramer had a troupe of professional champions that included 11 Hall of Fame players f under contract and he designed a series of tournaments to provide a format in which all of them could participate In January 1958 Hoad won the Kooyong Tournament of Champions in Melbourne the richest tournament of the year The tournament was funded by the Australian oil company Ampol 235 Hoad defeated Gonzales and Sedgman in deciding matches and won all five of his matches in the round robin event During the world championship tour in the U S in May the four players participated in the Cleveland event In the final at Cleveland on 5 May Hoad lost a two set lead against Gonzales while struggling with his leg muscle injury 236 Hoad dropped out of the tour in late May to rest his thigh injury 236 At the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions in June 1958 Hoad s thigh injury healed in time for his final match which he won against Gonzales on the final day 237 However Gonzales won the event with a better overall round robin record At Roland Garros in September Hoad won his quarterfinal against Trabert and his semifinal against Gonzales 238 While leading in the final against Rosewall Hoad wrenched his back reaching for a ball and could not play well in the remainder of the match 239 He had to default the Wembley Pro tournament in September due to an arthritic back 240 Hoad rested for the next three months and did not play again until 1959 238 Jack March ranked Hoad world No 2 professional tennis player behind Gonzales for 1958 241 Jack Kramer ranked Hoad No 4 for 1958 with Gonzales first Sedgman second Rosewall third 242 1959In early 1959 it was announced that the Australian oil company Ampol g would provide an award of AUS 2 500 US 5 600 plus the Ampol Open Trophy to the acknowledged world s best tennis player adjudged from a world series of tournaments managed by Jack Kramer 243 All of the best pros would be ranked by a point system 244 h which would determine the seeding list for all tournaments 245 246 The first five tournaments of the series were played in Australia on a portable outdoor wooden plywood court 247 playing slow on a sand paint surface for traction but with no sliding possible 248 Hoad began the series slowly hampered by an elbow injury 249 At the end of January Hoad defeated Rosewall and Cooper to win at Perth and in February 1959 he defeated Rosewall in three sets to win the South Australian Pro 250 tournament at the Norwood Cricket Oval in Adelaide 251 This gave Hoad the lead in Ampol bonus points after the first group of five tournaments a lead which he would not relinquish until the Ampol Open Trophy series ended in January 1960 252 In the four man 1959 Kramer World Professional Championship Tour which ran from 20 February 31 May in North America Hoad built a lead of 12 to 5 in his series of matches against Gonzales after a win in Newcastle Pennsylvania in late April 253 Gonzales stated that I had blisters under my blisters from the punishment on that tour 254 However the daily grind of the tour began to cause a renewal of Hoad s back trouble 255 and he finally won against Gonzales by 15 matches to 13 He also won his head to head s with newly turned pro Ashley Cooper 18 2 and Mal Anderson 9 5 With a win loss record of 42 20 he finished second in the four man tour behind Gonzales 47 15 256 257 The championship was based on money won 258 This would be the only 4 man world professional championship tour in which the winner would have a losing record against one of the other players and the second place finisher would have winning records against all of the other players Four man world championship tours were held in 1942 1954 1959 and 1960 259 In late April the players in the 4 man tour played in the Cleveland event and Hoad lost the final to Gonzales in three straight sets 257 The L A Masters round robin from 5 14 June was held at the L A Tennis Club on concrete and was part of the Ampol series Hoad and Gonzales both finished with five wins and one loss but Gonzales won the title on account of his victory over Hoad in their head to head match which had been the first match for both in the event 260 252 During the tournament Hoad received several Hollywood offers for screen tests but turned them down with the comment What do I want with money 261 At the O Keefe Professional Championships on red clay at Toronto Lawn Tennis Club from 16 to 21 June also part of the Ampol series Hoad lost to Sedgman and Rosewall lost to Trabert Gonzales won the tournament by beating Cooper Trabert and Sedgman 252 The Forest Hills Tournament of Champions 262 from 23 to 28 June played on grass at the Forest Hills stadium in New York and part of the Ampol series awarded the largest winners cheques of the season Hoad defeated Mal Anderson in the quarterfinal Rosewall in the semifinal in four sets and Gonzales in the final also in four sets to claim the title 252 Gonzales appeared tired near the end of the match but had declared in an interview prior to the final I feel fit very fit Until Hoad beats me I m not worried 263 In the August 1959 issue of World Tennis Riggs wrote of the Forest Hills final the match signified the end of an era The great Gonzales who had dominated professional tennis for four years had been decisively beaten 264 In August 1959 Hoad defeated Cawthorn and Worthington to reach the final of the Slazenger Pro Championships in Eastbourne but lost to Cooper in the final 265 266 267 In September Hoad lost to Sedgman in the semifinal of the French Pro at Roland Garros part of the Ampol series but defeated Rosewall in a playoff for third place At the Wembley Indoor Championships part of the Ampol series Hoad was upset by Segura in the second round and Segura eventually lost the final to Anderson in a close match In the Grand Prix de Europe tour from August to October which excluded Roland Garros and Wembley Hoad finished in third place behind Sedgman and Rosewall Gonzales defaulted the European tour Hoad won the Perth and Adelaide Memorial Drive events in November and December to begin the final group of Ampol tournaments which were played on grass courts in tennis stadiums 246 At the Sydney White City Tournament of Champions from 8 13 December Hoad injured his hip in the semifinal against Anderson 268 and lost the final to Gonzales in straight sets 269 At Brisbane Milton Courts from 15 to 19 December Rosewall defeated Hoad in the semifinal and Gonzales in the final in long matches 269 The final event of the Ampol Open Trophy series the Qantas International Kooyong Championships at Melbourne began on 26 December 1959 270 With a victory at Kooyong either Hoad or Gonzales would have won the series Gonzales decided to return to the U S for the holidays to be with his fiancee although Kramer had warned that it could cost Gonzales AUS 5 000 by going home for Christmas 271 272 Gonzales thereby defaulted the Ampol series to Hoad On 24 December the day following Gonzales departure Hoad announced that he would not participate in the upcoming 4 man tour in January 1960 273 On 2 January 1960 Hoad defeated Rosewall in a three and a half hour four set match to win the Kooyong tournament i 275 a match which Kramer acclaimed as one of the best ever played 270 With Hoad s successful defence of the Kooyong title also came the Ampol Open Trophy win and bonus money award 244 The Ampol Open Trophy world series 276 277 246 or world s open tennis championship it was named open in case open tennis arrived which it did not for some years 278 244 246 had consisted of 15 tournaments around the world between 10 January 1959 and 2 January 1960 j Hoad finished first in the series with 51 bonus points ahead of Gonzales 43 points and Rosewall 41 points k 279 270 280 l The Melbourne Age stated Hoad was crowned the new world professional tournament champion at Kooyong by winning the Ampol world series 270 The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Hoad had won the title of world s top professional tennis player and was the game s top money earner for 1959 285 270 286 French language L Impartial on 6 January 1960 stated Lewis Hoad world champion the win at Kooyong allows him at the same time to claim the world title for 1959 287 In an advertisement in World Tennis magazine in June 1960 Hoad was described as world champion Lew Hoad 288 Kramer s brochure described the Ampol series with the term World Championship Tennis 289 290 There had also been references of Gonzales between January and April 1960 being described variously that he was world professional tennis champion will defend his title 291 was advertised as WORLD PRO CHAMPION 292 was world professional champion 293 goes after an unprecedented sixth straight world crown 294 was perennial professional champion 295 was described in UPI newswire reports as world professional tennis champion since 1954 296 297 titleholder of the world professional tennis championship 298 and that Gonzales with five world series championships as his record defeated Ken Rosewall at Cairns last night in straight sets and added further to his claims for his sixth successive world title 299 On 15 January 1960 Lawn Tennis and Badminton said Hoad was taking a six month rest and the article stated J Kramer is urging Hoad not to take this step as during this year he will have his best chance of taking R A Gonzales world professional title from him 300 Kramer s office reported that in 1959 Hoad had won his personal series of matches against Gonzales 24 to 23 285 270 Kramer placed Hoad in fourth place in his personal world professional rating for 1959 the same ranking which Kramer awarded to Hoad in 1958 and 1960 Jack March ranked Hoad second behind Gonzales for 1959 the same ranking which he had given Hoad for 1958 301 Robert Roy in the French sportspaper L Equipe ranked Hoad fifth as of mid December behind Gonzales Sedgman Rosewall and Trabert 245 302 Kramer s Australian tennis agent Bob Barnes placed Hoad in first spot corresponding to Hoad s standing on the official Ampol ranking with Gonzales second Rosewall third Sedgman fourth and Trabert fifth 303 Mal Anderson in a conversation in World Tennis recalled that Kramer established a point system to decide the best players Lew finished ahead of Pancho followed by Rosewall Sedgman and Trabert 304 1960Hoad decided not to play in the 4 man 1960 world championship tour and took a three month layoff at the beginning of 1960 to rest his back and spend time with his family 305 285 When he returned to play 306 he was rusty slow and carried some extra weight but he gradually recovered his form He won a New Zealand tour in April over Anderson Sedgman and Cooper 274 In May Hoad commenced his participation in Kramer s tournament series for 1960 which used a point system to rank the players 307 Gonzales withdrew from the tournament series just before it began Hoad lost a five set final to Rosewall at the Melbourne Olympic Pool where a court was set up on the drained pool floor 308 Hoad Rosewall and most of the pros did not play in the Cleveland World Pro which as in 1959 was not a part of Kramer s tournament series However Hoad and Trabert played a match in Cincinnati Trabert s home town won by Hoad just before the Cleveland event where Trabert would be runner up to Olmedo 309 Hoad won tournament finals in June at Santa Barbara California and in September at Geneva Switzerland both over Rosewall but appeared out of condition in the Roland Garros final against Rosewall 310 At the Wembley Indoor Championships that year Hoad was again upset by Segura in the second round In late 1960 Hoad won the inaugural Japanese Professional Championships in Tokyo beating Rosewall Cooper and Gimeno 311 The event drew 7 000 fans for each of the four evenings of play with the Crown Prince and Princess in attendance the first evening 312 In the final Hoad prevailed at 13 11 in the fifth set over Rosewall saving three match points 312 Following the marathon Tokyo final Hoad withdrew from the remaining tournaments in the point series with back trouble and the final projected tournament in Australia was not played 307 313 The final results of Kramer s tournament series for 1960 are unknown Hoad and Gonzales did not play against each other in 1960 Hoad was ranked world No 2 professional tennis player behind Gonzales in a newspaper report 314 1961 Hoad and Robert Haillet right at the Professional Championship in Noordwijk Netherlands in August 1961 Hoad played a few one set matches on the 1961 Professional World Series tour in January but soon withdrew because of a broken left foot and was substituted for by first Trabert and then Sedgman 315 316 He finished fourth in a tour of five Soviet cities in July behind Trabert Buchholz and Segura returning to play after his broken foot had healed 317 In late August and September Hoad and Gonzales played a ten match best of three sets tour of Britain and Ireland with Buchholz and Davies playing the undercard matches 318 Hoad won his series against Gonzales by a score of six matches to four 319 320 Hoad won four of the five matches in the series which were played on grass 321 322 In September Hoad lost in the first round of the French Pro to Luis Ayala 323 At the Wembley Pro Hoad defeated Gonzales in a four set semifinal In the final against Rosewall in the second game of the match Hoad pulled his back while running for a backhand volley and suffered a recurrence of his old back injury and could no longer run losing in four sets 324 In November Hoad won the fifth and deciding rubber for Australia against the United States in the final of the inaugural Kramer Cup the pro equivalent of the Davis Cup by beating Trabert in four sets Trabert said afterwards Trying to stop Lew in that final set was like fighting a machine gun with a rubber knife 325 Robert Roy in L Equipe ranked Hoad as the third best player of the year 326 In July 1961 Gardnar Mulloy rated Hoad as world No 1 ahead of Gonzales and the favourite to win a prospective open Wimbledon 327 1962There was no official pro championship tour in 1962 as Laver and Emerson had declined to accept pro offers made by Kramer at the 1961 Wimbledon Kramer resigned as tour promoter and director From 14 to 17 March 1962 Hoad won the Adelaide Professional Championships beating Rosewall Gimeno and Sedgman the final against Rosewall very close In late August Hoad played a five match best of three sets tour in Britain against Trabert defeating Trabert at Nottingham Edinburgh Bournemouth and Dublin while Trabert won at Scarborough 328 Hoad won the professional tournament in Zurich in September 1962 by a win in the final against Pancho Segura 329 In late September Hoad lost to Rosewall in a 3 1 4 hour four set final at Wembley 330 Hoad and Rosewall teamed to win the doubles final at both Roland Garros and Wembley In October Hoad was awarded the Facis Trophy for winning the pro tour of Italy 331 In the 1962 Kramer Cup tournament in best of five set formats Hoad defeated Gimeno in the semifinal tie in Turin Italy on clay and Hoad won the opening match of the final at Adelaide in December against Olmedo on grass 332 In an interview in 1980 Hoad stated that I finally finished playing seriously in about 1962 220 Hoad was voted the world No 1 professional tennis player for 1962 in a UPI poll of 85 U S sports editors held at the end of January 1963 following the Australian tour 333 1963In January 1963 Hoad and Rosewall guaranteed the contract of new pro Rod Laver Hoad defeated Laver 8 0 m in an Australian tour some of their matches played to best of five and televised from sold out stadiums 338 339 340 On Laver s pro debut on 5 January Hoad beat Laver at White City stadium in Sydney on a slippery grass surface 341 Their match at the Kooyong stadium in Melbourne on grass was a close contest with Laver extending Hoad to five sets before losing After the Australian series Hoad was inactive for five months partly due to a shoulder injury 342 343 Hoad did not plan to participate in the World Tour for 1963 204 On his return in June he lost to Laver in the semifinal of the Adler Pro and at the Forest Hills U S Pro tournament he lost to Buchholz in the first round The Forest Hills event did not have a television contract was a financial failure and the players with the exception of Gonzales were not paid 42 344 At the French Pro indoor event at Stade Coubertin in September Hoad was defeated in straight sets by Rosewall in the semifinal and lost the third place play off against Sedgman At the Wembley Pro he reached the final after surviving a marathon semifinal against Buchholz in which he strained his leg muscle and was limping throughout most of the match McCauley acclaimed the semi final with Buchholz one of the best contests ever staged at Wembley 345 Hoad was tired and sluggish in the final 345 which again he lost to Rosewall this time in four sets 346 At the Tokyo Japanese Pro in November Hoad defeated Rosewall in the preliminary round but lost the third place match to Sedgman Buchholz defeating Laver in the final 347 At the end of the World Championship Tour earlier in the season Laver had finished second and was officially ranked the No 2 professional player behind Rosewall 348 Hoad did not play in the World Tour and was not officially ranked 1964 67In February and March 1964 Hoad played a 16 day 24 match best of three sets tour of New Zealand with Laver Rosewall and Anderson Hoad and Laver both finished on top with seven wins and five losses but Hoad won first place with a 3 to 1 head to head score against Laver 349 350 In late September 1964 Hoad and Gonzales played a four match best of three sets head to head series in Britain at Brighton Carlyon Bay Cornwall Cardiff Wales and Glasgow Scotland Hoad won at Carlyon Bay and Cardiff while Gonzales won at Brighton and Glasgow 351 352 353 Hoad experienced foot trouble in 1964 and finished in sixth place in the tournament series point system 354 In early 1965 much of his large right toe was removed and he was only able to play a limited schedule thereafter 355 Hoad won his final victories against Laver in January 1966 at White City in Sydney his home town defeating him in straight sets and at Forest Hills New York in a round robin match in June 1966 356 After the expiration of his seven year contract on 14 November 1966 357 Hoad withdrew from competitive play for ten months Hoad and his wife invested in the construction and development of a tennis club resort and a related residential complex in southern Spain He returned unexpectedly to participate in the Wimbledon Pro tournament in late August 1967 358 The Wimbledon Pro was a three day BBC televised tournament organised by the All England Club as a trial for open tennis and as such the first Wimbledon tournament open to male professional tennis players Hoad was one of the eight players invited for the singles event and despite being in semi retirement and without competitive play for ten months 359 he won his first match against Gonzales in three sets 360 The BBC television commentator called it the finest match ever seen on these hallowed grounds 361 This would be the last match on grass between Hoad and Gonzales with Hoad holding a lifetime edge on grass over Gonzales of 21 matches to 14 362 363 364 With little energy left he lost the semifinal to Rosewall in two straight sets 365 Hoad played for an eight week period on the pro tour in 1967 and then retired permanently from regular competitive tennis play 366 Open era 1968 1973Back problems plagued Hoad throughout his career and forced his retirement from the tennis tour in October 1967 but the advent of the Open Era enticed him to make sporadic appearances at tournaments 367 Hoad lost in the final of the Irish Championships at Dublin in July 1968 to Tom Okker in straight sets hampered by a thigh injury 368 In November 1969 Hoad won the Dewar Cup Aberavon singles title part of the Dewar Cup indoor circuit defeating Mark Cox in the semifinal 369 and Bob Hewitt in the final both wins in two straight sets 370 371 At the 1970 Italian Open he lost in the third round in four sets to Alex Metreveli At the 1970 French Open he defeated Charlie Pasarell in four close sets and reached the fourth round before succumbing to eventual finalist Zeljko Franulovic At Wimbledon that year he lost in the second round to Ismail El Shafei 372 Hoad won his final tournament singles title on 7 August 1971 the Playmon Fiesta 71 on red clay at Benidorm Spain 373 He defeated Antonio Munoz in the semifinal and Manuel Santana in the final This would mark a twenty year span during which Hoad won singles titles in tennis between the ages of 16 and 36 dating back to the Brisbane tournament of August 1951 In spring 1972 Hoad played the doubles final at Italian Open with Frew McMillan against Ilie Năstase and Ion Ţiriac Hoad McMillan led 2 0 in sets but retired at 3 5 down in the fifth set in protest of the poor light conditions and the antics of the Rumanian pair 374 375 At the end of June at the age of 37 Hoad made his final Wimbledon appearance losing in the first round to Jurgen Fassbender in four sets 376 Hoad s final match was a second round loss as a result of a retirement to Fassbender in Johannesburg in November 1973 377 From 1970 to 1974 Hoad was the coach of the Spanish Davis Cup team 378 According to notes for a 1970 British Pathe documentary film about Hoad s tennis ranch Hoad had made about GBP 350 000 as a professional 379 Per a 1977 newspaper interview Throughout his career Hoad earned a total of 250 000 less than many pros collect in a year now He received 150 for his Wimbledon victories the payoff now is 17 500 380 Career summary EditHoad s win loss ratio for 1956 in all matches was 114 129 or 88 381 His win ratio in 1958 was 41 winning 64 of 155 matches 382 However Hoad s win rates on the world championship tour that year 36 87 or 41 and in the 1959 four man tour 68 compare favourably to Rosewall s percentages on the 1957 world championship tour 34 and on the 1960 four man tour 56 383 In the 1959 Ampol Open Trophy tournament series Hoad s winning percentage was 71 36 51 compared to Gonzales 72 26 36 and Rosewall s 62 26 42 Gonzales defaulted three Ampol tournaments and played 15 fewer matches than Hoad in the tournament series 284 For the 1959 season as a whole Hoad had a 24 to 23 edge in wins against Gonzales a consistency which surpasses any other opponent of Gonzales during his world champion years 270 Hoad s lifetime edge over Gonzales on grass was 21 wins to 14 losses 60 384 Hoad trails Rosewall lifetime in grasscourt matches 17 to 27 Hoad s results declining after 1961 385 Hoad was 15 wins and 18 losses against Rosewall lifetime in grass court tournament play 1951 1967 Hoad was 17 wins and 21 losses lifetime on clay against Rosewall and 10 wins and 13 losses lifetime on clay against Trabert 385 386 Lifetime on all surfaces primarily indoor in approximate numbers Hoad trails Gonzales 78 104 and trails Rosewall 51 84 387 In the five Tournament of Champions events from 1957 to 1959 in which both players were entered Hoad held a 3 to 2 edge over Gonzales in head to head play all on grass 388 On the head to head tours of the era 1958 1959 1961 Hoad compiled 57 wins and 68 losses against Gonzales the best head to head showing of any pro against the reigning champion Gonzales In the 1959 Ampol series Hoad s record was 3 wins and 5 losses against Gonzales 389 284 However Hoad was more consistent than Gonzales against the other ten players in the Ampol series winning 33 of 43 matches 77 while Gonzales won 21 of 28 75 and this gave Hoad the overall victory in the series Hoad won six tournaments compared to Gonzales four and he had 6 wins and 2 losses against Rosewall on the 1959 Ampol series while Gonzales had 1 win and 3 losses against Rosewall Hoad had a 15 13 edge over Gonzales in their meetings on the 4 man championship tour of 1959 but Hoad was deprived of overall victory on this tour because he was less consistent than Gonzales when facing the rookie pros Mal Anderson and Ashley Cooper Hoad s combined record against the rookies was 27 7 compared to Gonzales 34 0 261 Hoad was a dominant doubles player He won nine Grand Slam doubles titles including one Mixed doubles title and a Career Grand Slam in men s doubles Hoad won 21 major men s doubles titles over 14 seasons eight Grand Slam thirteen Pro Slam a pre Open era record shared with Rosewall He also won the 1959 Forest Hills TOC doubles title Rosewall won 24 major men s doubles titles over 20 seasons and Mike Bryan won 18 over 15 seasons Hoad and Rosewall together as a doubles team won 15 major doubles titles six Grand Slam plus nine Pro Slam one fewer than the Bryan brothers at 16 Hoad and Trabert won four major doubles titles together three French Pro one Wembley Pro plus the 1959 Forest Hills TOC doubles title Hoad won a record seven French Pro men s doubles titles and consecutively Playing style EditStrength of arm and wrist played an important part in Hoad s game as he often drove for winners rather than rallying and waiting for the right opportunity though he also had the skill to win the French Championships on the slower clay court Hoad played right handed and had a powerful serve and groundstrokes Hoad s game was reported to lack consistency in some accounts 390 391 392 At times Hoad had difficulty maintaining concentration 393 394 395 According to Kramer Hoad had the loosest game of any good kid I ever saw There was absolutely no pattern to his game He was the only player I ever saw who could stand six or seven feet behind the baseline and snap the ball back hard crosscourt He d try for winners off everything off great serves off tricky short balls off low volleys He hit hard overspin drives and there was no way you could ever get him to temporise on important points 396 Hoad was runner up for the Australian junior table tennis championship in 1951 and developed strong wrists and arms through heavy weight lifting regimes 397 Hoad would use wrist strength in his strokes to make last split second changes in racquet direction He would saw off about an inch from the ends of his racquet handles which were short to begin with and move the grip higher to wield his racquets as if they were ping pong bats 398 Hoad would use wrist action to give heavy topspin to his groundstrokes 399 Assessment EditBy journalists Edit In The Encyclopedia of Tennis 1973 veteran sportswriters Allison Danzig and Lance Tingay as well as tennis coach writer and former player Harry Hopman listed their personal choices of the ten greatest players in tennis history Only Tingay included Hoad in his list n ranking him in fifth position behind Tilden Budge Laver and Gonzales 400 Max Robertson tennis author and commentator rated Hoad as the best post war Wimbledon player followed by Gonzales and Laver in his 1977 book Wimbledon 1877 1977 401 In his second book about Wimbledon Wimbledon Centre Court of the Game 1981 his list was unchanged but in the second edition in 1987 he listed Hoad second behind Boris Becker 402 403 In 100 Greatest of All Time a 2012 television series broadcast by the Tennis Channel Hoad was ranked the 19th greatest male player just behind fellow Australian John Newcombe at 18th and just ahead of tour promoter Jack Kramer who had signed Hoad to the professional ranks at 21st and Hoad s longtime tennis rival Gonzales at 22nd 404 In 2016 tennis journalist Richard Evans stated that in his judgment Hoad was the greatest player in the world before the emergence of Federer 405 and was without question the strongest man who ever played the game 397 In 2017 tennis journalist Shuvam Chakraborty stated that winning the biggest titles has always been a hallmark of greatness for players throughout the ages But for the old pros if you ask them who the greatest player of their day was they will all say one man Lew Hoad And compared to some of his contemporaries Hoad s resume may not stand out However his peaks might have been the highest of all time His peers would certainly agree with that 406 In 2021 tennis journalist Remi Bourrieres Former Deputy Editor in Chief of Tennis Magazine 2007 2019 ranked Hoad at No 3 among the pre Open players behind Tilden and Budge 407 Bourrieres ranking was 1 Tilden 2 Budge 3 Hoad 4 Gonzales 5 Perry 6 Cochet 7 Lacoste 8 Santana 9 Renshaw 10 Ashe Bourrieres summarized Hoad as This tall blond man with the physique of an Apollo and almost animal strength was perhaps the best of that glorious Australian generation that was to dominate the world in the middle of the 20th century Laver Rosewall and others By players Edit Fred Perry in 1978 put Borg in a class with Jack Kramer Lew Hoad Pancho Gonzales and Ellsworth Vines 408 In 1983 Perry listed his greatest male players of all time and listed them in two categories before World War 2 and after Perry s modern best behind Laver Borg McEnroe Connors Hoad Jack Kramer John Newcombe Ken Rosewall Manuel Santana Perry stated the match I d love to see would be Lew Hoad against Borg Hoad was better than most thought He hit so hard and so quickly off the ground he would have stretched Borg 409 Don Budge stated If Lew Hoad was on you may as well just go home or have tea because you weren t going to beat him 410 Budge did not include Hoad in his top five greatest of all time list in a 1975 newspaper interview citing 1 Ellsworth Vines 2 Jack Kramer 3 Fred Perry 4 Bill Tilden and 5 Rod Laver 411 In July 1961 Gardnar Mulloy ranked Hoad as the greatest player of the time based on his results against Gonzales and named Hoad as the favourite to win a prospective open Wimbledon 412 Kramer had a negative assessment of Hoad s consistency Although Kramer ranked him one of the 21 best players of all time albeit in his second echelon he also writes that when you sum Hoad up you have to say that he was overrated He might have been the best but day to day week to week he was the most inconsistent of all the top players 413 Kramer compared Hoad to Ellsworth Vines Both were very strong guys Both succeeded at a very young age Also both were very lazy guys Vines lost interest in tennis for golf before he was thirty and Hoad never appeared to be very interested Despite their great natural ability neither put up the outstanding records that they were capable of Unfortunately the latter was largely true because both had physical problems 414 However Kramer had a positive evaluation of Hoad s game when motivated When Lew felt like playing man he was really something I never saw anybody who could snap the ball back hard off both sides from way behind the baseline for winners the way he did 410 Kramer stated in 1981 Everybody loved Hoad even Pancho Gonzales They should put that on Lew s tombstone as the ultimate praise for the man Even when Hoad was clobbering Gonzales Gorgo wanted his respect and friendship 415 Gonzales stated that Hoad was the toughest most skillful adversary that he had ever faced and stated in a 1995 interview that He was the only guy who if I was playing my best tennis could still beat me 416 417 I think his game was the best game ever Better than mine He was capable of making more shots than anybody His two volleys were great His overhead was enormous He had the most natural tennis mind with the most natural tennis physique 396 In a 1970 interview he stated that Hoad was probably the best and toughest player when he wanted to be After the first two years on the tour his back injury plagued him so much that he lost the desire to practice He was the only man to beat me in a head to head tour 15 to 13 418 In a 1975 issue of Sports Illustrated Arthur Ashe was quoted as relating a remark which Pancho Gonzales had said to him If there was ever a Universe Davis Cup and I had to pick one man to represent Planet Earth I would pick Lew Hoad in his prime 419 In a 1963 article in World Tennis Rosewall judged Gonzales to be a notch above Hoad but stated that the latter is the greatest of all time when he is on 420 In 2010 Rosewall ranked Hoad at the top of his personal list of the top four greatest tennis players of all time ahead of Gonzales Laver and Federer 406 However in 2017 Rosewall was asked the question in Italian publication Corriere della Sera if he believed Roger Federer was the greatest of all time and he replied there is no doubt I challenge anyone to argue otherwise 421 Hoad gave his own rankings in a 1980 interview ranking Emerson and Borg at the top in terms of major tournaments won However Hoad claimed that the only way to really assess players is to play them rating Gonzales as the best player of those whom he had played against 220 In 1988 a panel consisting of Bud Collins Cliff Drysdale and Butch Buchholz ranked the top three male tennis players as Laver Borg and McEnroe Buchholz ranked Laver Borg Rosewall Gonzales and McEnroe as his top five choices while Drysdale ranked Hoad tied with Connors in fifth place behind Laver Borg Budge and McEnroe 422 However in 2007 Buchholz ranked Hoad as the greatest player of their time but said he was injury prone and not exactly a model of fitness Buchholz stated that If you had an Earth vs Mars match and had to send one man to represent the planet I would send Hoad 335 Buchholz had played the undercard matches on Hoad s 1961 British tour against Gonzales and Hoad s 1963 Australian tour against Laver Frew McMillan stated his opinion of Hoad in 2001 The finest player of all time Possibly At his best certainly the greatest of the greats that I have seen Light on his feet yet with the punching power of a fierce fighter I could marvel at Rod Laver and McEnroe their flair and artistic strength but Hoad s ruthless efficiency would take my breath away 423 Gordon Forbes gave his opinion in a 2009 interview The best they knew Hoad says Forbes Better than Rod Laver Hoad was much stronger bigger They were both magicians but Hoad was the best 424 Rod Laver in 2012 ranked Hoad as the greatest player of the past champions era of tennis while ranking Federer as the greatest player of the Open Era Laver described Hoad s strengths of power volleying and explosiveness as justification of his accolade 425 In July 2012 when Federer won his seventh Wimbledon singles championship Laver said Roger Federer certainly is my claim to be the best of all time if there is such a thing 426 and in January 2018 at the Australian Open won by Federer Laver said For me I think Roger Federer is certainly the greatest player that has come along and He s stood the test of time that s probably the one thing that puts you in that category of the best ever 427 428 However in a January 2019 interview Laver stated that Hoad was the best player who ever held a racquet He had every shot in the book and he could overpower anyone He was so strong 429 Pancho Gonzales made a similar remark about Hoad He was such a strong son when he tried you just couldn t beat him He hit the ball harder than anyone I ever played 398 Personal life Edit Hoad and Jennifer Staley right at the Davis Cup Ball on 30 December 1953 Hoad proposed to his girlfriend Australian tennis player Jenny Staley on her 21st birthday party in March 1955 and they planned to announce their engagement in June in London while both were on an overseas tour 430 After arrival in London Jenny discovered that she was pregnant and the couple decided to get married straight away 431 The marriage took place the following day on 18 June 1955 at St Mary s Church Wimbledon in London on the eve of Wimbledon fortnight 432 433 434 They had two daughters and a son After announcing his retirement in 1967 due to persistent back problems Hoad moved to Fuengirola Spain near Malaga where he and his wife constructed owned and operated a tennis resort Lew Hoad s Campo de Tenis 367 435 and the accompanying residential complex of apartments and penthouse properties Lew Hoad Tennis Village 436 For more than thirty years they entertained personal friends such as actors Stewart Granger Sean Connery Richard Burton Peter Ustinov Deborah Kerr and her husband writer Peter Viertel actor Kirk Douglas singer Frank Sinatra and saxophonist Stan Getz 437 438 439 Hoad s son Peter stated My dad was extremely well connected 440 The athletic club including the wedding event facilities were acquired by Spanish investors in 2005 and in 2021 were rumoured to be for sale at 10 million euros 441 The Lew Hoad Club currently has seven tennis courts and six paddle courts outdoor pool and gym Weddings and events are a specialty plus an annual ITF seniors tennis tournament and an annual IBP women s tournament In September 1978 Hoad s back problem was successfully treated with spinal fusion surgery and he was relieved of pain There had been two ruptured discs and a herniation The doctor asked one of Hoad s friends How on earth did this man walk let alone play tennis 442 In a 1980 interview Hoad claimed that my back is marvelous now it s absolutely perfect now 443 Hoad was diagnosed with a rare and incurable form of leukaemia on 13 January 1994 which caused his death on 3 July 1994 Press reports of a heart attack were incorrect Hoad s personal physician specialist was his own son in law Dr Manuel Benavides who explained the cause of death 444 445 446 447 A book co written with Jack Pollard and titled My Game The Lew Hoad story in the USA was published in 1958 In 2002 Pollard teamed up with his widow Jenny to write My Life With Lew Honours EditHoad was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport in 1980 and in December 1985 was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame 396 In January 1995 he was posthumously inducted into the Tennis Australia Hall of Fame together with friend and rival Ken Rosewall 448 The ITF organises a seniors tournament in his honour called The Lew Hoad Memorial ITF Veterans Tournament which is hosted by the Lew Hoad Campo de Tenis 449 The Kooyong Classic at Kooyong Stadium the principal warm up event for the Australian Open awards the Lew Hoad Memorial Trophy to the winner of the men s singles 450 Kooyong stadium was the site of some of Hoad s greatest victories The Lewis Hoad Reserve in Sydney and the Lew Hoad Avenue in Baton Rouge Louisiana are named after him 451 452 Performance timeline EditSingles Edit Hoad joined the professional tennis circuit in 1957 and as a consequence was banned from competing in 42 Grand Slam tournaments until the start of the Open Era at the 1968 French Open 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 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 SR W L Win Grand Slam tournaments 4 26 84 22 79 Australian 2R 3R 2R A F W SF not eligible A A A A 1 6 15 5 75 French A 2R QF 4R A W 3R not eligible A A 4R A A 1 6 16 5 76 Wimbledon A 4R QF QF QF W W not eligible 3R A 2R A 1R 2 9 32 7 82 U S A QF SF QF SF F not eligible A A A A A 0 5 21 5 81 Pro Slam tournaments 0 22 30 22 58 U S Pro A A A A A A A F F A A A QF QF A QF A 0 5 6 5 55 French Pro NH NH NH NH NH A NH F SF F 1R 1R SF QF A A QF 0 8 12 8 60 Wembley Pro A A A NH NH A QF A QF QF F F F QF A SF 1R 0 9 12 9 57 Win loss 1 1 8 4 13 4 10 3 12 3 24 1 10 3 5 2 5 3 3 2 3 2 3 2 5 3 2 3 0 0 3 2 1 2 2 1 0 0 4 2 0 0 0 1 4 48 114 44 72 Grand Slam and Pro Slam finals EditSingles Edit Grand Slam finals 4 2 Edit Result Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreLoss 1955 Australian Championships Grass Ken Rosewall 7 9 4 6 4 6Win 1956 Australian Championships Grass Ken Rosewall 6 4 3 6 6 4 7 5Win 1956 French Championships Clay Sven Davidson 6 4 8 6 6 3Win 1956 Wimbledon Grass Ken Rosewall 6 2 4 6 7 5 6 4Loss 1956 US Championships Grass Ken Rosewall 6 4 2 6 3 6 3 6Win 1957 Wimbledon Grass Ashley Cooper 6 2 6 1 6 2Pro Slam finals 0 7 Edit Result Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreLoss 1958 French Pro Clay Ken Rosewall 6 3 2 6 4 6 0 6Loss 1958 US Pro Indoor Pancho Gonzales 6 3 6 4 12 14 1 6 4 6Loss 1959 US Pro Indoor Pancho Gonzales 4 6 2 6 4 6Loss 1960 French Pro Clay Ken Rosewall 2 6 6 2 2 6 1 6Loss 1961 Wembley Pro Indoor Ken Rosewall 3 6 6 3 2 6 3 6Loss 1962 Wembley Pro Indoor Ken Rosewall 4 6 7 5 13 15 5 7Loss 1963 Wembley Pro Indoor Ken Rosewall 4 6 2 6 6 4 3 6Doubles 13 8 titles 5 runner ups Edit Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents ScoreWin 1953 Australian Championships Grass Ken Rosewall Don Candy Mervyn Rose 9 11 6 4 10 8 6 4Win 1953 French Championships Clay Ken Rosewall Mervyn Rose Clive Wilderspin 6 2 6 1 6 1Win 1953 Wimbledon Grass Ken Rosewall Rex Hartwig Mervyn Rose 6 4 7 5 4 6 7 5Loss 1954 French Championships Clay Ken Rosewall Vic Seixas Tony Trabert 4 6 2 6 1 6Loss 1954 U S National Championships Grass Ken Rosewall Vic Seixas Tony Trabert 6 3 4 6 6 8 3 6Loss 1955 Australian Championships Grass Ken Rosewall Vic Seixas Tony Trabert 3 6 2 6 6 2 6 3 1 6Win 1955 Wimbledon Grass Rex Hartwig Neale Fraser Ken Rosewall 7 5 6 4 6 3Win 1956 Australian Championships Grass Ken Rosewall Don Candy Mervyn Rose 10 8 13 11 6 4Loss 1956 French Championships Clay Ashley Cooper Don Candy Robert Perry 5 7 3 6 3 6Win 1956 Wimbledon Grass Ken Rosewall Orlando Sirola Nicola Pietrangeli 7 5 6 2 6 1Win 1956 U S National Championships Grass Ken Rosewall Hamilton Richardson Vic Seixas 6 2 6 2 3 6 6 4Win 1957 Australian Championships Grass Neale Fraser Mal Anderson Ashley Cooper 6 3 8 6 6 4Loss 1957 Wimbledon Grass Neale Fraser Budge Patty Gardnar Mulloy 10 8 4 6 4 6 4 6Mixed doubles 4 1 title 3 runner ups Edit Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 1952 U S National Championships Grass Thelma Coyne Long Doris Hart Frank Sedgman 3 6 5 7Win 1954 French Championships Clay Maureen Connolly Jacqueline Patorni Rex Hartwig 6 4 6 3Loss 1955 Australian Championships Grass Jenny Staley Thelma Coyne Long George Worthington 2 6 1 6Loss 1956 U S National Championships Grass Darlene Hard Margaret Osborne Ken Rosewall 7 9 1 6Other important finals EditResult Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1959 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions Grass Pancho Gonzales 6 1 5 7 6 2 6 1See also EditOverall tennis records Men s singlesNotes Edit Lewis Hoad was named after the American actor Lewis Stone 2 The U S Championships used separate seeding lists for U S and foreign players between 1927 the first year seeding were used and 1956 35 Ken Rosewall won the deciding rubber played on the next day due to rain against Vic Seixas in four sets 83 The annual Tingay September amateur rankings from 1952 1967 were also published in USLTA USTA official encyclopedias 89 Bud Collins tennis encyclopedia in the 1985 and later editions the Italian annual Almanacco illustrato del tennis and other publications 90 An alternative ranking compiled by an international team of tennis writers placed Hoad as No 5 138 The 11 members of the International Tennis Hall of Fame on the 1959 60 Ampol world series all of whom won major singles titles were Hoad Gonzales Rosewall Sedgman Trabert Segura Anderson Cooper Rose McGregor Olmedo Caltex was the name used by the Ampol company from 1997 until 2020 The company then officially rebranded as Ampol Ltd in May 2020 The 13 players on the 1959 Ampol Open Trophy world series of tournaments were Hoad Gonzales Rosewall Sedgman Trabert Anderson Segura Cooper Rose McGregor Hartwig Olmedo Giammalva Hoad and Rosewall both had a 4 1 win loss record but Hoad finished first due to his win over Rosewall 274 According to the Kramer Tour brochure for 1959 the 15 tournaments were Melbourne Olympic Velodrome 10 Jan Brisbane 20 Jan Perth 26 Jan Sydney Marks Athletic Field 4 Feb Adelaide Norwood Cricket Oval 11 Feb L A Masters L A Tennis Club 5 Jun Toronto Toronto Lawn Tennis Club 16 Jun New York City Forest Hills 23 Jun Paris Roland Garros 8 Sep London Wembley 19 Sep Perth 26 Nov Adelaide Memorial Drive Tennis Club 1 Dec Sydney White City 8 Dec Brisbane Milton Courts 15 Dec Melbourne Kooyong 26 Dec Final Ampol Points List L Hoad 51 P Gonzales 43 K Rosewall 41 F Sedgman 32 T Trabert 25 P Segura 14 M Anderson 14 A Cooper 8 Olmedo 1 M Rose 1 Hartwig 0 McGregor 0 Giammalva 0 Hoad won six of the 15 tournaments and 71 36 51 of his matches in the series 281 282 while Gonzales won four tournaments and 72 26 36 of his matches 283 and Rosewall won two tournaments and 62 26 42 of his matches in the series 284 Sedgman Melbourne Trabert Roland Garros and Anderson Wembley each won one Ampol world series tournament Gonzales defaulted three Ampol tournaments and played 15 fewer matches than Hoad Hoad was three wins and five losses in matches against Gonzales in the Ampol series although Hoad and Gonzales were two wins and two losses against each other in tournament deciding matches Hoad won six of his eight matches against Rosewall on the Ampol series 284 Laver in statements made in interviews from June 2017 and November 2019 claimed that after turning pro he lost the first 13 matches which he played against Hoad although he did not specify these as all being part of the 1963 Australian tour Buchholz in 2007 who played the undercard on the tour claimed that Hoad won 13 consecutive matches over Laver In a book published in 2020 Laver stated during that Australian tour I played Lew eight times and he won every match 334 335 336 337 Hopman left both of his Tennis Twins Hoad and Rosewall off his selection and ranked Tilden Budge Perry Laver Cochet Lacoste H Doherty Vines as his first nine and listed Gonzales and Emerson in shared tenth position Danzig rated Tilden Cochet Budge Lacoste Kramer Perry Johnston Laver and Vines at the top of his list and also listed Gonzales and Emerson in shared tenth position 400 References Edit a b Lew Hoad Career match record thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 22 September 2021 a b Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 3 Davidson 1970 pp 105 106 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 pp 3 4 Davidson 1970 p 106 School for Tennis Juniors The Sydney Morning Herald 28 December 1944 p 5 Retrieved 14 June 2014 via Trove Muscles Ken Rosewall as told to Richard Naughton Slattery Media Group 2012 p 17 a b Alan Trengove 5 July 1994 Obituary Lew Hoad The Independent Archived from the original on 14 June 2022 Rosewall Hoad in state team The Sydney Morning Herald 25 November 1949 p 10 via Trove N S W Tennis Titles The Barrier Miner 26 November 1949 p 1 via Trove Table Tennis The Sunday Herald 27 November 1949 p 12 Section Sporting Section via Trove Larsen well below form The Sydney Morning Herald 18 November 1950 p 10 via Newspapers com Tennis County of Cumberland Championships The Sydney Morning Herald 29 December 1950 p 6 via Newspapers com Sidwell was determined The Sydney Morning Herald 29 December 1950 p 8 via Newspapers com Australian Open players results archive Lew Hoad Tennis Australia Hoad beats Rosewall The Sun 11 August 1951 p 6 via Trove Hoad takes tennis final The Sydney Morning Herald 11 September 1951 p 10 via Newspapers com a b Davidson 1970 p 109 Hoad Narrowly Beats Rosewall The Sunday Herald 4 May 1952 p 5 Section Sports Section via Trove 3 Australians Beaten In Paris Tennis Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 23 May 1952 p 4 via Trove French Cheer Hoad Rosewall After Brilliant Win The Northern Star 31 May 1952 p 5 via Trove Rosewall Hoad Beaten In Belgian Tennis The Advertiser 7 June 1952 p 4 via Trove Australian final likely in tennis The Argus 21 June 1952 p 12 via Trove Italian star fights back but Hoad lazes way to singles win The Argus 25 June 1952 p 20 via Trove Davidson 1970 pp 109 110 Davidson 1970 p 110 Davidson 1970 pp 110 111 Shock defeat by Hoad and Rosewall of top American doubles pair The Northern Star 30 June 1952 p 5 via Trove Rosewalll Hoad make history The Morning Bulletin 30 June 1952 p 7 via Trove Rose Narrowly Beats Hoad The Mercury 14 July 1952 p 17 via Trove DAVIS CUP MEN REACH N YORK The Barrier Miner 30 July 1952 p 12 via Trove Hoad out in first round The Mercury 6 August 1952 p 24 via Trove Rose beaten by Seixas The Queensland Times Daily ed 16 August 1952 p 3 via Trove 3 Australians in tennis final The Courier Mail 25 August 1952 p 7 via Trove Sedgman Hits At Split Seeds The Sydney Morning Herald 9 September 1952 p 8 via Trove Tennis seedings The Barrier Miner 28 August 1952 p 2 via Trove Davidson 1970 p 111 Talbert Bill 1967 Tennis Observed Barre Publishers p 127 OCLC 172306 Rosewall Hoad eliminated in U S title games The Barrier Miner 6 September 1952 p 2 via Trove Sedgman and Doris Hart win mixed doubles Cootamundra Herald 9 September 1952 p 1 via Trove Hoad beaten in Pacific Championships The Canberra Times 16 September 1952 p 6 via Trove a b c d e Collins Bud 2010 The Bud Collins History of Tennis 2nd ed New Chapter Press pp 715 717 718 754 ISBN 978 0942257700 Australians head tennis rankings Daily Examiner 17 September 1952 p 5 via Trove Hoad Defeated By Unseeded W Australian The Sunday Herald 11 January 1953 p 1 via Trove Instructions beat Hoad The Sydney Morning Herald 12 January 1953 p 7 via Trove Rosewall Hoad take doubles title The Mercury 17 January 1953 p 23 via Trove Hoad Proves Too Strong For Bromwich In Final The Sunday Herald 15 March 1953 p 6 Section Sports Section via Trove Brilliant tennis by Lewis Hoad The Cairns Post 14 March 1953 p 5 via Trove Hoad Saved Six Match Points The Queensland Times Daily ed 13 March 1953 p 3 via Trove Rose in first major win Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 24 March 1953 p 10 via Trove Austn tennis stars to play in Cair The Dubbo Liberal and Macquarie Advocate 30 April 1953 p 3 via Trove Australians Should Do Well On Tennis Tour The Sunday Herald 26 April 1953 p 11 Section Sporting Section via Trove Hoad trounced by Drobny in singles The Mercury 13 May 1953 p 28 via Trove Tennis World The Mirror 16 May 1953 p 20 via Trove Hoad overwhelmed by Seixas in three sets The Mercury 28 May 1953 p 28 via Trove Rosewall And Hoad Win Doubles Title In Three Easy Sets The Sydney Morning Herald 1 June 1953 p 7 via Trove Hoad is too good for Rosewall The Advocate 22 June 1953 p 10 via Trove Another Hoad Rosewall duel Daily Advertiser 22 June 1953 p 4 via Trove Rosewall seeded Wimbledon No 1 The Advocate 17 June 1953 p 20 via Trove Hoad Rosewall lose singles matches The Advocate 30 June 1953 p 16 via Trove Rosewall and Hoad Win Doubles The Examiner 6 July 1953 p 19 via Trove Morea beats Lew Hoad The News 13 July 1953 p 19 via Trove Hoad Stops Hartwig s Winning Run The Advertiser 11 August 1953 p 13 via Trove Hoad Trounces Hartwig News Vol 61 no 9360 10 August 1953 p 20 Retrieved 15 October 2016 via Trove Hoad injures muscle in back The Sydney Morning Herald 11 August 1953 p 10 via Trove Hoad And Rosewall Down To U S Pair Goulburn Evening Post Daily and Evening ed 21 August 1953 p 3 via Trove Australians top U S seedings The Mercury 27 August 1953 p 24 via Trove Rosewall Hoad failL The News 7 September 1953 p 1 via Trove Strong attack on Hopman The Sydney Morning Herald 9 September 1953 p 10 via Trove Hopman Ruined Players Morale The Advertiser 11 September 1953 p 3 via Trove Rosewall Beats Trabert The Advertiser 21 September 1953 p 3 via Trove Win to Hoad in straight sets The News 7 November 1953 p 7 via Trove Hoad invincible in smashing singles victory The Argus 9 November 1953 p 17 via Trove Hoad 18 youngest player to win NSW singles title The Mail 21 November 1953 p 4 Section SPORTS SECTION via Trove Heat treatments for Hoads elbow The Sydney Morning Herald 23 November 1953 p 8 via Trove Hoad Has Sore Elbow The Sydney Morning Herald 21 November 1953 p 1 via Trove Hoad beats Rosewall both in great form The Mail 5 December 1953 p 42 via Trove Australia s Cup doubles pairing roasted overseas Lithgow Mercury 30 December 1953 p 1 via Trove Selectors should resign says Davis Cup critic The Dubbo Liberal and Macquarie Advocate 30 December 1953 p 1 via Trove Tennis Critics Hit at Boner Goulburn Evening Post Daily and Evening ed 30 December 1953 p 3 via Trove The Cup selectors Mistake The Canberra Times 30 December 1953 p 2 via Trove Biggest tragedy of tennis The Sydney Morning Herald 30 December 1953 p 1 via Trove Rosewall s great battle The News 31 December 1953 p 16 via Trove Best Tennis I Have Ever Seen The Advertiser 31 December 1953 p 3 via Trove Davidson 1970 pp 102 104 113 114 Topped all games The Argus 31 December 1953 p 13 via Trove Davidson 1970 p 105 Davidson 1970 p 114 Official Encyclopedia of Tennis United States Lawn Tennis Association 1972 The Guinness Book of Tennis Facts and Feats Lance Tingay 1983 Trabert is No 1 tennis player The Advocate 16 September 1953 p 16 via Trove HOAD JUST HEADS TRABERT The Herald Melbourne No 23 912 Victoria Australia 15 January 1954 p 13 Retrieved 25 November 2021 via National Library of Australia Revised World Rankings World Tennis Vol 1 no 10 New York March 1954 p 12 Philippe Chatrier ed February 1954 Annual rankings Tennis de France No 10 pp 3 4 5 The Tennis de France rankings for 1953 were determined by Philippe Chatrier and his editorial team results as follows 1 Hoad 2 Trabert 3 Rosewall 4 Seixas 5 Drobny 6 Patty 7 Rose 8 Larsen 9 Nielsen 10 Davidson The News Adelaide 14 September 1954 trove nla gov au Hoad far below best volleying poor backhand wilted The Mail 9 January 1954 p 7 Section Sports section via Trove Lew Hoad in camp The Advocate 14 January 1954 p 7 via Trove At 32 40 point in the official film https www youtube com watch v o EXTWvPDeQ amp t 2056s Africa leads in Test The Argus 27 February 1954 p 48 via Trove Africa shocks Aussie stars in tennis Test The Argus 28 February 1954 p 21 via Trove Hoad s stay in hospital extended The News 5 March 1954 p 3 via Trove Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 22 Australians Leave For Tour The Examiner 6 May 1954 p 28 via Trove Hoad Seeded No 1 in France The Northern Star 17 May 1954 p 3 via Trove Hoad out of French tournament The Singleton Argus 24 May 1954 p 1 via Trove Australians eclipsed The News 31 May 1954 p 28 via Trove Hoad s second successive Queen s Club singles win Sunday Times Country edition Section Sporting Section ed 20 June 1954 p 8 via Trove Trabert seeded No 1 for Wimbledon Hoad second The Advocate 16 June 1954 p 20 via Trove Hood Avenges Defeat In French Championship The Advertiser 28 June 1954 p 8 via Trove Rosewall only Australian not beaten at Wimbledon The Advocate 29 June 1954 p 16 via Trove U S pair beats Hoad Rosewall The Advocate 2 July 1954 p 20 via Trove Hoad beaten in UK tennis The News 10 July 1954 p 11 via Trove Hoad too strong for Fraser The Mercury 20 July 1954 p 23 via Trove Eastern Title Win To L Hoad Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 10 August 1954 p 10 via Trove Hoad Down To Junior Goulburn Evening Post Daily and Evening ed 13 August 1954 p 3 via Trove Emerson s Victory Is Praised The Sydney Morning Herald 14 August 1954 p 11 via Trove Seixas and Trabert win U S doubles The News 23 August 1954 p 28 via Trove Hoad downed in five sets by Richardson The News 4 September 1954 p 6 via Trove Trabert Hoad Classed No 1 The Northern Miner 26 August 1954 p 1 via Trove Hoad Rosewall Lose In Singles Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 20 September 1954 p 8 via Trove Hoad keen to regain form The News 2 October 1954 p 3 via Trove Hoad lethargic in semi final defeat The Sydney Morning Herald 14 October 1954 p 12 via Trove Hoad takes title The Courier Mail 8 November 1954 p 7 via Trove Hoad s form worst for year The Courier Mail 17 November 1954 p 15 via Trove Hopman not worried over Hoad s defeat The Courier Mail 18 November 1954 p 13 via Trove Hoad amp Pollard 2002 pp 26 27 Quist s advice on Hoad Must leave him alone The Sydney Morning Herald 2 December 1954 p 13 via Trove No solution at present says Hopman The Argus 3 December 1954 p 32 via Trove No heading The News 27 December 1954 p 1 Archived from the original on 11 March 2020 Retrieved 12 June 2014 via Trove dead link U S wins back Davis Cup after lapse of 4 years The Sydney Morning Herald 29 December 1954 p 1 via Trove G P Hughes ed 1955 Dunlop Lawn Tennis Annual and Almanack 1955 Ed J Burrow amp Co Ltd p 10 The Hoads go on living in cases The Australian Women s Weekly 11 July 1956 p 12 Retrieved 9 July 2014 via Trove Writer lists his 10 best Hoad seventh The News 14 September 1954 p 36 via Trove Hopman surveys tennis tour The News 27 September 1954 p 24 via Trove Hoad was never in best form The Courier Mail 29 September 1954 p 12 via Trove Trabert and Connolly head tennis ranking The Advocate 30 November 1954 p 19 via Trove Potter Edward C February 1955 The World s First Ten World Tennis Vol 2 no 2 New York p 10 Lewis Hoad not to play The Cairns Post 31 December 1954 p 1 via Trove Lew and Jenny cause a stir The Argus 7 January 1955 p 1 via Trove Rosewall Beats Hoad In Australian Tennis Final The Central Queensland Herald 3 February 1955 p 12 via Trove Davis Cup squad leaves for U K The Canberra Times 31 May 1955 p 1 via Trove Rosewall Wins Pre Wimbledon Singles Title The Canberra Times 20 June 1955 p 5 via Trove 2 day honeymoon then tennis The Argus 20 June 1955 p 5 via Trove Budge Patty Upsets Hoad Spokane Daily Chronicle 27 June 1955 U S morale slumps as Hoad hits form The Argus 17 August 1955 p 24 via Trove Second Singles Wins Sweep Australia To Five nil Triumph The Canberra Times 30 August 1955 p 8 via Trove Alfred Wright 5 September 1955 Lew Hoad s big serve carried the load Sports Illustrated Vol 3 no 10 Lew Freedman The 100 Most Important Sporting Events in American History Santa Barbara California Greenwood 2015 p 28 Hughes G P ed 1956 Dunlop Lawn Tennis Annual and Almanack 1956 Dunlop Sports Co Ltd p 185 OCLC 877780619 Killer Hoad fights for pro offer The Argus 21 November 1955 p 18 via Trove Rose must beat Lew for a career The Argus 8 December 1955 p 24 via Trove Cooper heads for top of tennis The Argus 12 December 1955 p 22 via Trove Potter Edward C November 1955 The World s First Ten of 1955 World Tennis Vol 3 no 6 New York p 44 Fraser Beats Hoad For S A Singles Title The Canberra Times 3 January 1956 p 3 via Trove Crowd hinders title tennis The Argus 9 January 1956 p 15 via Trove Australian title to Lew Hoad The Canberra Times 31 January 1956 p 5 via Trove A few faces were red as Tired Lew takes first big title The Argus 31 January 1956 p 16 via Trove Hoads tennis tour approved The Central Queensland Herald 23 February 1956 p 19 via Trove Australian ace on Pot Hunting tour The Mirror 28 April 1956 p 14 via Trove Egyptian Tennis Championships The Central Queensland Herald 15 March 1956 p 29 via Trove Lew to play in final The Argus 26 March 1956 p 17 via Trove Vincent beats Hoad The Central Queensland Herald 5 April 1956 p 18 via Trove Hoad Heads Rankings The Canberra Times 17 April 1956 p 8 via Trove Hoad tokes two titles The Argus 11 April 1956 p 26 via Trove Hoad In Three Title Wins The Central Queensland Herald 26 April 1956 p 18 via Trove Lew Hoad beaten The Mirror 28 April 1956 p 16 via Trove Aussie Lew Whips Sven Ottawa Citizen 9 May 1956 Hoad and Cooper win The Argus 19 May 1956 p 33 via Trove Hoad takes French title The Central Queensland Herald 31 May 1956 p 18 via Trove Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 47 Star News UPI 4 September 1951 Savitt was seeking the third grand slam in tennis annals for the Australian Wimbledon and United States titles had been won previously only by Fred Perry in 1934 and Don Budge in 1938 https news google com newspapers id pGlgAAAAIBAJ amp sjid N3INAAAAIBAJ amp dq grand 20slam 20tennis amp pg 822 2C345156 World Tennis July 1956 Hoad beats Larsen to win Wiesbaden tennis tourney Stars and Stripes 15 May 1956 Jaime Bartroli 2 June 1956 El gran triunfo de Bob Howe sobre Lew Hoad ayer en el Trofeo Conde de Godo de Tenis La Vanguardia in Spanish p 28 Our Lew is beaten by Drobny The Argus 11 June 1956 p 18 via Trove Rosewall favoured in Queen s tourney The Canberra Times 19 June 1956 p 11 via Trove Hoad Wins Wimbledon Singles Tennis Crown The Lewiston Daily Sun 6 July 1956 Lew Hoad at Wimbledon crushes Rosewall for singles title Ottawa Citizen 6 July 1956 https www youtube com watch v lPkGg5Lcgfk Henley and Wimbledon 1956 London British Pathe July 1956 Wimbledon Tennis Hoad Rosewall have grand doubles win The Central Queensland Herald 12 July 1956 p 19 via Trove He beat Lew but lost The Argus 16 July 1956 p 24 via Trove Mrs Long Hoad Win Finals The Central Queensland Herald 9 August 1956 p 19 via Trove a b Hodgson amp Jones 2001 p 113 Hodgson amp Jones 2001 pp 114 116 Sports Illustrated 3 September 1956 Rosewall Great In Defeating Hoad The Central Queensland Herald 13 September 1956 p 19 via Trove Hoad Rosewall Win U S Doubles Title The Canberra Times 28 August 1956 p 12 via Trove New York Times 14 September 1956 p 18 Hoad Defeated The Central Queensland Herald 27 September 1956 p 19 via Trove Hoad Back From Tour The Canberra Times 29 September 1956 p 16 via Trove Killer Coop beats Hoad The Argus 5 November 1956 p 18 via Trove The rains came to rob Rosewall The Argus 17 December 1956 p 16 via Trove Tennis writer Ron asks Why make enemies Mr Hoad The Argus 18 December 1956 p 18 via Trove a b Hodgson amp Jones 2001 p 115 Davis Cup 1956 https www youtube com watch v JwWJ1I9kSxA Australia Wins Challenge Round 5 Love The Canberra Times 29 December 1956 p 1 via Trove Potter Edward C November 1956 The World s First Tens of 1956 World Tennis Vol 4 no 6 New York p 13 Tennis de France No 46 1956 Annual Rankings February 1957 Kramer 1981 p 229 a b Hoad 6 10 a minute Sydney Morning Herald 1 December 1957 p 13 via Google News Alan Clarkson 7 January 1958 Kramer receives the smallest cut Sydney Morning Herald p 12 via Google News a b The Age 31 December 1962 https news google com newspapers nid MDQ 9Oe3GGUC amp dat 19621231 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Bud Lessor Oral History Archive International Tennis Hall of Fame 12 July 1980 Hoad Impressive In Professional Win The Canberra Times 16 July 1957 p 11 via Trove What s My Line 1950 1967 IMDB 14 July 1957 McCauley 2000 pp 76 78 206 Gonzales thinks he can beat Hoad consistently Bergen Evening Record 22 July 1957 p 13 via Newspapers com Gonzales Beats Hoad In Stirring Game The Canberra Times 23 July 1957 p 11 via Trove Lew Hoad loses for 7th time The Canberra Times 2 August 1957 p 19 via National Library of Australia McCauley 2000 pp 77 78 206 Lew Hoad 1957 Player Activity thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 11 June 2019 Kramer still has hopes Hoad will be a Pro star Wilmington Morning News 3 August 1957 p 19 via Newspapers com Interviews with Lew Hoad and Jack Kramer Getty Images 9 September 1957 G P Hughes ed 1958 Dunlop Lawn Tennis Annual 1958 Ed J Burrow amp Co Ltd p 169 Kramer Rosewall win Richmond Times Dispatch 26 September 1957 p 26 via Newspapers com Jack Kramer United States tennis promoter and former Davis Cupper defeated Lew Hoad of Australia 6 1 10 8 in the first round of a professional indoor tennis tournament at Wembley Stadium Wednesday Manila Times 23 November 1957 1957 4 man Tour Doubles Match https www filmothek bundesarchiv de video 586301 a b c Bud Lessor Oral History Archive International Tennis Hall of Fame 12 July 1980 Times have changed The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 27 October 1957 p 32 Retrieved 26 January 2022 via Google News Archive Neue Deutsche Wochenschau 418 1958 in German Melbourne Australia Bundesarchiv 31 January 1958 McCauley 2000 p 208 Hoad takes lead The Canberra Times 11 January 1958 p 1 via National Library of Australia McCauley 2000 p 82 Sydney Morning Herald 4 February 1958 p 13 Kramer said he would ask Gonzales to count the Masters 3rd place match in the world 100 match series The Montana Standard 28 January 1958 via Newspapers com The experts advise against taking too seriously the fact that Pancho Gonzales world s top professional player is trailing Lew Hoad after the first few matches in their 100 match international series They are playing now on grass courts in Australia Look for Gonzales to begin taking charge when he and Hoad open the United States section of their tour in San Francisco on Feb 8 Then they will play on indoor surfaces on which Hoad has had little experience Gonzales has been playing on indoor surfaces for years and is a master of them McCauley 2000 pp 83 84 Kramer 1981 p 234 Gonzales Now Leads Hoad The Canberra Times 2 April 1958 p 20 via Trove Lew and Pancho serve up tennis at its very best Sports Illustrated Vol 8 no 24 16 June 1958 Kramer 1981 pp 233 235 World Tennis Around the World November 1958 McCauley 2000 pp 208 216 Draw for Ampol tennis fixed The Canberra Times 15 January 1958 p 11 via Trove a b McCauley 2000 p 83 McCauley 2000 p 209 a b McCauley 2000 p 211 The Times of London 20 22 September 1958 Around the World World Tennis Vol 6 no 6 November 1958 p 50 McCauley 2000 p 88 The Press Christchurch 6 March 1959 p 6 Sportsman s notebook Kramer s brochure described the Ampol series with the term World Championship Tennis Kramer 1959 tour fall brochure https douglasstewart com au product jack kramer presents world championship tennis a b c Search for world s best tennis star The Cumberland Argus 14 January 1959 p 9 via Trove a b McCauley 2000 p 97 a b c d World Tennis Championship The Cumberland Argus 23 September 1959 p 5 via Trove Sydney Morning Herald 2 February 1959 Kramer 1959 winter tour brochure Chicago Tribune 1 March 1959 p 258 Abilene Reporter 15 February 1959 newspapers com Sydney Morning Herald 13 January 1959 a b c d McCauley 2000 p 212 L Impartial Saturday 25 April 1959 p 7 New York Times 23 January 1970 p 56 Hodgson amp Jones 2001 p 175 Around the World World Tennis Vol 7 no 2 July 1959 pp 61 67 a b McCauley 2000 pp 92 212 Associated Press news release 1 June 1959 AP Pancho Gonzales is the world professional tennis champion for the fifth straight year Gonzales clinched the title Saturday and then defeated his main rival Lew Hoad in the final match of their tour 6 3 15 13 Sunday Gonzales won 29 150 on the tour Hoad s total was 28 250 The championship is based on money won Hoad came out on top in matches with Gonzales 15 13 McCauley 2000 pp 188 200 212 216 Jamie Curran 15 June 1960 Gonzales wins pro masters net tourney Los Angeles Times p 1 Part IV via Newspapers com a b McCauley 2000 p 92 Current designation WCT Tournament of Champions by West Side Tennis Club https thewestsidetennisclub com history timeline TIME magazine 6 July 1959 http content time com time subscriber article 0 33009 825754 00 html World Tennis August 1959 p 25 https archive org details sim tennis illustrated 1959 08 7 3 page 26 mode 2up McCauley 2000 p 213 Tournament results England World Tennis 7 5 78 October 1959 Eastbourne Gazette 12 August 1959 Sydney Morning Herald 11 December 1959 Hoad injured his hip in an awkward fall in the first game of the third set which he lost a b McCauley 2000 p 215 a b c d e f g Don Lawrence 4 January 1960 Tennis final to Lew Hoad The Age p 15 via Newspapers com Don Lawrence 22 December 1959 Board of Management need in open tennis The Age p 20 via Newspapers com Lewis Hoad champion du monde L Impartial in French 6 January 1960 p 9 The Age 24 December 1959 p 16 a b McCauley 2000 p 216 Ottawa Citizen 4 January 1960 p 15 Kramer 1959 60 fall tour brochure In each tournament conducted in the world series the players are seeded according to their standings on points The Cumberland Argus 23 September 1959 p 5 via Trove The world series will wind up at Kooyong Melbourne Search for world s best tennis star The Cumberland Argus 14 January 1959 p 9 via Trove We have therefore framed the scope of this award to provide for an amateur to win in the event of open tournaments being played Mr Walkley said McCauley 2000 pp 97 99 Kramer Tour 1959 brochure Lew Hoad 1959 Player Activity thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 9 May 2019 Lew Hoad 1960 Player Activity Tennis Base Retrieved 9 May 2019 Pancho Gonzales 1959 Player Activity Tennis Base Retrieved 9 May 2019 a b c d McCauley 2000 pp 211 216 a b c David Burke 10 January 1960 Hoad takes stock The Sun Herald p 33 via Newspapers com Arizona Republic 29 June 1959 In prize money Gonzales leads Hoad by only 65 winning 47 640 to Hoad s 47 575 Hoad picked up 3 750 in this tourney including 750 as a share of the doubles title with Trabert Tennis Lewis Hoad champion du monde L Impartial in French 6 January 1960 p 9 World Tennis June 1960 p 7 Kramer 1959 tour fall brochure https douglasstewart com au product jack kramer presents world championship tennis Current designation by West Side Tennis Club of 1959 Forest Hills TOC is WCT Tournament of Champions https thewestsidetennisclub com history timeline Arena lists Pro tennis Feb 3 4 The Philadelphia Inquirer 10 January 1960 p S8 via Newspapers com Professional tennis The Boston Globe 24 January 1960 p 70 via Newspapers com John Cronley 26 February 1960 Once over lightly The Daily Oklahoman via Newspapers com The Los Angeles Times 29 January 1960 The Chattanooga Daily Times 21 February 1960 via Newspapers com Pasadena Independent 9 April 1960 via Newspapers com The Cincinnati Enquirer newspapers com 16 April 1960 The Age Melbourne 12 April 1960 via Newspapers com Cairns Post 20 April 1960 Lawn Tennis and Badminton 15 January 1960 Around the World World Tennis Vol 7 no 7 New York December 1959 p 44 L Equipe 17 December 1959 Around the World World Tennis Vol 7 no 7 December 1959 p 44 Robson Mike June 1960 The Pros in New Zealand World Tennis Vol 8 no 1 New York p 25 Don Lawrence 24 December 1959 Lew Hoad withdraws from 1960 tennis tour The Age p 16 via Newspapers com Writers predict cold future for Wimbledon St Joseph Gazette 8 February 1960 p 7 Kramer did more than talk yesterday He signed up Ken Rosewall and Lew Hoad for another seven years a b Pacific Stars and Stripes November 1960 Rosewall pro tennis champ Los Angeles Times 11 May 1960 p 4 From Club Court to Center Court 2010 Edition The Evolution of Professional Tennis in Cincinnati By Phillip S Smith p 27 http assets usta com assets 663 15 Compendium 2010 reduced pdf McCauley 2000 p 217 McCauley 2000 pp 103 218 a b World Tennis January 1961 p 51 https archive org details sim tennis illustrated 1961 01 8 8 page 50 mode 2up view theater McCauley 2000 p 103 Valley News 15 January 1961 via Newspapers com Lew Hoad world s second ranking tennis player behind Pancho Gonzales Hoad breaks left foot The Canberra Times 23 March 1961 p 31 via Trove Hoad planning month s rest The Canberra Times 24 March 1961 p 31 via Trove McCauley 2000 pp 220 221 Eddie Oakes 8 October 1961 Pros plan busy Aust tour The Sun Herald p 62 via Newspapers com Vera McWeeny 16 September 1961 Vera McWeeney on Tennis Irish Independent p 18 via Irish Newspaper Archives Lew Hoad Wins at St Annes Lytham Evening Gazette 11 September 1961 Hoad won on grass at Bristol Leeds Scarborough and St Annes Gonzales won on grass at Dublin Scarborough News 2 September 1961 Yorkshire Evening Post 3 September 1961 St Annes News 10 September 1961 Irish Examiner 27 August 1961 British Pro Tour thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 11 June 2019 McCauley 2000 p 221 World Tennis Nov 1961 P 10 https archive org details sim tennis illustrated 1961 11 9 6 page 10 mode 2up view theater McCauley 2000 p 115 McCauley 2000 p 116 John Crittenden 16 July 1961 Barriers to crumble at Wimbledon Gar Miami News p 4C via Newspapers com McCauley 2000 p 225 Hoad new champion The Canberra Times 11 September 1962 p 28 via National Library of Australia McCauley 2000 pp 119 230 McCauley 2000 p 224 McCauley 2000 pp 226 227 Lew Hoad Mr Tennis The Canberra Times 30 January 1963 p 30 via Trove Votes Hoad 63 Laver 61 Rosewall 47 Segura 37 Olmedo 24 The Golden Era The extraordinary 25 years when Australians ruled the tennis world Rod Laver 2020 p 225 a b Peter Bodo 4 April 2007 TMF best of 5 all the time Tennis com Stephen Towers 19 November 2019 A light shone down on me The remarkable story of the 1969 Rod Laver Grand Slam tennishead Martyn Herman 29 June 2017 Laver says turning pro made him twice as good Reuters McCauley 2000 p 227 Lew Hoad vs Rod Laver Head 2 Head thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 14 June 2019 World Tennis The Amateurs and the Pros by Lew Hoad August 1964 First loss to pro Laver The Sydney Morning Herald 6 January 1963 p 53 via Newspapers com Schenectady Gazette 28 June 1963 https news google com newspapers id ZWQtAAAAIBAJ amp sjid FYkFAAAAIBAJ amp dq gonzalez fails comeback amp pg 596 4662889 amp hl en The Fresno Bee 7 January 1964 via Newspapers com Dave Anderson 11 September 1977 The grandeur that was Hoad The New York Times p 181 a b McCauley 2000 p 125 McCauley 2000 p 230 Japanese Pro 1963 https www tennisarchives com edition v 28471 McCauley 2000 p 228 McCauley 2000 p 231 New Zealand Herald 29 February March 1964 Christchurch Star 16 March 1964 Dick Morgan 21 September 1964 Brighton match report Brighton Evening Argus Injury weakened Hoad Glasgow Herald 24 September 1964 TennisBase Hoad Gonzales matches 1964 McCauley 2000 p 235 McCauley 2000 p 132 McCauley 2000 p 240 Writers predict cold future for Wimbledon St Joseph Gazette 8 February 1960 p 7 Kramer did more than talk yesterday He signed up Ken Rosewall and Lew Hoad for another seven years McCauley 2000 pp 244 249 McCauley 2000 pp 244 248 UK Wimbledon World Professional Tennis Championship 1967 London British Pathe 25 August 1967 McCauley 2000 p 139 TennisBase lifetime hth statistics local British newspapers 1961 tour Irish Examiner 27 August 1961 Yorkshire Evening Post 3 September 1961 St Annes News 10 September 1961 Hoad won on grass at Bristol Leeds Scarborough St Annes Gonzales won on grass at Dublin The Sydney Morning Herald 5 February 1958 p 17 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 pp 142 145 McCauley 2000 p 249 a b Hoad may retire to coaching The Age 9 June 1967 Laver scores again The Canberra Times 15 July 1968 p 11 via Trove The Times of London 1 November 1969 Hoad shines in Dewar Cup The Age 3 November 1969 Hoad threat again The Age 5 November 1969 Fred Tupper 25 June 1970 Wimbledon cheers Hoad 35 as he loses 5 set struggle against El Shafei The New York Times ABC Madrid 8 August 1971 p 45 Hoad stalks off court The Age 4 May 1972 John Barrett ed 1973 World of Tennis 73 a BP and Commercial Union yearbook London Queen Anne Press pp 117 119 ISBN 9780671216238 Veterans bow to youth at Wimbledon The Canberra Times 28 June 1972 p 34 via Trove 1973 Johannesburg Men s singles draw Association of Tennis Professionals ATP Hoad enters net tourney Billings Gazette 9 August 1970 p 46 via Newspapers com Australian Former Champion Lew Hoad Establishes Tennis School In Spain British Pathe 20 February 1970 Jack Monet 30 April 1977 Nowadays Lew Hoad Is Helpful on the Tennis Court International Herald Tribune European Edition p 13 Lew Hoad 1956 Player Activity thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 11 June 2019 1958 Ranking Singles thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 11 June 2019 McCauley 2000 pp 205 216 TennisBase lifetime head to head stats newspaper reports of 1961 British head to head tour Sydney Morning Herald 5 February 1958 a b Ken Rosewall vs Lew Hoad Head 2 Head thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 11 June 2019 Hoad Trabert rivalries TennisBase Lew Hoad Rivalries thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 14 June 2019 McCauley pp 206 208 209 212 215 Pancho Gonzales Rivalries thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved 14 June 2019 How Vic Seixas rates our men The Mail 21 August 1954 p 44 via Trove Hoad too erratic to be great The News 2 September 1954 p 48 via Trove It s Dr Jekyll and Mr Hoad The Argus 23 July 1956 p 16 via Trove Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 10 Hoad s main problem now himself The Sydney Morning Herald 1 December 1954 p 17 via Trove Lew s biggest rival is Hoad The Argus 26 May 1956 p 5 The Argus Weekender via Trove a b c Lew Hoad Sport Australia Hall of Fame a b 10sballs 10 August 2016 https archive 10sballs com 2016 08 10 ten fittest male players by richard evans a b Hodgson amp Jones 2001 p 234 TIME magazine 6 July 1959 http content time com time subscriber article 0 33009 825754 00 html Flatfooted he can hit a backhand with a flick of his powerful wrist with so much top spin that the ball seems to zoom off the turf like a maddened hornet a b Robertson Max 1974 The Encyclopedia of Tennis London Allen amp Unwin p 175 ISBN 9780047960420 Robertson Max 1977 Wimbledon 1877 1977 London Arthur Baker Limited p 164 ISBN 0213166437 Robertson Max 1981 Wimbledon Centre Court of the Game London British Broadcasting Corporation p 307 ISBN 0563179236 Robertson Max 1987 Wimbledon Centre Court of the Game London BBC Books p 463 ISBN 0563204540 The List Tennis Channel www tennischannel com Archived from the original on 5 June 2012 Retrieved 11 January 2022 10sballs 11 February 2016 https archive 10sballs com 2016 02 11 lew hoad profile by richard evans a b Shuvam Chakraborty 22 June 2017 Chasing Greatness GOAT or GOATs peRFect Tennis Remi Bourrieres From Santana to Lacoste the 10 GOATs among the lost legends of men s tennis 30 December 2021 https www tennismajors com others news from santana to lacoste the 10 goats among the lost legends of mens tennis 522421 html Neil Amdur 9 July 1978 Borg Overcomes Connors For 3d Wimbledon Crown The New York Times Retrieved 10 April 2022 The Miami Herald 25 April 1983 newspapers com a b Joseph B Stahl Greatest of the Wood Racquet Men http www worldtennismagazine com archives 10802 The South Bend Tribune 10 August 1975 newspapers com John Crittenden 16 July 1961 Barriers to crumble at Wimbledon Gar The Miami News p 4C via Newspapers com Kramer 1981 p 230 Kramer 1981 pp 229 230 Kramer 1981 p 201 Dave Anderson 12 March 1995 The lone wolf faces a match point The New York Times p 3 Section 8 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 62 Dave Anderson 23 January 1970 Pancho Picks Hoad The Spokesman Review Arthur Ashe Frank Deford 10 March 1975 A shout for those Aussies Sports Illustrated Vol 42 no 10 p 45 Rosewall praises Gonzales The Canberra Times 29 May 1963 p 45 via Trove Antenato in Italian Corriere della Sera 19 July 2017 via PressReader The Miami News 10 March 1988 newspapers com Golden Boy and good girls The Guardian The Observer 1 July 2001 Abe Segal amp Gordon Forbes Sport was all fun and now it almost isn t at all Peter Bills Wednesday 25 March 2009 01 01 https www independent co uk voices columnists peter bills abe segal amp gordon forbes sport was all fun and now it almost isn rsquo t at all 1653173 html Rod Laver s 10 best past and present players Herald Sun 2012 Federer greatest of all time says Laver Tennis Australia 6 July 2012 Lauren Wood 29 January 2018 Rod Laver passes torch to new GOAT Roger Federer after he claims 20th grand slam Herald Sun Kim Trengove 6 February 2018 Federer celebrates 20 and the Laver Cup legacy Laver Cup Laver interview with Grantlee Kieza in the Courier Mail 26 January 2019 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 28 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 pp 29 32 2 day honeymoon then tennis The Argus 20 June 1955 p 5 via Trove Tennis Star Takes Bride In London Reading Eagle June 19 1955 19 June 1955 My Wimbledon romance The Argus 23 July 1955 p 33 via Trove Luxury Campo de Tennis The Australian Women s Weekly 11 June 1969 p 2 via Trove Lew Hoad Tennis Village https intermarbella com properties for sale in lew hoad tennis village mijas Hoad amp Pollard 2002 pp 120 126 Lew Hoad Tennis and Paddle Club The Club https lew hoad com en the club Coaching the rich and famous in Mijas 17 November 2017 Margaret Maccoll 26 June 2017 Tennis in his blood Noosa Today Review of Lew Hoad Resort https www youtube com watch v RoEpQ7JJqTQ Hodgson amp Jones 2001 pp 220 221 Bud Lessor Oral History Archive International Tennis Hall of Fame interview by Bud Lessor recorded at International Tennis Hall of Fame Newport Rhode Island 12 July 1980 Hodgson amp Jones 2001 p 222 Hoad amp Pollard 2002 p 193 Lew Hoad 59 Tennis Champion of the 1950 s The New York Times 5 July 1994 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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