fbpx
Wikipedia

Pancho Gonzales

Ricardo Alonso "Pancho" González (May 9, 1928 – July 3, 1995), known sometimes as Richard Gonzales, was an American tennis player. He won 15 major singles titles, including two U.S. National Singles Championships in 1948 and 1949, and 13 Professional Grand Slam titles. He also won three Tournament of Champions professional events in 1957, 1958, and 1959. He was ranked world amateur No. 1 in 1948 by Ned Potter[2] and in 1949 by Potter [3] and John Olliff.[4]

Pancho Gonzales
Gonzales in a tournament in Los Angeles, c. 1950
Full nameRicardo Alonso González
Country (sports) United States
Born(1928-05-09)May 9, 1928
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedJuly 3, 1995(1995-07-03) (aged 67)
Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Turned pro1949
Retired1974
PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)
Int. Tennis HoF1968 (member page)
Singles
Career record1368–652 (67.7%)[1]
Career titles111[1]
Highest rankingNo. 1 (1948, Ned Potter[2])
Grand Slam singles results
Australian Open3R (1969)
French OpenSF (1949, 1968)
Wimbledon4R (1949, 1969)
US OpenW (1948, 1949)
Other tournaments
Professional majors
US ProW (1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1961)
Wembley ProW (1950, 1951, 1952, 1956)
French ProF (1956, 1961)
Other pro events
TOCW (1957FH, 1958FH, 1959AU)
Doubles
Career record43–30
Grand Slam doubles results
French OpenW (1949)
WimbledonW (1949)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
WimbledonQF (1968)

Gonzales was a prominent professional champion in the 1950s and 1960s, winning world professional championship tours between 1954 and 1961; he was the world number one ranked male tennis player professional between 1952 and 1961.[5] Gonzales was a determined competitor with a fierce temper. He was often at odds with officials and promoters. However, he was a fan favorite who drew many spectators.[6]

Career edit

Amateur edit

Gonzales was given a 51-cent racquet by his mother when he was 12 years old. He received tennis analysis from his friend, Chuck Pate, but mostly taught himself to play by watching other players on the public courts at nearby Exposition Park in Los Angeles. Once he discovered tennis, he lost interest in school and began a troubled adolescence in which he was occasionally pursued by truant officers and police. He was befriended by Frank Poulain, the owner of the tennis shop at Exposition Park, and sometimes slept there.[7]

Due to his lack of school attendance and occasional minor brushes with the law, he was ostracized by the tennis establishment of the 1940s.[8] The headquarters for tennis activity was the Los Angeles Tennis Club, which actively trained other top players such as the youthful Jack Kramer. During that time, the head of the Southern California Tennis Association, and the most powerful man in California tennis was Perry T. Jones.

Jones, the head of California tennis, was described as an autocratic leader who embodied much of the exclusionary sensibilities that governed tennis for decades. Although Gonzales was a promising junior, once Jones discovered that the youth was truant from school, Jones banned him from playing tournaments.[9]

Eventually he was arrested for burglary at age 15 and spent a year in detention. He then joined the Navy just as World War II was ending and served for two years, finally receiving a bad-conduct discharge in 1947.[10][11]

1947

Despite his lack of playing time while in the Navy, and as a mostly unknown 19-year-old in 1947, Gonzales achieved a national ranking of No. 17 by playing primarily on the West Coast. He did, however, go East that year to play in the U.S. Championships at Forest Hills. He beat the British Davis Cup player Derek Barton and then lost a five-set match to third seed Gardnar Mulloy, despite leading 4–3 with a break in the fifth set.[12] Following that, in the last major tournament of the year, the Pacific Southwest, played at the Los Angeles Tennis Club, he beat three players that would end their careers with Grand Slam singles titles, Jaroslav Drobný, Bob Falkenburg, and Frank Parker, before losing in the semifinals to Ted Schroeder.[13]

1948

The following year, Perry T. Jones relented in his opposition to Gonzales and sponsored his trip East to play in the major tournaments.[14] The top-ranked American player, Schroeder, decided at the last moment not to play in the U.S. Championships and Gonzales was seeded No. 8 in the tournament. To the surprise of most observers, he won it fairly easily by a straight-set victory over the South African Eric Sturgess in the finals with his powerful serve-and-volley game. As The New York Times story of that first win began, "The rankest outsider of modern times sits on the tennis throne."[15] His persona at the time was strikingly different from what it would become in future years. American Lawn Tennis wrote that "the crowd cheered a handsome, dark-skinned Mexican-American youngster who smiled boyishly each time he captured a hard-fought point, kissed the ball prayerfully before a crucial serve, and was human enough to show nervousness as he powered his way to the most coveted crown in the world." This was Gonzales's only major tournament victory of the year, but it was enough to let him finish the year ranked as the number one American player.[16] Gonzales was ranked world No. 1 amateur by Ned Potter.[2]

1949

In 1949, Gonzales performed poorly at Wimbledon, where he was seeded second but lost in the fourth round to Geoff Brown, and was derided for his performance by some of the press. Gonzales was called a "cheese champion"[17] and, because of his name, his doubles partner of the time, Frank Parker, began to call him "Gorgonzales",[18] after gorgonzola, the Italian cheese. This was eventually shortened to "Gorgo", the nickname by which he was later known by his colleagues on the professional tour. (Jack Kramer, in his autobiography, says that it was Jim Burchard, the tennis writer for the New York World-Telegram who first called him a "cheese champ".)[19]

When Gonzales returned to the United States Championships in 1949, he repeated his victory of the previous year. Schroeder, the top seed, had beaten Gonzales eight times in nine matches during their careers and was heavily favored. The only time he had beaten Schroeder, Gonzales was playing with a nose that had been broken the day before by his doubles partner's tennis racquet during a misplayed point at the net.[20] In a tremendous final that has been called the 11th greatest match of all time",[21] Gonzales lost a 1-hour and 15-minute first set 16–18 but finally managed to prevail in the fifth set. Once again he finished the year as the number-one ranked U.S. amateur. Gonzales was ranked world No. 1 amateur by John Olliff[4] and Ned Potter.[3] Gonzales also won both his singles matches in the Davis Cup finals against Australia. Having beaten Schroeder at Forest Hills, Bobby Riggs, who had been counting on signing Schroeder to play Kramer on the professional tour, was then forced to reluctantly sign Gonzales instead.

Professional edit

 
Pancho Segura (left) and Gonzales (right) at the Professional Championship in Noordwijk, Netherlands in August 1961.

1949–1950 edit

Gonzales was beaten in his first year on the professional tour, 94 matches to 29, by the reigning king of professional tennis, Jack Kramer. During this time, Gonzales's personality apparently changed from a friendly, happy-go-lucky youngster to the hard-bitten loner he became known as for the rest of his life. According to Kramer in his 1979 autobiography, "The worst thing that ever happened to Gonzales was winning Forest Hills in 1949... At a time when Gorgo wasn't mature as a player he was pitted against Kramer, an established pro at his peak." Moreover, says Kramer, "Pancho had no idea how to live or take care of himself. He was a hamburger-and-hot-dog guy to start with and had no concept of diet in training... On the court, Gorgo would swig Cokes through a match... Also Gorgo was a pretty heavy cigarette smoker. He had terrible sleeping habits made even worse by the reality of a tour."[22]

Life on the tour was not easy. Most of the matches were played indoors on the tour's portable canvas surface. "One night", Gonzales recalled later, "I sprained an ankle badly. The next night in another town I was hurting. I told Jack I couldn't play. He said to me, 'Kid, we always play.' Jack had a doctor shoot me up with novocaine, and we played. That's just the way it was. The size of the crowd didn't matter. They'd paid to see us play."[23]

Kramer won 22 of the first 26 matches and 42 of the next 50. Gonzales improved enough to win 15 of the remaining 32 but it was too late. Bobby Riggs, the tour promoter, told Gonzales that he was now "dead meat": Kramer would need a new challenger for the next tour. As compensation, however, Gonzales had made US$75,000, well above his guarantee of $60,000, in his losing efforts. Kramer also said that "his nature had changed completely. He became difficult and arrogant. Losing had changed him. When he got his next chance, he understood that you either win or you're out of a job." He was now "a loner", said Ted Schroeder, "and always the unhappiest man in town."[23]

One bright moment for Gonzales in his rookie year as a professional was winning the U.S. Pro Indoor Championship at Philadelphia in late March, defeating Kramer in the final in straight sets.[24] Gonzales also won the tournament at Wembley, beating Don Budge and Welby Van Horn. He did not play in the 1950 U. S. Professional Championships in Cleveland, which were authorized by the USPLTA.

1951 edit

From 1951 to 1953, Gonzales was in semi-retirement. He bought the tennis shop at Exposition Park and ran that while playing in short tours and occasional professional tournaments throughout the world.[25] In spite of his infrequent play (because first Riggs, then Kramer, as promoters of the pro tour, did not offer him playing positions on the tours), he had nevertheless raised his game to a higher level than before and was winning most of his matches. Precise records of this time are difficult to locate but Gonzales asserts in his autobiography that after the decisive loss to Kramer in their 1949–50 tour he then beat his old antagonist 11 times in their next 16 matches.

In the southern hemisphere summer of 1950–51, Gonzales toured Australia and New Zealand with Dinny Pails, Frank Parker, and Don Budge.[25] In December 1950, Pails won the short tour in New Zealand, but in January and February 1951 Gonzales won a second and longer tour in Australia.[25] Gonzales lost the deciding match of the U.S. Professional Indoor Championships at Philadelphia in February 1951 to Kramer.

At the Philadelphia U.S. Pro Indoor in March, 1951, the service "drives" (not "forehand drives" as sometimes reported) of a number of players were electronically measured and compared to Tilden's reported service "drive" speed of 151 mph made by stopwatch and film in 1931. The service speeds were measured at the net, and not at the racquet face, as is currently the standard practice. Gonzales was recorded as hitting the fastest serve, 112.88 mph, followed by Kramer at 107.8, and Van Horn at 104.[26][27] Kovacs, who possessed a big serve, played in the Philadelphia tournament but did not participate in the service speed measurements. Segura and Riggs participated in the test, but their results were not reported.

Gonzales finished second to Segura in the 1951 U.S. Professional Championships at Forest Hills, organized by Riggs and Kramer, and authorized by the USPLTA.[28] Gonzales did not play in the 1951 Cleveland International Professional title at Cleveland, won by Kovacs (and approved as the U.S. National Pro Championships by the Professional Players Association of Tennis, an organization formed that year and led by Budge). Though Gonzales won Wembley in 1951 (where Kramer was not entered), Segura was ranked the number one U.S. pro in the USPLTA rankings for 1951[29][30] and Kramer won the world series over Segura.

1952 edit

In 1952 Gonzales reached the top level of the pros. In 1952, he won the Philadelphia Inquirer Masters tournament[31] (where he beat both Segura and Kramer twice in a double round-robin event, and split his two matches with Kovacs); the World Professional hard court event at Los Angeles[32] (beating Budge and Segura); at Scarborough, England[33] (where he defeated Budge and Segura); at Wembley, England (where he beat Segura in the semis, and then, to beat Kramer in the final, came from down 2 sets to none, and from 4-1 down in the fifth set);[34] at Berlin, (where Segura and Budge lost again to him); and in Geneva (beating Segura). Gonzales was a finalist at Cleveland, approved by the P.P.A.T. as the U.S. National Pro, where he lost again to Segura.[35] 1952 was the first year that "Big Pancho" (Gonzales) had an edge in results over "Little Pancho" (Segura) in their head-to-head matches, and thereafter his edge in results over Segura continued throughout their long careers.

The USPLTA issued rankings at the end of 1952 in which they ranked Segura the U.S. pro No. 1, with Gonzales second (in 1951, when Kramer had beaten Segura 64 matches to 28 in their championship tour, they had ranked Segura as the U.S. No. 1 pro player due to Kramer's lack of success in the U.S.). The Tennis Hall of Fame gives Gonzales "Top ranking: World number 1 (1952)".[36] The PPAT rankings for 1952 placed Segura as the U.S. No. 1 professional, followed by Gonzales as the U.S. No. 2.[37]

1953 edit

In 1953, Gonzales was omitted by Kramer (by now also a promoter) from the big pro tour, which featured Frank Sedgman (a winner of five Grand Slam singles titles) against Kramer himself and Ken McGregor (the 1952 Australian Open singles winner) against Segura. Gonzales won the Cleveland event, defeating Don Budge in the final in four sets.[38] Gonzales was awarded the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy for his victory. At Wembley 1953[39] and two days later in Paris,[40] he was severely beaten by Sedgman, the eventual winner of these tournaments, and Sedgman was ranked the pro No. 1 for 1953 by Tennis de France in its full season ranking list.[41] In June, the Players Committee of the Cleveland U.S. Pro or Cleveland World Pro (billed title)[42] ranked Gonzales as the world No. 1 professional player for 1953 and he was also ranked No. 1 pro in October by Ken McGregor.[43]

1954 edit

In late 1953, Kramer, then a temporarily retired player (due to his back troubles), signed Gonzales (a seven-year contract) to play in a 1954 US tour also featuring Pancho Segura, Frank Sedgman, and Donald Budge (the latter being replaced in March 1954 by Carl Earn for the last weeks of the tour). In the subsequent matches Gonzales beat Segura 30–21 and Sedgman by the same score. After this tour, Gonzales won the Cleveland World Pro or Cleveland U.S. Pro held at the Cleveland Arena from April 27 through May 2 and where all the best, except Pails, were present.[44][45] Gonzales was awarded the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy for his victory at Cleveland.

In early June 1954, Gonzales won the U.S. Professional Championships held by Jack Kramer at the Los Angeles Tennis Club in California.[46][45] Gonzales was seeded No. 1 and defeated both Sedgman and Segura,[a] the latter in a close five set final to win the USPLTA Benrus Trophy for the only time in his career. Gonzales thus won two U.S. Pro titles (according to some writers) in one year, a unique achievement in tennis.

Gonzales then played in the Far East tour (September–October 1954) that visited Japan, Korea, the Philippines, and Hong Kong. He finished second to Sedgman and barely won over Segura and Kramer, who was making a comeback in singles after a 14-month retirement.[64] Later that year Gonzales enjoyed further success: he swept the Australian Tour of November–December 1954 by beating Sedgman 16–9, McGregor 15–0, and Segura, 4–2.[65] Although he was beaten by the Australian Dinny Pails in the last competition of the year, Gonzales had clearly established himself as the top player in the world in 1954. In December, the International Professional Tennis Association ranked Gonzales as the No. 1 professional player for 1954.[66]

1955–1956 edit

In 1955–56, Gonzales beat Tony Trabert in the World series by 74 matches to 27. Forty years after his matches with Gonzales, Trabert told interviewer Joe McCauley "that Gonzales's serve was the telling factor on their tour — it was so good that it earned him many cheap points. Trabert felt that, while he had the better groundstrokes, he could not match Pancho's big, fluent service."[67]

Much of Gonzales's competitive fire during these years derived from the anger he felt at being paid much less than the players he was regularly beating. In 1956, for instance, he was guaranteed US$15,000[68] for the pro tour, while his touring opponent, the recently turned professional Tony Trabert, had a guarantee for US$80,000.[68] He had a poor and often adversarial relationship with most of the other players and generally travelled and lived by himself, showing up only in time to play his match, then moving on alone to the next town. Gonzales and Jack Kramer, the long-time promoter of the tour, had a bitter and inimical relationship dating to the days when Kramer had first beaten the youthful Gonzales on his initial tour. Now they fought incessantly about money, while Kramer openly rooted for the other players to beat Gonzales.[69] As much as he disliked Gonzales, however, Kramer knew that Gonzales was the star attraction of the touring professionals and that without him there would be no tour at all.

Regarding the tour, Kramer writes that "even though Gonzales was usually the top name, he would almost never help promote the tour. The players could have tolerated his personal disagreeableness, but his refusal to help the group irritated them the most. Frankly, the majority of players disliked Gonzales intensely. Sedgman almost came to blows with Gonzales once. Trabert and Gorgo hated each other. The only player he ever tried to get along with was Lew Hoad."

Trabert also told McCauley in their interview that "I appreciated his tennis ability but I never came to respect him as a person. Too often I had witnessed him treat people badly without a cause. He was a loner, sullen most of the time, with a big chip on his shoulder and he rarely associated with us on the road. Instead he'd appear at the appointed hour for his match, then vanish back into the night without saying a word to anyone. We'd all stay around giving autographs to the fans before moving on to the next city. Not Pancho. On court, he was totally professional as well as a fantastic player."[23] In a 2005 interview, Ted Schroeder commented on Gonzales's intense demeanor both on and off the court, "We hardly ever spoke a civil word to one another, yet we were friends. He was a very prideful man, not proud, prideful. When you understood that, you understood him."[70]

Gonzales won at Cleveland in 1955 and 1956, both events using the VASSS (Van Alen Simplified Scoring System, i.e. table tennis scoring), beating Segura in the final in both years. Gonzales played against Trabert in a South American tour, losing six matches to Trabert on outdoor clay, but winning the three indoor matches.[71] Gonzales won the inaugural Los Angeles Masters tournament in early August 1956, defeating Sedgman in the deciding match.[72] Sedgman missed the first five and a half months of 1956. Gonzales and Trabert played a five-set final at Roland Garros in 1956, with Trabert winning in the fifth set.[73] At the Wembley World Pro Indoor Championships in 1956, Gonzales won a classic final with Sedgman in four long sets:[74] "The match lasted almost three hours and ended at 12.35am. B.B.C. Television covered it to the end."[75] (It was customary for the Wembley final to be broadcast nationally in the UK on the BBC). Lawn Tennis and Badminton magazine[76] and International Professional Tennis Association[77] ranked Gonzales the world No. 1 professional for 1955. Cleveland tournament promoter Jack March ranked Gonzales the world No. 1 professional for 1956.[78]

1957 edit

At the end of 1956, Kramer signed Ken Rosewall to play a world series[79] tour against Gonzales. In early 1957, Gonzales flew to Australia for the first ten matches against Rosewall in his native country. Gonzales had developed a "half-dollar"-size cyst on the palm on his right hand[80] and there was speculation in the newspapers that his tennis career might be over. Kramer's personal physician began to treat it with injections, and it gradually began to shrink.[81] It was still painful, however, when Gonzales beat Rosewall in their initial match and eventually won the Australian portion of the tour 7 matches to 3, with Rosewall beating Gonzales in a tournament whose results did not count towards the series total. By the time the tour opened in New York in late February, the cyst had shrunk considerably and Gonzales went on to beat Rosewall by a final score of 50 matches to 26.

Gonzales won the 1957 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions with a perfect 5–0 record, beating Sedgman in a five-set deciding match. The event was broadcast nationally on CBS television. Gonzales also won the Cleveland tournament, beating Trabert and Segura, and the Los Angeles Masters tournament.

Kramer has written that he was so worried that Rosewall would offer no competition to Gonzales and would thereby destroy the financial success of the tour that, for the only time in his career as a player or promoter, he asked Gonzales while in Australia to "carry" Rosewall in return for having his share of the gross receipts raised from 20 percent to 25 percent. Gonzales reluctantly agreed. After four matches, with Gonzales ahead 3 to 1, Gonzales came to Kramer to say that "I can't play when I'm thinking about trying to carry the kid. I can't concentrate. It just bothers me too much." By this time, however, it was apparent that Rosewall would be fully competitive with Gonzales, so Kramer told Gonzales to return to his normal game — and that he could keep his additional five percent. Gonzales built a 5 to 1 lead over Rosewall in the Australian portion of the tour.[82] Gonzales would eventually build a lifetime head-to-head edge against Rosewall on grass of 24 to 14.

Later that year, Gonzales sued in California superior court to have his seven-year contract with Kramer declared invalid. As proof of his claim, Gonzales cited being paid 25 percent of the gate instead of the stipulated 20 percent. Judge Leon T. David found Gonzales's reasoning implausible and ruled in favor of Kramer. Gonzales remained bound to Kramer by contract until 1960."[83] Gonzales was ranked world No. 1 pro by Jack March for the 1957 season.[84] Gonzales was also ranked No. 1 in October 1957 in a combined pro/amateur ranking by Adrian Quist.[85]

1958 edit

The most difficult challenge that Gonzales faced during his dominant years came from Lew Hoad, the powerful young Australian who had won four Grand Slam titles as an amateur. In the 1958 world series[86] tour, Gonzales and Hoad (in his rookie year), played head-to-head 87 times. Hoad won the Australian series 8 to 5, and 18 of the first 27 matches. It appeared that he was about to displace Gonzales as the professional world champion. Gonzales, however, revamped and improved his backhand.[87][88][89][90][91][92] Also, Hoad suffered back trouble beginning in early March which reduced his ability to play at a high level and contributed and coincided with the turnaround in results on the tour. Gonzales won the 1958 series by a margin of 51 wins to 36 wins for Hoad.

In January, Gonzales finished third in the Kooyong Tournament of Champions, the richest tournament of the year, losing his match to Hoad.[93] In May, he beat Hoad in the final at Cleveland as Hoad's leg injury worsened. Gonzales received his record sixth Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy award for the victory. Gonzales won the 1958 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions with a 5–1 record, defeating Rosewall in the deciding match. He lost to Hoad in the semifinal at the Roland Garros World Professional Championships. Gonzales lost to Sedgman in the semifinal of the World Professional Indoor Championships at Wembley, and had earlier lost to him in the semifinal of the Sydney Masters. Jack March ranked Gonzales the world No. 1 professional tennis player for 1958[94] and Jack Kramer also ranked Gonzales world No. 1 pro for 1958.[95]

1959 edit

Gonzales played Hoad again in the 4-man World Professional Championship Tour in 1959 and Pancho finished with 13 wins and 15 losses against Hoad, but Gonzales achieved a perfect record against rookies Cooper and Anderson to keep his world championship title. The series concluded at the end of May and Gonzales was proclaimed in 1959 and 1960 press reports as the "world champion".[96][97][98][99][100] Gonzales was referred to in a paid advertisement for the pro tour in a 1960 Boston Globe edition as "world champion".[101] Gonzales beat Hoad to retain his Cleveland title, played during the 4-man tour and not part of the Ampol Open Trophy tournament series.

Gonzales finished second to Hoad in the point ranking on the 1959/1960 Ampol Open Trophy world series of tournaments, winning four of the tournaments (Sydney Marks Athletic Field, L.A. Tennis Club Masters, Toronto Lawn Tennis Club O'Keefe, Ampol White City TOC), losing the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions final to Hoad, but winning the White City Tournament of Champions, where he beat Hoad in the final. Gonzales defaulted the final and deciding Ampol series tournament in December, the Qantas Kooyong, to spend the holidays in the U.S.

Jack Kramer ranked Gonzales as the world No. 1 professional tennis player for 1959 in his personal pro ranking list[102] (different from Kramer's point ranking list) with Sedgman No. 2, Rosewall No. 3, and Hoad as No. 4. Robert Roy of L'Équipe magazine agreed with Gonzales as No. 1 and Hoad as No. 5 for 1959.[102] Jack March ranked Gonzales number one in his pro ranking list for the 1959 season with Hoad second.[103]

1960 edit

Gonzales faced Rosewall, Segura and new pro signing Alex Olmedo on the 1960 World Professional Championship tour (Trabert also played a few matches early on). Gonzales was at the peak of his form, beating Rosewall 20 to 5 and easily overcoming Segura and Olmedo. During a match against Segura at White Plains on February 13, 1960, Gonzales served 33 aces.[104] In April 1960 it was reported that "Pancho Gonzales, world's pro tennis champ since 1954, confirmed his recent announcement that he would quit Jack Kramer's touring troupe May 1. However, Gonzales said he might play in a few pro tournaments after that if they did not involve touring".[105] Gonzales did return to touring and played in the 1961 World Series. Gonzales and Hoad did not play against each other in 1960. Kramer ranked Gonzales as world No. 1 professional tennis player for 1960[106] with Sedgman No. 2, Rosewall No. 3, and Hoad No. 4, the same ranking order for the third straight year.

1961 edit

The 1961 World Series would not feature Rosewall, who opted not to play. Gonzales beat Andrés Gimeno, Trabert (replacing Hoad), Sedgman (also replacing Hoad), Hoad (who withdrew with a broken foot), Barry MacKay, Olmedo, and Butch Buchholz. The top two players, Gonzales and Gimeno then played a head-to-head series to determine the champion. Gonzales beat Gimeno 21 match wins to 7, in single-set matches.

Gonzales beat Gimeno and Sedgman to win at Cleveland[107] (Hoad and Rosewall did not enter). Later in the year there were signs Gonzales' dominance was waning. He lost to Rosewall in the final of the French Pro championships on red clay at Roland Garros, and at Wembley on indoor wood he lost in the semifinals to Hoad. Then Gonzales went into a period of retirement.

1962–1963 edit

Gonzales didn't play on the pro circuit at all in 1962. His only appearance in 1963 was at the United States Professional Championship, which were held that year at the hallowed Forest Hills courts. Gonzales both dismayed and infuriated his colleagues by being the only player who was paid for his participation. Having learned by bitter experience about the exigencies of the pro tour, Gonzales had demanded, and received, US$5,000 in advance for his appearance in the tournament.[108] An out-of-shape, semi-retired Gonzales was beaten in the first round by Alex Olmedo.[109] Ken Rosewall eventually beat Rod Laver in the finals but neither of them collected a penny: the promoter had failed to obtain a television contract, could not meet his costs and couldn't pay any prize money to any of the players.[110]

1964 edit

Gonzales returned to play on the pro circuit in 1964. By now, Rod Laver had arrived in the pro ranks.

In early May, 1964, Gonzales defeated Gimeno and Anderson to win the Cleveland World Pro, his ninth Cleveland title.[111] Arguably Gonzales' best tournament victory of 1964 came in late May at the U.S. Pro Indoors at White Plains. After coming from a set down to beat both Laver and Hoad earlier in the event, Gonzales trailed Rosewall in the best of five set final by 2 sets to 0 and 1–4.[112] Trailing by two service breaks in the third set, Gonzales managed to turn the match around and won in five sets in a final that lasted 3 hours and 11 minutes.[113] Gonzales finished third behind Rosewall and Laver in the points series for the season, which did not include the Australian tournaments.[114]

1965–1967 edit

Despite a good comeback year in 1964, Gonzales was no longer the top pro. In January 1965, Gonzales won the New South Wales Pro in Sydney beating Laver and Rosewall.[115] Gonzales also beat Laver and Rosewall to win the 1965 CBS TV Pro at Dallas on a clay surface. The tournament was the richest of the year, and was broadcast nationally on the CBS television network. Gonzales was the leading money winner on the pro tour through the U.S. series of tournaments with $18,945,[116] not including the $8,000 first prize for winning the Dallas event. However, Gonzales did not play in Europe that year, and Laver, Rosewall, Gimeno and Buchholz all earned more prize money than Gonzales by the end of the year.[117] By the late 1960s Gonzales was a declining force, though still a big drawing card. Laver was the top player in these late sixties years.

Open tennis edit

1968 edit

In April 1968, he was the first professional to lose to an amateur, the British player Mark Cox. The then-24-year-old Cox beat Gonzales at the British Hard Court Championships at Bournemouth, in five sets, in two and a quarter hours.[118]

The first major open tournament was the 1968 French Open, when Gonzales had just turned 40. In spite of the fact that he had been semi-retired for a number of years and that the tournament was held on slow clay courts that penalize serve-and-volley players, Gonzales beat the 1967 defending champion Roy Emerson in the quarterfinals.[119] He then lost in the semifinals to Rod Laver. He lost in the third round of 1968 Wimbledon but later beat the second-seeded Tony Roche in the fourth round of the 1968 US Open, before losing an epic match to the Dutch Tom Okker.

Gonzales finished third in the NTL rankings for 1968, and was selected to enter the season combined professional final at Madison Square Garden together with the top four WCT players in an eight-man field. Gonzales won a close dramatic win over Rosewall, then defeated Gimeno in the semifinal, before losing the final to Roche.[120]

1969 edit

In 1969, it was Gonzales's turn to prevail in the longest match ever played till that time, one so long and arduous that it resulted in the advent of tiebreak scoring. As a 41-year-old at Wimbledon, Gonzales met Charlie Pasarell, a Puerto Rican younger than Gonzales by 16 years who revered his opponent. Pasarell won a lengthy 46-game first set, then with daylight fading, the 41-year-old Gonzales argued that the match should be suspended. The referee didn't relent, and the petulant Gonzales virtually threw the second set. At the break, the referee agreed the players should stop. Gonzales was booed as he walked off Centre Court. The next day, the serves, the volleys, and all the prowess that made Gonzales a fiery competitor surfaced. Pasarell, seeking to exploit Gonzales's advanced years, tried to aim soft service returns at Gonzales's feet and tire him with frequent lobs. Gonzales rebounded to win three straight sets. In the fifth set, Gonzales saved all seven match points that Pasarell had against him, twice coming back from 0–40 deficits, to walk off the court the eventual winner in a 5-hour, 12-minute match.[9] The final score was 22–24, 1–6, 16–14, 6–3, 11–9. Gonzales went on to the fourth round of the championship, where he was beaten in four sets by Arthur Ashe. The match with Pasarell, however, is still remembered as one of the highlights in the history of tennis and was called one of "The Ten Greatest Matches of the Open Era", in the November/December 2003 issue of TENNIS magazine.[121]

The match would (largely due to the introduction of the tie break) remain the longest in terms of games played until the 11 hours and 183 games long Isner–Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships.

In late 1969, Gonzales won the Howard Hughes Open in Las Vegas and the Pacific Southwest Open in Los Angeles, beating, among others, John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall, Stan Smith (twice), Cliff Richey, and Arthur Ashe.[122] He was the top American money-winner for 1969 with US$46,288.

1970 edit

Roy Emerson, the Australian player who won 12 major titles during the 1960s as an amateur when most of the best players in the world were professionals, turned pro in early 1968 at the age of 31, having won the French Championships the year before. Gonzales, at the age of 40, beat Emerson in five sets in the quarterfinals of the 1968 French Open. In the following years, Gonzales beat Emerson another 11 times, apparently losing very few matches to him. In the Champions Classic of 1970 in Miami, Florida, however, Emerson did beat Gonzales in straight sets.[123]

Gonzales continued to play in the occasional tournament in his 40s. He could also occasionally beat the clear number-one player in the world, Rod Laver. Their most famous meeting was a US$10,000 winner-take-all match before a crowd of 14,761 in Madison Square Garden in January 1970. Coming just after the Australian had completed a calendar-year sweep of the Grand Slams, the 41-year-old Gonzales beat Laver in five sets.[124]

1971 edit

In spite of the fact that Gonzales was still known as a serve-and-volley player, in 1971, when he was 43 and Jimmy Connors was 19, he beat the great young baseliner by playing him from the baseline at the Pacific Southwest Open.[125] Around this time, Gonzales relocated to Las Vegas to be the Tennis Director at Caesars Palace, and he hired Chuck Pate, his childhood friend, to run the Pro Shop.

1972 edit

In 1972, Gonzales became the oldest player to have ever won a professional tournament, winning the 1972 Des Moines Open, which was part of the USLTA Indoor Circuit, over 24-year-old Georges Goven when he was three months shy of his 44th birthday.[126] In June 1972, Gonzales reached the semifinals of the Queen's Club Championships, at age 44, and was leading by a set against John Paish when he was disqualified by the tournament referee after an argument over the replacement of a linesman.[127][128]

1973 edit

At South Orange in August, Gonzales beat John Lloyd, Sandy Mayer and Paul Gerken (all players more than twenty years younger than himself) before losing in the semifinals to Vijay Amritraj.[129] Gonzales made his final Grand Slam singles appearance, losing in round one of the US Open to Tom Okker. In September, Gonzales lost in the second round of the Pacific southwest championships in Los Angeles to Jimmy Connors.[130]

Personal and family life edit

González's parents, Manuel Antonio González and Carmen Alire Alonso, migrated from the Mexican state of Chihuahua to the U.S. in the early 1900s. González was born in 1928, the eldest of seven children. Kramer writes that "Gorgo was not the poor Mexican-American that people assumed. He didn't come from a wealthy family, but from a stable middle-class background, probably a lot like mine. He had a great mother and there was always a warm feeling of family loyalty. If anything, he might have been spoiled as a kid. It's a shame he suffered discrimination because of his Mexican heritage." However, according to other sources, Gonzales's father worked as a house-painter and he, along with his six siblings, were raised in a working-class neighborhood. In his autobiography, González states, "We had few luxuries at our house. Food wasn't abundant but it was simple and filling, and we never went hungry. Our clothes were just clothes – inexpensive but clean."[131]

González had a long scar across his left cheek that, according to his autobiography, some members of the mass media of the 1940s attributed to his being a Mexican-American pachuco and hence involved in knife fights. It was one more slur that embittered González towards the media in general. The scar was actually the result of a prosaic street accident in 1935 when he was seven years old. He pushed a scooter too fast, ran into a passing car, and had his cheek gashed open by its door handle. He spent two weeks in the hospital as a result.[132]

Gonzales was referred to as either "Richard" or "Ricardo" by his friends and family. As the child of working-class Hispanic parents, young Richard was well aware of the social prejudices of his day. He reportedly disliked the nickname "Pancho", as it was a common derogatory term used against Mexican Americans at the time.[133] In the Hispanic community, the name "Pancho" is traditionally only given to individuals whose first name is "Francisco", as was the case with Gonzales' tennis rival, Pancho Segura.

Gonzales reportedly was "haunted by race issues throughout his life...Six months before he died, he told his brother Ralph that he should have taken the offer of the Mexican government in 1948 to give up his U.S. citizenship and play for Mexico. His bitterness at how he had been treated by his American WASP colleagues on the tour stayed with him all his life."[134]

Although his surname was properly spelled "González", during most of his playing career he was known as "Gonzales". It was only towards the end of his life that the Spanish-language spelling began to be used regularly.

Gonzales became a television commentator for ABC, a rare presence at tournaments. Described as an adequate but unmotivated commentator, Gonzales would issue thoughtful comments – often magnanimous, occasionally harsh, always candid – on contemporary pros.[9]

For decades Gonzales had made US$75,000 a year from an endorsement contract with Spalding for racquets and balls but was unable to get along with the company personnel. Finally, in 1981, after nearly 30 years, Spalding refused to renew the contract. He had also been the Tennis Director and Tournament Director at Caesars Palace on the Las Vegas Strip for 16 years, another lucrative job. In 1985, he was fired after refusing to give playing lessons to the wife of his boss.[23] As S. L. Price wrote about Gonzales in a 2002 Sports Illustrated article, "There was no more perfect match than Pancho and Vegas: both dark and disreputable, both hard and mean and impossible to ignore."

Gonzales married and divorced six times and had nine children: he wed his childhood sweetheart, Henrietta Pedrin, on March 23, 1948; they had three children. He married actress (and Miss Rheingold of 1958) Madelyn Darrow (sister of Barbara Darrow) twice; they had three children including twin girls.[135] He married his dental hygienist, Betty, in Beverly Hills, and had one daughter. His last wife, Rita, is the elder sister of Andre Agassi, and they had one son. According to Price's article, Rita's father, Mike Agassi hated Gonzales so much that he considered having him killed.[136] Gonzales had coached the young Rita until she had rebelled against her father's 5,000-balls-a-day-regimen and first moved in with, then married, on March 31, 1984, the much-older Gonzales. Years before, Mike Agassi, already a tennis fanatic, had once served as a linesman for one of Gonzales's professional matches in Chicago. Gonzales had upbraided Agassi so severely for perceived miscalls that Agassi walked away and sat in the stands.[137]

Kramer says that "Gonzales never seemed to get along with his various wives, although this never stopped him from getting married... Segura once said, 'You know, the nicest thing Gorgo ever says to his wives is 'Shut up'". Following a ten-month battle with stomach cancer, Gonzales died on July 3, 1995, at the Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas at the age of 67, in poverty and estranged from his ex-wives and children except for Rita and their son, Skylar.[138] Andre Agassi paid for his funeral.[139]

Gonzales played tennis with the actor Robert Redford while Redford was growing up.[140]

Assessment and Tennis legacy edit

In his professional career, Gonzales won the United States Professional Championship nine times, including twice in the same year, a unique achievement in tennis history. He won the USPLTA version of the U.S. Pro in L.A. in 1954, and the Cleveland U.S. Pro version another eight times, the Wembley professional title in London four times, and the Tournament of Champions three times (1957 Forest Hills, 1958 Forest Hills, 1959 Sydney White City), the Los Angeles Masters three times (1956, 1957, 1959), the U.S. Professional Indoor three times (1950 Philadelphia, 1952 Philadelphia, 1964 White Plains), plus beating, in seven head-to-head pro tours, all of the best amateurs who turned pro. During this time Gonzales was known for his fiery will to win, his cannonball serve, and his outstanding net game, a combination so potent that the rules on the 1960 professional tour were briefly changed to prohibit him from advancing to the net immediately after serving. Under the new rules, the returned serve had to bounce before the server could make his own first shot, thereby keeping Gonzales from playing his usual serve-and-volley game. He won even so, and the rules were changed back. Kramer also tried moving the service line to a yard behind the baseline; once again, Gonzales won in spite of the change.[141]

Most of Gonzales's career as a professional took place before the start of the Open era of tennis, and he was therefore ineligible to compete at the Grand Slam events between the end of 1949 (when he turned pro) and the start of the open era in April 1968. As has been observed about other great players such as Rod Laver, Gonzales almost certainly would have won a number of additional Grand Slam titles had he been permitted to compete in those tournaments during that 18-year period. Jack Kramer, for instance, has speculated in an article about the theoretical champions of Forest Hills and Wimbledon that Gonzales would have won an additional 12 titles in those two tournaments alone.[142] From 1952 through 1961 Gonzales was considered the best of this time period, with some saying he had taken the crown from Bill Tilden as the best of all time.[143] Gonzales has been rated one of the greatest in the history of the sport.[144] He was ranked the world No. 1 tennis player in some rankings from 1952 to 1961.[145] The Tennis Hall of Fame says Gonzales "rose to the world No. 1 ranking, holding that lofty perch from 1952 to 1960."[36] Other sources state that Gonzales was world number one for an eight-year period.[146][147][148] The tennis rankings of that era were composed by tennis writers, promoters, and players. Only in 1946, 1959, 1960, and 1964 to 1968 was there a point system based on tournament series to provide a No. 1 ranking for professional play. Gonzales was the No. 1 money winner on the American portion of the 1965 season. Gonzales was runner-up for the combined WCT/NTL professional tours championship final in 1968, losing the final at Madison Square Garden to Tony Roche.

Gonzalez was reported to be the first tennis player to earn a half-million dollars in career prize money.[149][150][151] By mid-1965 he had earned US$740,000, excluding income from product endorsements, appearances, and lessons.[152]

According to his autobiography, Gonzales stood 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) and weighed 183 pounds (83 kg) by the time he was 19 years old.[153] Other sources generally credit him as being an inch or two shorter but in any case he would enjoy a clear advantage in height over a number of his most prominent rivals, particularly Pancho Segura, Ken Rosewall, and Rod Laver, all of whom were at least 5 or 6 inches shorter. Tony Trabert, who was badly beaten by Gonzales on their 101-match tour and who disliked him intensely, saying "I appreciated his tennis ability but I never came to respect him as a person;"[154] he nevertheless told the Los Angeles Times that "Gonzales is the greatest natural athlete tennis has ever known. The way he can move that 6-foot-3-inch frame of his around the court is almost unbelievable. He's just like a big cat... Pancho's reflexes and reactions are God-given talents. He can be moving in one direction and in the split second it takes him to see that the ball is hit to his weak side, he's able to throw his physical mechanism in reverse and get to the ball in time to reach it with his racket."[155] The flamboyant Gussie Moran, who briefly toured with the Gonzales group, said that watching Gonzales was like seeing "a god patrolling his personal heaven."[23]

Arthur Ashe called Gonzales "the only idol he ever had."[156] Allen Fox said "Pancho Gonzales was, if not the best player of all time, certainly one of the best."[157] In a 1972 article about an imaginary tournament among the all-time greats, Gene Scott had the fourth-seeded Gonzales upsetting Bill Tilden in the semifinals and then using his serve to beat Rod Laver in the finals.[158][159]

Tennis commentator, journalist and author Bud Collins, the editor of "The History of Tennis" (2016), is guarded. He writes that Gonzales was "probably as good as anyone who ever played the game, if not better." However, he also states that Rod Laver would "be known as possibly the greatest player ever." and calls Bill Tilden "perhaps the greatest player of them all."[160]

In 1978, Ellsworth Vines ranked his all-time top 10 in Tennis Myth and Method and rated Gonzales number three, behind Budge and Kramer.[161]

Jack Kramer, on the other hand, who became a world-class player in 1940 and then beat Gonzales badly in the latter's first year as a professional, has stated that he believes that although Gonzales was better than either Laver or Sampras,[162] he was not as good as either Ellsworth Vines or Don Budge. Kramer, who had a long and frequently bitter relationship with Gonzales, rates him only as one of the four players who are second to Budge and Vines in his estimation.[b] Kramer also stated that Bobby Riggs would have beaten Gonzales on a regular basis, and he ranked Riggs above Gonzales, stating "On a long tour...I'm sure he would have beaten Gonzales — Bobby was too quick, he had too much control for Pancho."

Jack Kramer wrote that although Laver was "absolutely unbeatable for a year or two late in the 1960s", a "careful comparison" could be made between Laver and the somewhat older Gonzales and that Kramer is "positive that Gonzales could have beaten Laver regularly."[164][165]

Kramer sees as evidence of Gonzales's superiority over Laver the fact that Gonzales defeated Laver in a five-set match before 14,761 spectators in New York's Madison Square Garden in January 1970, when Gonzales was 41 years old and Laver was still considered the world No. 1 player.[166] On the other hand, Gonzales was still a top ten player when this match occurred and Laver subsequently won the tournament event played there, beating Gonzales in a straight sets semifinal.

During the span of seven years that they faced each other, Laver was 26–32 and Gonzales was 36–42 years old. While the peak of Laver was in the late 60s, the peak of Gonzales was in the mid-to-late 50s. Gonzales had a great longevity that made possible this rivalry. However, the overall record could be biased in favor of Laver because of the difference of ten years between them. For the 1964 season, Gonzales held a head-to-head edge over Laver.

In 2007, after Gonzales and Hoad were both dead, Kramer gave a higher assessment of both players, rating them among the top five players of all time, chronologically Vines, Budge, Gonzales, Hoad, and Federer. Kramer had expressed a competitive relationship with both Gonzales and Hoad during his years as tour manager, but time had mellowed his assessment of them.

Early in 1986, Inside Tennis, a magazine published in Northern California, devoted parts of four issues to a lengthy article called "Tournament of the Century", an imaginary tournament to determine the greatest of all time. They asked 37 tennis notables such as Kramer, Budge, Perry, and Riggs and observers such as Bud Collins[c] to list the ten greatest players in order. Twenty-five players in all were named by the 37 experts in their lists of the ten best. The magazine then ranked them in descending order by total number of points assigned. The top eight players in overall points, with their number of first-place votes, were: Rod Laver (9), John McEnroe (3), Don Budge (4), Jack Kramer (5), Björn Borg (6), Pancho Gonzales (1), Bill Tilden (6), and Lew Hoad (1). Gonzales was ranked the sixth-best player, with only Allen Fox casting a vote for him as the greatest of all time.[167]

In the early years of the 21st century, Sidney Wood compiled his list of the Greatest Players of All Time (later published posthumously in a memoir "The Wimbledon final that never was and other tennis tales from a bygone era"). Wood first entered Wimbledon in 1927 and won the title in 1931. "From that time on, through to the late 1970s (doubles only towards the end), I was privileged to compete against virtually every top player in the world", said Wood. Wood ranked Gonzales number four, behind Budge, Kramer, and Tilden.[168]

In the Tennis Channel series "The 100 Greatest of All Time" in 2012, Gonzales was ranked the 22nd greatest male tennis player of all time, just behind his longtime tennis rivals Lew Hoad (19th) and Jack Kramer (21st), and just ahead of Lacoste (23rd) and Djokovic (24th).

In 2014, Frank Sedgman ranked Gonzales number four, behind Jack Kramer, Roger Federer and Rod Laver, in his greatest male tennis players of all-time list in his autobiography 'Game, Sedge and Match'.[169]

After his death, a Sports Illustrated article stated: "If earth was on the line in a tennis match, the man you want serving to save humankind would be Ricardo Alonso Gonzales."[6] Longtime tennis commentator Bud Collins echoed it in 2006: "If I had to choose someone to play for my life, it would be Pancho Gonzales."[170]

Hoad was Gonzales's toughest opponent on grass, with Hoad holding a 21 to 14 (60%) lifetime edge, although Gonzales held a lifetime head-to-head edge against Rosewall on grass of 24 to 14 (63%). Gonzales held a lifetime edge over Hoad overall at 104–78 (57%).[171] Gonzales's lifetime edge over Rosewall was 117–87 (57%).[172] In head-to-head world championship tours, Gonzales led Hoad 64 to 51 (56%), and led Rosewall 70 to 31 (70%).

Honors edit

Gonzales was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame at Newport in 1968.

California State University, Los Angeles named their Tennis Center the Rosie Casals/Pancho Gonzalez Tennis Center in 2013.[173]

Performance timeline for major tournaments edit

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.
Career SR Career W-L Career Win %
Grand Slam tournaments Amateur Professional Open Era 2 / 17 44–15 75%
1947 1948 1949 1950–1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973
Australian A A A Unable to compete 3R A A A A 0 / 1 2–1 67%
French A A SF Unable to compete SF A A A A A 0 / 2 9–2 82%
Wimbledon A A 4R Unable to compete 3R 4R A 2R 2R A 0 / 5 10–5 67%
U.S. 2R W W Unable to compete QF 4R 3R 3R 1R 1R 2 / 9 23–7 77%
Pro Slam tournaments Professional 13 / 27 65–14 82%
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967
U.S. Pro A A RU F W W W W W W W W A W A QF F SF A A 9 / 14 36–5 88%
French Pro NH F NH SF A A F A A SF A A A 0 / 4 7–4 64%
Wembley Pro W W W F NH W SF SF A A SF A A SF A A A 4 / 9 22–5 81%

Major finals edit

Grand Slam tournaments edit

Singles: 2 (2 titles) edit

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Win 1948 U.S. Championships Grass   Eric Sturgess 6–2, 6–3, 14–12
Win 1949 U.S. Championships Grass   Ted Schroeder 16–18, 2–6, 6–1, 6–2, 6–4

Doubles: 2 (2 titles) edit

Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1949 French Championships Grass   Frank Parker   Eustace Fannin
  Eric Sturgess
6–3, 8–6, 5–7, 6–3
Win 1949 Wimbledon Grass   Frank Parker   Gardnar Mulloy
  Ted Schroeder
6–4, 6–4, 6–2

Pro Slam tournaments edit

Singles: 19 (13 titles, 6 runner-ups) edit

Result Year Championship Surface Opponent Score
Win 1950 Wembley Pro Indoor   Welby Van Horn 6–3, 6–3, 6–2
Loss 1951 U.S. Pro Grass   Pancho Segura 3–6, 4–6, 2–6
Win 1951 Wembley Pro Indoor   Pancho Segura 6–2, 6–2, 2–6, 6–4
Loss 1952 U.S. Pro Indoor   Pancho Segura 6–3, 4–6, 6–3, 4–6, 0–6
Win 1952 Wembley Pro Indoor   Jack Kramer 3–6, 3–6, 6–2, 6–4, 7–5
Win 1953 U.S. Pro Indoor   Don Budge 4–6, 6–4, 7–5, 6–2
Loss 1953 Wembley Pro Indoor   Frank Sedgman 1–6, 2–6, 2–6
Win 1954 U.S. Pro Indoor   Frank Sedgman 6–3, 9–7, 3–6, 6–2
Win 1954 U.S. Pro Cement   Pancho Segura 6–4, 4–6, 2–6, 6–2, 6–4
Win 1955 U.S. Pro Indoor   Pancho Segura 21–16, 19–21, 21–8, 20–22, 21–19
Win 1956 U.S. Pro Indoor   Pancho Segura 21–15, 13–21, 21–14, 22–20
Loss 1956 French Pro Clay   Tony Trabert 3–6, 6–4, 7–5, 6–8, 2–6
Win 1956 Wembley Pro Indoor   Frank Sedgman 4–6, 11–9, 11–9, 9–7
Win 1957 U.S. Pro Indoor   Pancho Segura 6–3, 3–6, 7–5, 6–1
Win 1958 U.S. Pro Indoor   Lew Hoad 3–6, 4–6, 14–12, 6–1, 6–4
Win 1959 U.S. Pro Indoor   Lew Hoad 6–4, 6–2, 6–4
Win 1961 U.S. Pro Indoor   Frank Sedgman 6–3, 7–5
Loss 1961 French Pro Clay   Ken Rosewall 6–2, 4–6, 3–6, 6–8
Loss 1964 U.S. Pro Grass   Rod Laver 6–4, 3–6, 5–7, 4–6

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Segura was the defending champion from that version of the U.S. Pro last held in 1951 at Forest Hills[47] (there was also the Cleveland US Pro, described as such in contemporary press reports and by Jack Kramer and Pancho Gonzales in their autobiographies. It was also approved by the Professional Players Association of Tennis (PPAT) in the early 1950's.[48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57]) The 1951 U.S. Pro at Forest Hills was the previous time before the 1954 L.A. Tennis Club U.S. Pro that the winner was awarded the Benrus Cup.[47] The Cup was under the jurisdiction of the USPLTA.[58][59] The Cleveland promoter, Jack March, had applied to the USPLTA (an organisation of teaching professionals) in 1952 for their sanction of the Cleveland tournament as the U.S. Pro, but was not successful, and would use the term International Pro and, from 1953, World Pro for his Cleveland tournament.[60][61][62] The 1954 U.S. Pro at L.A. would be the only occasion where Gonzales was awarded the USPLTA's Benrus Cup. The Cleveland World Pro Championships awarded different trophies, the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy from 1951 to 1958, the Leisy Brewing Trophy in 1959, and the Pepsi-Cola Trophy from 1960 to 1964. Jack March reportedly warned of legal action against Kramer in 1960 to maintain the Cleveland tournament's exclusive rights to the "World Pro Tennis Championships" title name.[63] Kramer had been using the title "World's Professional Championship of Tennis" to describe his own tours in his brochures. Kramer changed his brochures to "World Series" for the 1961 pro tour. March would continue to bill the Cleveland event as "World Pro" until its final installment in 1964.
  2. ^ In his 1979 autobiography Kramer considered the best ever to have been either Don Budge (for consistent play) or Ellsworth Vines (at the height of his game). The next four best were, chronologically, Bill Tilden, Fred Perry, Bobby Riggs, and Pancho Gonzales. After these six came the "second echelon" of Rod Laver, Lew Hoad, Ken Rosewall, Gottfried von Cramm, Ted Schroeder, Jack Crawford, Pancho Segura, Frank Sedgman, Tony Trabert, John Newcombe, Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith, Björn Borg, and Jimmy Connors He felt unable to rank Henri Cochet and René Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best.[163]
  3. ^ The 37 were: Vijay Amritraj, Arthur Ashe, Lennart Bergelin (Björn Borg's coach), Nick Bollettieri, Norm Brooks, Don Budge, Nick Carter, Bud Collins, Allison Danzig, Donald Dell, Cliff Drysdale, Allen Fox, John Gardiner, Dick Gould, Slew Hester, Bill Jacobsen, Alan King, Jack Kramer, Art Larsen, Rod Laver, Bob Lutz, Barry MacKay, Marty Mulligan. Yannick Noah, Manuel Orantes, Charlie Pasarell, Fred Perry, Whitney Reed, Bobby Riggs, Vic Seixas, Stan Smith, Bill Talbert, Eliot Teltscher, Ted Tinling, Tony Trabert, Dennis Van der Meer, Erik van Dillen.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b "Pancho Gonzales: Career match record". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "BROMWICH RANKED 6th". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XIII, no. 174. Australia. October 11, 1948. p. 11. Retrieved November 22, 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ a b "Frank Sedgman Rated Fifth". The Age. No. 29, 503. Victoria, Australia. November 17, 1949. p. 14. Retrieved November 26, 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ a b "Australian is 3rd on world tennis table". North-Eastern Courier. Vol. 24, no. 1359. Western Australia. November 4, 1949. p. 8 (MODERN WEEKLY News Magazine). Retrieved November 22, 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ "Pancho Gonzales, Tennis Hall of Fame profile". tennisfame.com.
  6. ^ a b "Richard "Pancho" Gonzales". International Tennis Hall of Fame. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  7. ^ Cy Rice (1959). Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales. A S Barnes and Co. p. 26. ASIN B000F79V9Y.
  8. ^ Cy Rice (1959). Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales. A S Barnes and Co. p. various pages. ASIN B000F79V9Y.
  9. ^ a b c Joel Drucker (September 26, 2008). "Irascible Gonzales's resolve to win came at a price". ESPN. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  10. ^ "The Natural: Remembering Pancho Gonzalez". tennisnow.com.
  11. ^ Bercow (2014), p. 61
  12. ^ "Gonzales forces Mulloy to 5 sets". The Daily News. New York. September 9, 1947 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Register". Los Angeles Times. September 28, 1947 – via newspapers.com.
  14. ^ Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales, as Told to Cy Rice (1959)
  15. ^ "Irascible Gonzalez's resolve to win came at a price". espn.co.uk. September 23, 2008.
  16. ^ Bud Collins' Modern Encyclopedia of Tennis (1994), p.594
  17. ^ "Register". The Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph. June 12, 1949 – via newspapers.com.
  18. ^ Historical dictionary of tennis, John Grasso (2011)
  19. ^ The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis (1979), Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (ISBN 0-399-12336-9), page 177
  20. ^ "Pancho tops Ted, Todd trips Moran". Los Angeles Times. February 14, 1949. p. 53.
  21. ^ Tennis Magazine, on page 330 of The Tennis Book, Edited by Michael Bartlett and Bob Gillen
  22. ^ The Game, Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (1981 André Deutsch edition), p. 199-200
  23. ^ a b c d e The Lone Wolf, by S. L. Price, Sports Illustrated, June 26, 2002.
  24. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 195
  25. ^ a b c Bercow (2014), p. 65
  26. ^ "Register". The Evening Standard. Uniontown. March 28, 1951 – via newspapers.com.
  27. ^ "Register". Philadelphia Inquirer. March 29, 1951 – via newspapers.com.
  28. ^ "Register". Detroit Free Press. July 5, 1951 – via newspapers.com.
  29. ^ Little Pancho: The Life of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura, Caroline Seebohm (2009)
  30. ^ The history of Professional Tennis, Joe McCauley (2000)
  31. ^ "Register". San Francisco Examiner. March 30, 1952 – via newspapers.com.
  32. ^ "Register". Los Angeles Times. April 21, 1952 – via newspapers.com.
  33. ^ "Register". The Guardian. August 4, 1952 – via newspapers.com.
  34. ^ "Register". The Guardian. September 27, 1952 – via newspapers.com.
  35. ^ "Register". The Pittsburgh Press. June 8, 1952 – via newspapers.com.
  36. ^ a b "Tennis Hall of Fame bio". Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  37. ^ "Register". Arizona Republic. August 13, 1952 – via Newspapers.com.
  38. ^ World Tennis, June 1953
  39. ^ "Register". The Guardian. November 21, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  40. ^ "Register". The Age. November 24, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  41. ^ Tennis de France, February 1954, volume 10, P. 3, 4, 5
  42. ^ March, Jack (July 1953). "Gonzales Wins Pro Title". World Tennis. Vol. 1, no. 2. New York. p. 31.
  43. ^ "Register". Brisbane Courier-Mail. October 31, 1953 – via Trove.
  44. ^ "Sedgman and Gonzales win". Los Angeles Times. May 2, 1954. p. 13, part II.
  45. ^ a b McCauley (2000), p. 64
  46. ^ "Register". Los Angeles Times. June 14, 1954 – via newspapers.com.
  47. ^ a b L.A. Times, 11 May 1954, p.58
  48. ^ The Game, Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, (1981 André Deutsch edition), p. 205
  49. ^ "Register". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 20, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  50. ^ Harold E. Donohue (July 1956). "Pancho Gonzales: Mixed-Up Champion". Pageant. p. 112.
  51. ^ "Register". Corpus Christi Caller Times. March 12, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  52. ^ "Register". The Philadelphia Inquirer. April 4, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  53. ^ "Register". The Tampa Tribune. April 11, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  54. ^ "Register". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 27, 1953 – via newspapers.com.
  55. ^ "Register". The Times. Shreveport. February 16, 1956 – via newspapers.com.
  56. ^ "Register". Star Press. Muncie. March 18, 1957 – via newspapers.com.
  57. ^ Man with a racket: The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales (1959), p.111
  58. ^ "Pancho Gonzales given top seeding for pro net tourney; Segura second". Los Angeles Times. June 2, 1954. p. 2, part IV.
  59. ^ "Gonzales scores gruelling 5-set victory over Segura". Los Angeles Times. June 14, 1954. p. 4, part IV.
  60. ^ The Racquet, "Professional Lawn Tennis Association News", February 1952
  61. ^ New York Times, 4 May 1958, Sports section, P. 2
  62. ^ Sports Illustrated, 16 April 1956. https://vault.si.com/vault/1956/04/16/tennis-talk
  63. ^ World Tennis, Feb. 1960
  64. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 201–202
  65. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 202
  66. ^ "Gonzales tops". The Akron Beacon Journal. December 22, 1954. p. 34 – via Newspapers.com. A committee of the International Professional Tennis Association today ranked Richard "Pancho" Gonzales of Los Angeles at the top of its ratings. Winner of the world professional championship here last Summer, Gonzales beat out Francisco "Pancho" Segura, second place in the ratings. Australia's Frank Sedgman was third.
  67. ^ The History of Professional Tennis, Joe McCauley
  68. ^ a b Prescott Sullivan (December 15, 1955). "Loser of Trabert-Gonzales Pro tennis series will be out in cold". San Francisco Examiner. pp. 9–10, Section II.
  69. ^ The Game, Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (1981 André Deutsch edition)
  70. ^ Jerry Magee (October 18, 2005). "Legend ignored?". The San Diego Union-Tribune. signonsandiego.com. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  71. ^ L.A. Times, 30 July 1956
  72. ^ McCauley, P. 204
  73. ^ . The Tribune. Scranton. September 17, 1956. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  74. ^ . The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 30, 1956. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  75. ^ The Daily Mail (London), 1 October 1956
  76. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 66
  77. ^ Le soir (Belgian newspaper), 26 January 1956, p.8
  78. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 72
  79. ^ "Register". The News and Observer. Raleigh. April 28, 1957 – via newspapers.com.
  80. ^ Man with a racket: The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as told to Cy Rice (1959), p.174
  81. ^ Man with a racket: The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as told to Cy Rice (1959), p.175
  82. ^ The Age, 11 January 1958
  83. ^ All information about the Australian tour with Rosewall is from The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis, pages 225–228
  84. ^ Cleveland Plain Dealer, 20 December 1957
  85. ^ "Times have changed". The Sydney Morning Herald. October 27, 1957. p. 32. Retrieved January 26, 2022 – via Google News Archive.
  86. ^ "Register". The Courier-Journal. Louisville. January 5, 1958 – via newspapers.com.
  87. ^ Tennis Myth and Method (1978), Ellsworth Vines and Gene Vier (ISBN 9780670696659), page 52
  88. ^ "The Sports Patrol". Great Falls Tribune. May 4, 1960. p. 15.
  89. ^ "Tennis Lead to Gonzales: Aussie Hoad Blames Conditions for Losses; Pancho Changed Tactics". The Baltimore Sun. April 3, 1958. p. 16.
  90. ^ Paul Menton (April 21, 1958). "Sportopics". The Evening Sun. p. 26.
  91. ^ Charles Johnson (May 8, 1958). "Lowdown on Sports". The Minneapolis Star. p. 73.
  92. ^ Ed Collins (April 29, 1958). "Gonzales Outlasts Hoad in Corning Match". Star Gazette. p. 16.
  93. ^ "Sedgman Win". Sports. The Sydney Morning Herald. January 30, 1958 – via Google News.
  94. ^ McCauley (2000), pp. 88
  95. ^ The Press (Christchurch), 6 March 1959, p.6 "Sportsman's notebook"
  96. ^ "Register". The Daily Reporter. Dover. June 1, 1959 – via newspapers.com.
  97. ^ "Register". Utrechtsch Nieuwsblad. Netherlands. June 2, 1959 – via hetutrechtsarchief.nl.
  98. ^ "Register". Gazette de Lausanne. June 3, 1959 – via letempsarchives.ch.
  99. ^ "Register". Oakland Tribune. January 8, 1960 – via newspapers.com.
  100. ^ "Register". The Bristol Daily Courier. January 12, 1960 – via newspapers.com.
  101. ^ "Register". The Boston Globe. January 27, 1960 – via newspapers.com.
  102. ^ a b McCauley (2000), p. 97
  103. ^ World Tennis, February 1960, 'Around the World' p.45
  104. ^ "Big Pancho Blasts Two Rivals at Center; 'New* Gonzales, Rosewall Delight Fandom". Herald Statesman. Yonkers, New York. February 15, 1960 – via Fulton New York Postcards.
  105. ^ "Register". The Courier-Journal. Louisville. April 16, 1960 – via newspapers.com.
  106. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 104
  107. ^ "Register". The Boston Globe. May 4, 1961 – via newspapers.com.
  108. ^ "A Legend Dies On The Court". Sports Illustrated. July 8, 1963 – via vault.si.com.
  109. ^ "A Legend Dies On The Court". Sports Illustrated. July 8, 1963 – via vault.si.com.
  110. ^ Game, Set and Match: The Tennis Boom of the 1960s and 70s by Herbert Warren Wind (1979)
  111. ^ McCauley, p. 231
  112. ^ "Register". The Journal News. White Plains. June 1, 1964 – via newspapers.com.
  113. ^ "Gonzalez Rallies to Beat Rosewall in 5‐Set Pro Net Final". The New York Times. June 1, 1964.
  114. ^ Butch Buchholz, World Tennis, Dec. 1964
  115. ^ Rod Humphries (January 24, 1965). "Veteran takes singles". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 62.
  116. ^ "Register". The Boston Globe. July 20, 1965 – via newspapers.com.
  117. ^ "Register". Daily News. New York. February 27, 1966. p. 37 – via newspapers.com.
  118. ^ "Mark Cox". Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
  119. ^ "Register". The Journal News. White Plains. June 6, 1968 – via newspapers.com.
  120. ^ McCauley (2000) P. 156
  121. ^ Frank Riley (November–December 2003). "The 10 Greatest Matches of the Open Era". Tennis. TennisForum. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  122. ^ "Gonzales 'going' – again". Evening Independent. September 29, 1969. p. 4C.
  123. ^ John Barrett, ed. (1977). World of Tennis Yearbook 1971. Jane's Information. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-354-09011-7.
  124. ^ Los Angeles Times, 24 January 1970
  125. ^ "Register". Daily News-Post. Monrovia. September 27, 1971 – via newspapers.com.
  126. ^ "Register". The Philadelphia Inquirer. February 7, 1972 – via newspapers.com.
  127. ^ "Gonzalez Is Disqualified In Court By Woman Referee". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. AP. June 23, 1972. p. A6.
  128. ^ "Bea Seal". The Telegraph. February 1, 2011.
  129. ^ "Richard Pancho Gonzales, 1973 Player Activity". atptour.com.
  130. ^ "Richard Pancho Gonzales, 1973 Player Activity". atptour.com.
  131. ^ Cy Rice (1959). Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales. A S Barnes and Co. p. 33. ASIN B000F79V9Y.
  132. ^ "How Did Pancho Gonzales Gain His Facial Scar?". June 29, 2021. Retrieved October 5, 2023.
  133. ^ Hispanic Magazine.com – Nov 2006 – The Latin Forum October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  134. ^ Little Pancho: The Life of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura: Seebohm, Caroline: 9780803220416, p. 101
  135. ^ Clemens, Samuel (March 31, 2023). Top Models. Sequoia Press. p. 18. ISBN 9798889921806.
  136. ^ "The Lone Wolf". Sports Illustrated. June 24, 2002 – via vault.si.com.
  137. ^ "The Lone Wolf". Sports Illustrated. June 24, 2002 – via vault.si.com.
  138. ^ Amdur, Neil (July 5, 1995). "Pancho Gonzalez, U.S. Tennis Champion, Dies at 67". New York Times.
  139. ^ Seebohn, Caroline (2009). Little Pancho: The Life Of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 174, etc. ISBN 9780803220416.
  140. ^ . Archived from the original on January 3, 2011. Retrieved March 11, 2012.
  141. ^ Kramer, Jack (1981). The Game (First ed.). London: André Deutsch. p. 244. ISBN 0233973079.
  142. ^ The Game, Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (1981 André Deutsch edition), p. 238-239
  143. ^ "Honoring Gonzalez and his legacy". New York Times. September 5, 2009. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
  144. ^ . Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on September 18, 2010. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  145. ^ Ernie Reed (October 21, 1961). "Pancho Gonzales calls it quits" (Press release). UPI.
  146. ^ "The natural". Tennis Now. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  147. ^ "USTA scholarship grant paperwork" (PDF). Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  148. ^ McDougall, Chris (2011). Arthur Ashe: Tennis Great & Civil Rights Leader. ABDO Publishing. p. 27.
  149. ^ Shirley Povich (April 14, 1961). "This Morning". The Washington Post. p. D1.
  150. ^ Bill Lee (February 1, 1961). "With Malice Toward None". Hartford Courant. p. 3.
  151. ^ "Ayala Went Pro to "Quit Tennis"". The Spokesman-Review. September 24, 1961. p. 20.
  152. ^ Mel Durslag (May 19, 1965). "Tamed Pancho Faces Young Tigers". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 49 – via Newspapers.com.
  153. ^ Cy Rice (1959). Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales. A S Barnes and Co. p. 21. ASIN B000F79V9Y.
  154. ^ McCauley (2000), p. 68
  155. ^ Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales, as Told to Cy Rice (1959), page 129
  156. ^ "The Lone Wolf". Sports Illustrated. June 24, 2002.
  157. ^ "Richard (Pancho) Gonzales, Possibly the greatest of them all".
  158. ^ Tennis Week, 1972
  159. ^ Ira Berkow (July 31, 1998). "Sports of the times; Laver's Strength? No Weakness". The New York Times.
  160. ^ Collins, Bud (2016). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (3rd ed.). New York: New Chapter Press. pp. 617–618, 639, 691–692. ISBN 978-1-937559-38-0.
  161. ^ Tennis Myth and Method, Ellsworth Vines & Gene Vier, 1978, Viking Press, p.6
  162. ^ "The Lone Wolf". Sports Illustrated. June 24, 2002.
  163. ^ Kramer, Jack (1981). The Game : My 40 Years in Tennis. London: Deutsch. pp. 43–45. ISBN 978-0233973074.
  164. ^ The Game, Jack Kramer with Frank Deford (1981 André Deutsch edition), p. 45
  165. ^ Bercow (2014), p. 64
  166. ^ . Los Angeles Times. January 24, 1970. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  167. ^ Inside Tennis magazine, 1986
  168. ^ "Analyzing the Greatest Players of All Time". World Tennis Magazine. December 16, 2011.
  169. ^ "Frank Sedgman names Jack Kramer and Roger Federer in front of Rod Laver in best-ever list". heraldsun.com.
  170. ^ . NBC Sports. Archived from the original on October 15, 2006. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  171. ^ "Gonzales Hoad H2H". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  172. ^ "Gonzales Rosewall H2H". thetennisbase.com. Tennis Base. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  173. ^ "Cal State L.A. breaks ground on Rosie Casals/Pancho Gonzales Tennis Center". Pasadena Star News. May 6, 2014.

Sources edit

  • Tennis Myth and Method (1978), Ellsworth Vines and Gene Vier (ISBN 9780670696659)
  • Kramer, Jack (1981). The Game : My 40 Years in Tennis. London: Deutsch. ISBN 0233973079.
  • McCauley, Joe (2000). The History of Professional Tennis. Windsor: The Short Run Book Company Limited.
  • Man with a Racket, The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales, as Told to Cy Rice (1959)
  • The Tennis Book (1981), Edited by Michael Bartlett and Bob Gillen (ISBN 0-87795-344-9)
  • The Lone Wolf, by S. L. Price, Sports Illustrated, June 26, 2002
  • World of Tennis Yearbook 1971 (1971), by John Barrett, London
  • Seebohm, Caroline (2009). Little Pancho. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-2041-6.
  • Bercow, John (2014). Tennis Maestros. London: Biteback Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84954-512-9.

External links edit

  1. ^ "Tennis players Tony Trabert and Pancho Gonzales with Beans Reardon at Bond Club luncheon in Los Angeles, Calif., 1955 - UCLA Library Digital Collections".

pancho, gonzales, richard, gonzales, redirects, here, other, people, richard, gonzales, disambiguation, footballer, footballer, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, newspaper, articles, from, newspapers, need. Richard Gonzales redirects here For other people see Richard Gonzales disambiguation For the footballer see Pancho Gonzales footballer This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is newspaper articles from newspapers com need titles Please help improve this article if you can October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ricardo Alonso Pancho Gonzalez May 9 1928 July 3 1995 known sometimes as Richard Gonzales was an American tennis player He won 15 major singles titles including two U S National Singles Championships in 1948 and 1949 and 13 Professional Grand Slam titles He also won three Tournament of Champions professional events in 1957 1958 and 1959 He was ranked world amateur No 1 in 1948 by Ned Potter 2 and in 1949 by Potter 3 and John Olliff 4 Pancho GonzalesGonzales in a tournament in Los Angeles c 1950Full nameRicardo Alonso GonzalezCountry sports United StatesBorn 1928 05 09 May 9 1928Los Angeles California U S DiedJuly 3 1995 1995 07 03 aged 67 Las Vegas Nevada U S Height6 ft 2 in 1 88 m Turned pro1949Retired1974PlaysRight handed one handed backhand Int Tennis HoF1968 member page SinglesCareer record1368 652 67 7 1 Career titles111 1 Highest rankingNo 1 1948 Ned Potter 2 Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian Open3R 1969 French OpenSF 1949 1968 Wimbledon4R 1949 1969 US OpenW 1948 1949 Other tournamentsProfessional majorsUS ProW 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1961 Wembley ProW 1950 1951 1952 1956 French ProF 1956 1961 Other pro eventsTOCW 1957FH 1958FH 1959AU DoublesCareer record43 30Grand Slam doubles resultsFrench OpenW 1949 WimbledonW 1949 Grand Slam mixed doubles resultsWimbledonQF 1968 Gonzales was a prominent professional champion in the 1950s and 1960s winning world professional championship tours between 1954 and 1961 he was the world number one ranked male tennis player professional between 1952 and 1961 5 Gonzales was a determined competitor with a fierce temper He was often at odds with officials and promoters However he was a fan favorite who drew many spectators 6 Contents 1 Career 1 1 Amateur 1 2 Professional 1 2 1 1949 1950 1 2 2 1951 1 2 3 1952 1 2 4 1953 1 2 5 1954 1 2 6 1955 1956 1 2 7 1957 1 2 8 1958 1 2 9 1959 1 2 10 1960 1 2 11 1961 1 2 12 1962 1963 1 2 13 1964 1 2 14 1965 1967 1 3 Open tennis 1 3 1 1968 1 3 2 1969 1 3 3 1970 1 3 4 1971 1 3 5 1972 1 3 6 1973 2 Personal and family life 3 Assessment and Tennis legacy 4 Honors 5 Performance timeline for major tournaments 6 Major finals 6 1 Grand Slam tournaments 6 1 1 Singles 2 2 titles 6 1 2 Doubles 2 2 titles 6 2 Pro Slam tournaments 6 2 1 Singles 19 13 titles 6 runner ups 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 8 Sources 9 External linksCareer editAmateur edit Gonzales was given a 51 cent racquet by his mother when he was 12 years old He received tennis analysis from his friend Chuck Pate but mostly taught himself to play by watching other players on the public courts at nearby Exposition Park in Los Angeles Once he discovered tennis he lost interest in school and began a troubled adolescence in which he was occasionally pursued by truant officers and police He was befriended by Frank Poulain the owner of the tennis shop at Exposition Park and sometimes slept there 7 Due to his lack of school attendance and occasional minor brushes with the law he was ostracized by the tennis establishment of the 1940s 8 The headquarters for tennis activity was the Los Angeles Tennis Club which actively trained other top players such as the youthful Jack Kramer During that time the head of the Southern California Tennis Association and the most powerful man in California tennis was Perry T Jones Jones the head of California tennis was described as an autocratic leader who embodied much of the exclusionary sensibilities that governed tennis for decades Although Gonzales was a promising junior once Jones discovered that the youth was truant from school Jones banned him from playing tournaments 9 Eventually he was arrested for burglary at age 15 and spent a year in detention He then joined the Navy just as World War II was ending and served for two years finally receiving a bad conduct discharge in 1947 10 11 1947Despite his lack of playing time while in the Navy and as a mostly unknown 19 year old in 1947 Gonzales achieved a national ranking of No 17 by playing primarily on the West Coast He did however go East that year to play in the U S Championships at Forest Hills He beat the British Davis Cup player Derek Barton and then lost a five set match to third seed Gardnar Mulloy despite leading 4 3 with a break in the fifth set 12 Following that in the last major tournament of the year the Pacific Southwest played at the Los Angeles Tennis Club he beat three players that would end their careers with Grand Slam singles titles Jaroslav Drobny Bob Falkenburg and Frank Parker before losing in the semifinals to Ted Schroeder 13 1948The following year Perry T Jones relented in his opposition to Gonzales and sponsored his trip East to play in the major tournaments 14 The top ranked American player Schroeder decided at the last moment not to play in the U S Championships and Gonzales was seeded No 8 in the tournament To the surprise of most observers he won it fairly easily by a straight set victory over the South African Eric Sturgess in the finals with his powerful serve and volley game As The New York Times story of that first win began The rankest outsider of modern times sits on the tennis throne 15 His persona at the time was strikingly different from what it would become in future years American Lawn Tennis wrote that the crowd cheered a handsome dark skinned Mexican American youngster who smiled boyishly each time he captured a hard fought point kissed the ball prayerfully before a crucial serve and was human enough to show nervousness as he powered his way to the most coveted crown in the world This was Gonzales s only major tournament victory of the year but it was enough to let him finish the year ranked as the number one American player 16 Gonzales was ranked world No 1 amateur by Ned Potter 2 1949In 1949 Gonzales performed poorly at Wimbledon where he was seeded second but lost in the fourth round to Geoff Brown and was derided for his performance by some of the press Gonzales was called a cheese champion 17 and because of his name his doubles partner of the time Frank Parker began to call him Gorgonzales 18 after gorgonzola the Italian cheese This was eventually shortened to Gorgo the nickname by which he was later known by his colleagues on the professional tour Jack Kramer in his autobiography says that it was Jim Burchard the tennis writer for the New York World Telegram who first called him a cheese champ 19 When Gonzales returned to the United States Championships in 1949 he repeated his victory of the previous year Schroeder the top seed had beaten Gonzales eight times in nine matches during their careers and was heavily favored The only time he had beaten Schroeder Gonzales was playing with a nose that had been broken the day before by his doubles partner s tennis racquet during a misplayed point at the net 20 In a tremendous final that has been called the 11th greatest match of all time 21 Gonzales lost a 1 hour and 15 minute first set 16 18 but finally managed to prevail in the fifth set Once again he finished the year as the number one ranked U S amateur Gonzales was ranked world No 1 amateur by John Olliff 4 and Ned Potter 3 Gonzales also won both his singles matches in the Davis Cup finals against Australia Having beaten Schroeder at Forest Hills Bobby Riggs who had been counting on signing Schroeder to play Kramer on the professional tour was then forced to reluctantly sign Gonzales instead Professional edit nbsp Pancho Segura left and Gonzales right at the Professional Championship in Noordwijk Netherlands in August 1961 1949 1950 edit Gonzales was beaten in his first year on the professional tour 94 matches to 29 by the reigning king of professional tennis Jack Kramer During this time Gonzales s personality apparently changed from a friendly happy go lucky youngster to the hard bitten loner he became known as for the rest of his life According to Kramer in his 1979 autobiography The worst thing that ever happened to Gonzales was winning Forest Hills in 1949 At a time when Gorgo wasn t mature as a player he was pitted against Kramer an established pro at his peak Moreover says Kramer Pancho had no idea how to live or take care of himself He was a hamburger and hot dog guy to start with and had no concept of diet in training On the court Gorgo would swig Cokes through a match Also Gorgo was a pretty heavy cigarette smoker He had terrible sleeping habits made even worse by the reality of a tour 22 Life on the tour was not easy Most of the matches were played indoors on the tour s portable canvas surface One night Gonzales recalled later I sprained an ankle badly The next night in another town I was hurting I told Jack I couldn t play He said to me Kid we always play Jack had a doctor shoot me up with novocaine and we played That s just the way it was The size of the crowd didn t matter They d paid to see us play 23 Kramer won 22 of the first 26 matches and 42 of the next 50 Gonzales improved enough to win 15 of the remaining 32 but it was too late Bobby Riggs the tour promoter told Gonzales that he was now dead meat Kramer would need a new challenger for the next tour As compensation however Gonzales had made US 75 000 well above his guarantee of 60 000 in his losing efforts Kramer also said that his nature had changed completely He became difficult and arrogant Losing had changed him When he got his next chance he understood that you either win or you re out of a job He was now a loner said Ted Schroeder and always the unhappiest man in town 23 One bright moment for Gonzales in his rookie year as a professional was winning the U S Pro Indoor Championship at Philadelphia in late March defeating Kramer in the final in straight sets 24 Gonzales also won the tournament at Wembley beating Don Budge and Welby Van Horn He did not play in the 1950 U S Professional Championships in Cleveland which were authorized by the USPLTA 1951 edit From 1951 to 1953 Gonzales was in semi retirement He bought the tennis shop at Exposition Park and ran that while playing in short tours and occasional professional tournaments throughout the world 25 In spite of his infrequent play because first Riggs then Kramer as promoters of the pro tour did not offer him playing positions on the tours he had nevertheless raised his game to a higher level than before and was winning most of his matches Precise records of this time are difficult to locate but Gonzales asserts in his autobiography that after the decisive loss to Kramer in their 1949 50 tour he then beat his old antagonist 11 times in their next 16 matches In the southern hemisphere summer of 1950 51 Gonzales toured Australia and New Zealand with Dinny Pails Frank Parker and Don Budge 25 In December 1950 Pails won the short tour in New Zealand but in January and February 1951 Gonzales won a second and longer tour in Australia 25 Gonzales lost the deciding match of the U S Professional Indoor Championships at Philadelphia in February 1951 to Kramer At the Philadelphia U S Pro Indoor in March 1951 the service drives not forehand drives as sometimes reported of a number of players were electronically measured and compared to Tilden s reported service drive speed of 151 mph made by stopwatch and film in 1931 The service speeds were measured at the net and not at the racquet face as is currently the standard practice Gonzales was recorded as hitting the fastest serve 112 88 mph followed by Kramer at 107 8 and Van Horn at 104 26 27 Kovacs who possessed a big serve played in the Philadelphia tournament but did not participate in the service speed measurements Segura and Riggs participated in the test but their results were not reported Gonzales finished second to Segura in the 1951 U S Professional Championships at Forest Hills organized by Riggs and Kramer and authorized by the USPLTA 28 Gonzales did not play in the 1951 Cleveland International Professional title at Cleveland won by Kovacs and approved as the U S National Pro Championships by the Professional Players Association of Tennis an organization formed that year and led by Budge Though Gonzales won Wembley in 1951 where Kramer was not entered Segura was ranked the number one U S pro in the USPLTA rankings for 1951 29 30 and Kramer won the world series over Segura 1952 edit In 1952 Gonzales reached the top level of the pros In 1952 he won the Philadelphia Inquirer Masters tournament 31 where he beat both Segura and Kramer twice in a double round robin event and split his two matches with Kovacs the World Professional hard court event at Los Angeles 32 beating Budge and Segura at Scarborough England 33 where he defeated Budge and Segura at Wembley England where he beat Segura in the semis and then to beat Kramer in the final came from down 2 sets to none and from 4 1 down in the fifth set 34 at Berlin where Segura and Budge lost again to him and in Geneva beating Segura Gonzales was a finalist at Cleveland approved by the P P A T as the U S National Pro where he lost again to Segura 35 1952 was the first year that Big Pancho Gonzales had an edge in results over Little Pancho Segura in their head to head matches and thereafter his edge in results over Segura continued throughout their long careers The USPLTA issued rankings at the end of 1952 in which they ranked Segura the U S pro No 1 with Gonzales second in 1951 when Kramer had beaten Segura 64 matches to 28 in their championship tour they had ranked Segura as the U S No 1 pro player due to Kramer s lack of success in the U S The Tennis Hall of Fame gives Gonzales Top ranking World number 1 1952 36 The PPAT rankings for 1952 placed Segura as the U S No 1 professional followed by Gonzales as the U S No 2 37 1953 edit In 1953 Gonzales was omitted by Kramer by now also a promoter from the big pro tour which featured Frank Sedgman a winner of five Grand Slam singles titles against Kramer himself and Ken McGregor the 1952 Australian Open singles winner against Segura Gonzales won the Cleveland event defeating Don Budge in the final in four sets 38 Gonzales was awarded the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy for his victory At Wembley 1953 39 and two days later in Paris 40 he was severely beaten by Sedgman the eventual winner of these tournaments and Sedgman was ranked the pro No 1 for 1953 by Tennis de France in its full season ranking list 41 In June the Players Committee of the Cleveland U S Pro or Cleveland World Pro billed title 42 ranked Gonzales as the world No 1 professional player for 1953 and he was also ranked No 1 pro in October by Ken McGregor 43 1954 edit In late 1953 Kramer then a temporarily retired player due to his back troubles signed Gonzales a seven year contract to play in a 1954 US tour also featuring Pancho Segura Frank Sedgman and Donald Budge the latter being replaced in March 1954 by Carl Earn for the last weeks of the tour In the subsequent matches Gonzales beat Segura 30 21 and Sedgman by the same score After this tour Gonzales won the Cleveland World Pro or Cleveland U S Pro held at the Cleveland Arena from April 27 through May 2 and where all the best except Pails were present 44 45 Gonzales was awarded the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy for his victory at Cleveland In early June 1954 Gonzales won the U S Professional Championships held by Jack Kramer at the Los Angeles Tennis Club in California 46 45 Gonzales was seeded No 1 and defeated both Sedgman and Segura a the latter in a close five set final to win the USPLTA Benrus Trophy for the only time in his career Gonzales thus won two U S Pro titles according to some writers in one year a unique achievement in tennis Gonzales then played in the Far East tour September October 1954 that visited Japan Korea the Philippines and Hong Kong He finished second to Sedgman and barely won over Segura and Kramer who was making a comeback in singles after a 14 month retirement 64 Later that year Gonzales enjoyed further success he swept the Australian Tour of November December 1954 by beating Sedgman 16 9 McGregor 15 0 and Segura 4 2 65 Although he was beaten by the Australian Dinny Pails in the last competition of the year Gonzales had clearly established himself as the top player in the world in 1954 In December the International Professional Tennis Association ranked Gonzales as the No 1 professional player for 1954 66 1955 1956 edit In 1955 56 Gonzales beat Tony Trabert in the World series by 74 matches to 27 Forty years after his matches with Gonzales Trabert told interviewer Joe McCauley that Gonzales s serve was the telling factor on their tour it was so good that it earned him many cheap points Trabert felt that while he had the better groundstrokes he could not match Pancho s big fluent service 67 Much of Gonzales s competitive fire during these years derived from the anger he felt at being paid much less than the players he was regularly beating In 1956 for instance he was guaranteed US 15 000 68 for the pro tour while his touring opponent the recently turned professional Tony Trabert had a guarantee for US 80 000 68 He had a poor and often adversarial relationship with most of the other players and generally travelled and lived by himself showing up only in time to play his match then moving on alone to the next town Gonzales and Jack Kramer the long time promoter of the tour had a bitter and inimical relationship dating to the days when Kramer had first beaten the youthful Gonzales on his initial tour Now they fought incessantly about money while Kramer openly rooted for the other players to beat Gonzales 69 As much as he disliked Gonzales however Kramer knew that Gonzales was the star attraction of the touring professionals and that without him there would be no tour at all Regarding the tour Kramer writes that even though Gonzales was usually the top name he would almost never help promote the tour The players could have tolerated his personal disagreeableness but his refusal to help the group irritated them the most Frankly the majority of players disliked Gonzales intensely Sedgman almost came to blows with Gonzales once Trabert and Gorgo hated each other The only player he ever tried to get along with was Lew Hoad Trabert also told McCauley in their interview that I appreciated his tennis ability but I never came to respect him as a person Too often I had witnessed him treat people badly without a cause He was a loner sullen most of the time with a big chip on his shoulder and he rarely associated with us on the road Instead he d appear at the appointed hour for his match then vanish back into the night without saying a word to anyone We d all stay around giving autographs to the fans before moving on to the next city Not Pancho On court he was totally professional as well as a fantastic player 23 In a 2005 interview Ted Schroeder commented on Gonzales s intense demeanor both on and off the court We hardly ever spoke a civil word to one another yet we were friends He was a very prideful man not proud prideful When you understood that you understood him 70 Gonzales won at Cleveland in 1955 and 1956 both events using the VASSS Van Alen Simplified Scoring System i e table tennis scoring beating Segura in the final in both years Gonzales played against Trabert in a South American tour losing six matches to Trabert on outdoor clay but winning the three indoor matches 71 Gonzales won the inaugural Los Angeles Masters tournament in early August 1956 defeating Sedgman in the deciding match 72 Sedgman missed the first five and a half months of 1956 Gonzales and Trabert played a five set final at Roland Garros in 1956 with Trabert winning in the fifth set 73 At the Wembley World Pro Indoor Championships in 1956 Gonzales won a classic final with Sedgman in four long sets 74 The match lasted almost three hours and ended at 12 35am B B C Television covered it to the end 75 It was customary for the Wembley final to be broadcast nationally in the UK on the BBC Lawn Tennis and Badminton magazine 76 and International Professional Tennis Association 77 ranked Gonzales the world No 1 professional for 1955 Cleveland tournament promoter Jack March ranked Gonzales the world No 1 professional for 1956 78 1957 edit At the end of 1956 Kramer signed Ken Rosewall to play a world series 79 tour against Gonzales In early 1957 Gonzales flew to Australia for the first ten matches against Rosewall in his native country Gonzales had developed a half dollar size cyst on the palm on his right hand 80 and there was speculation in the newspapers that his tennis career might be over Kramer s personal physician began to treat it with injections and it gradually began to shrink 81 It was still painful however when Gonzales beat Rosewall in their initial match and eventually won the Australian portion of the tour 7 matches to 3 with Rosewall beating Gonzales in a tournament whose results did not count towards the series total By the time the tour opened in New York in late February the cyst had shrunk considerably and Gonzales went on to beat Rosewall by a final score of 50 matches to 26 Gonzales won the 1957 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions with a perfect 5 0 record beating Sedgman in a five set deciding match The event was broadcast nationally on CBS television Gonzales also won the Cleveland tournament beating Trabert and Segura and the Los Angeles Masters tournament Kramer has written that he was so worried that Rosewall would offer no competition to Gonzales and would thereby destroy the financial success of the tour that for the only time in his career as a player or promoter he asked Gonzales while in Australia to carry Rosewall in return for having his share of the gross receipts raised from 20 percent to 25 percent Gonzales reluctantly agreed After four matches with Gonzales ahead 3 to 1 Gonzales came to Kramer to say that I can t play when I m thinking about trying to carry the kid I can t concentrate It just bothers me too much By this time however it was apparent that Rosewall would be fully competitive with Gonzales so Kramer told Gonzales to return to his normal game and that he could keep his additional five percent Gonzales built a 5 to 1 lead over Rosewall in the Australian portion of the tour 82 Gonzales would eventually build a lifetime head to head edge against Rosewall on grass of 24 to 14 Later that year Gonzales sued in California superior court to have his seven year contract with Kramer declared invalid As proof of his claim Gonzales cited being paid 25 percent of the gate instead of the stipulated 20 percent Judge Leon T David found Gonzales s reasoning implausible and ruled in favor of Kramer Gonzales remained bound to Kramer by contract until 1960 83 Gonzales was ranked world No 1 pro by Jack March for the 1957 season 84 Gonzales was also ranked No 1 in October 1957 in a combined pro amateur ranking by Adrian Quist 85 1958 edit The most difficult challenge that Gonzales faced during his dominant years came from Lew Hoad the powerful young Australian who had won four Grand Slam titles as an amateur In the 1958 world series 86 tour Gonzales and Hoad in his rookie year played head to head 87 times Hoad won the Australian series 8 to 5 and 18 of the first 27 matches It appeared that he was about to displace Gonzales as the professional world champion Gonzales however revamped and improved his backhand 87 88 89 90 91 92 Also Hoad suffered back trouble beginning in early March which reduced his ability to play at a high level and contributed and coincided with the turnaround in results on the tour Gonzales won the 1958 series by a margin of 51 wins to 36 wins for Hoad In January Gonzales finished third in the Kooyong Tournament of Champions the richest tournament of the year losing his match to Hoad 93 In May he beat Hoad in the final at Cleveland as Hoad s leg injury worsened Gonzales received his record sixth Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy award for the victory Gonzales won the 1958 Forest Hills Tournament of Champions with a 5 1 record defeating Rosewall in the deciding match He lost to Hoad in the semifinal at the Roland Garros World Professional Championships Gonzales lost to Sedgman in the semifinal of the World Professional Indoor Championships at Wembley and had earlier lost to him in the semifinal of the Sydney Masters Jack March ranked Gonzales the world No 1 professional tennis player for 1958 94 and Jack Kramer also ranked Gonzales world No 1 pro for 1958 95 1959 edit Gonzales played Hoad again in the 4 man World Professional Championship Tour in 1959 and Pancho finished with 13 wins and 15 losses against Hoad but Gonzales achieved a perfect record against rookies Cooper and Anderson to keep his world championship title The series concluded at the end of May and Gonzales was proclaimed in 1959 and 1960 press reports as the world champion 96 97 98 99 100 Gonzales was referred to in a paid advertisement for the pro tour in a 1960 Boston Globe edition as world champion 101 Gonzales beat Hoad to retain his Cleveland title played during the 4 man tour and not part of the Ampol Open Trophy tournament series Gonzales finished second to Hoad in the point ranking on the 1959 1960 Ampol Open Trophy world series of tournaments winning four of the tournaments Sydney Marks Athletic Field L A Tennis Club Masters Toronto Lawn Tennis Club O Keefe Ampol White City TOC losing the Forest Hills Tournament of Champions final to Hoad but winning the White City Tournament of Champions where he beat Hoad in the final Gonzales defaulted the final and deciding Ampol series tournament in December the Qantas Kooyong to spend the holidays in the U S Jack Kramer ranked Gonzales as the world No 1 professional tennis player for 1959 in his personal pro ranking list 102 different from Kramer s point ranking list with Sedgman No 2 Rosewall No 3 and Hoad as No 4 Robert Roy of L Equipe magazine agreed with Gonzales as No 1 and Hoad as No 5 for 1959 102 Jack March ranked Gonzales number one in his pro ranking list for the 1959 season with Hoad second 103 1960 edit Gonzales faced Rosewall Segura and new pro signing Alex Olmedo on the 1960 World Professional Championship tour Trabert also played a few matches early on Gonzales was at the peak of his form beating Rosewall 20 to 5 and easily overcoming Segura and Olmedo During a match against Segura at White Plains on February 13 1960 Gonzales served 33 aces 104 In April 1960 it was reported that Pancho Gonzales world s pro tennis champ since 1954 confirmed his recent announcement that he would quit Jack Kramer s touring troupe May 1 However Gonzales said he might play in a few pro tournaments after that if they did not involve touring 105 Gonzales did return to touring and played in the 1961 World Series Gonzales and Hoad did not play against each other in 1960 Kramer ranked Gonzales as world No 1 professional tennis player for 1960 106 with Sedgman No 2 Rosewall No 3 and Hoad No 4 the same ranking order for the third straight year 1961 edit The 1961 World Series would not feature Rosewall who opted not to play Gonzales beat Andres Gimeno Trabert replacing Hoad Sedgman also replacing Hoad Hoad who withdrew with a broken foot Barry MacKay Olmedo and Butch Buchholz The top two players Gonzales and Gimeno then played a head to head series to determine the champion Gonzales beat Gimeno 21 match wins to 7 in single set matches Gonzales beat Gimeno and Sedgman to win at Cleveland 107 Hoad and Rosewall did not enter Later in the year there were signs Gonzales dominance was waning He lost to Rosewall in the final of the French Pro championships on red clay at Roland Garros and at Wembley on indoor wood he lost in the semifinals to Hoad Then Gonzales went into a period of retirement 1962 1963 edit Gonzales didn t play on the pro circuit at all in 1962 His only appearance in 1963 was at the United States Professional Championship which were held that year at the hallowed Forest Hills courts Gonzales both dismayed and infuriated his colleagues by being the only player who was paid for his participation Having learned by bitter experience about the exigencies of the pro tour Gonzales had demanded and received US 5 000 in advance for his appearance in the tournament 108 An out of shape semi retired Gonzales was beaten in the first round by Alex Olmedo 109 Ken Rosewall eventually beat Rod Laver in the finals but neither of them collected a penny the promoter had failed to obtain a television contract could not meet his costs and couldn t pay any prize money to any of the players 110 1964 edit Gonzales returned to play on the pro circuit in 1964 By now Rod Laver had arrived in the pro ranks In early May 1964 Gonzales defeated Gimeno and Anderson to win the Cleveland World Pro his ninth Cleveland title 111 Arguably Gonzales best tournament victory of 1964 came in late May at the U S Pro Indoors at White Plains After coming from a set down to beat both Laver and Hoad earlier in the event Gonzales trailed Rosewall in the best of five set final by 2 sets to 0 and 1 4 112 Trailing by two service breaks in the third set Gonzales managed to turn the match around and won in five sets in a final that lasted 3 hours and 11 minutes 113 Gonzales finished third behind Rosewall and Laver in the points series for the season which did not include the Australian tournaments 114 1965 1967 edit Despite a good comeback year in 1964 Gonzales was no longer the top pro In January 1965 Gonzales won the New South Wales Pro in Sydney beating Laver and Rosewall 115 Gonzales also beat Laver and Rosewall to win the 1965 CBS TV Pro at Dallas on a clay surface The tournament was the richest of the year and was broadcast nationally on the CBS television network Gonzales was the leading money winner on the pro tour through the U S series of tournaments with 18 945 116 not including the 8 000 first prize for winning the Dallas event However Gonzales did not play in Europe that year and Laver Rosewall Gimeno and Buchholz all earned more prize money than Gonzales by the end of the year 117 By the late 1960s Gonzales was a declining force though still a big drawing card Laver was the top player in these late sixties years Open tennis edit 1968 edit In April 1968 he was the first professional to lose to an amateur the British player Mark Cox The then 24 year old Cox beat Gonzales at the British Hard Court Championships at Bournemouth in five sets in two and a quarter hours 118 The first major open tournament was the 1968 French Open when Gonzales had just turned 40 In spite of the fact that he had been semi retired for a number of years and that the tournament was held on slow clay courts that penalize serve and volley players Gonzales beat the 1967 defending champion Roy Emerson in the quarterfinals 119 He then lost in the semifinals to Rod Laver He lost in the third round of 1968 Wimbledon but later beat the second seeded Tony Roche in the fourth round of the 1968 US Open before losing an epic match to the Dutch Tom Okker Gonzales finished third in the NTL rankings for 1968 and was selected to enter the season combined professional final at Madison Square Garden together with the top four WCT players in an eight man field Gonzales won a close dramatic win over Rosewall then defeated Gimeno in the semifinal before losing the final to Roche 120 1969 edit In 1969 it was Gonzales s turn to prevail in the longest match ever played till that time one so long and arduous that it resulted in the advent of tiebreak scoring As a 41 year old at Wimbledon Gonzales met Charlie Pasarell a Puerto Rican younger than Gonzales by 16 years who revered his opponent Pasarell won a lengthy 46 game first set then with daylight fading the 41 year old Gonzales argued that the match should be suspended The referee didn t relent and the petulant Gonzales virtually threw the second set At the break the referee agreed the players should stop Gonzales was booed as he walked off Centre Court The next day the serves the volleys and all the prowess that made Gonzales a fiery competitor surfaced Pasarell seeking to exploit Gonzales s advanced years tried to aim soft service returns at Gonzales s feet and tire him with frequent lobs Gonzales rebounded to win three straight sets In the fifth set Gonzales saved all seven match points that Pasarell had against him twice coming back from 0 40 deficits to walk off the court the eventual winner in a 5 hour 12 minute match 9 The final score was 22 24 1 6 16 14 6 3 11 9 Gonzales went on to the fourth round of the championship where he was beaten in four sets by Arthur Ashe The match with Pasarell however is still remembered as one of the highlights in the history of tennis and was called one of The Ten Greatest Matches of the Open Era in the November December 2003 issue of TENNIS magazine 121 The match would largely due to the introduction of the tie break remain the longest in terms of games played until the 11 hours and 183 games long Isner Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships In late 1969 Gonzales won the Howard Hughes Open in Las Vegas and the Pacific Southwest Open in Los Angeles beating among others John Newcombe Ken Rosewall Stan Smith twice Cliff Richey and Arthur Ashe 122 He was the top American money winner for 1969 with US 46 288 1970 edit Roy Emerson the Australian player who won 12 major titles during the 1960s as an amateur when most of the best players in the world were professionals turned pro in early 1968 at the age of 31 having won the French Championships the year before Gonzales at the age of 40 beat Emerson in five sets in the quarterfinals of the 1968 French Open In the following years Gonzales beat Emerson another 11 times apparently losing very few matches to him In the Champions Classic of 1970 in Miami Florida however Emerson did beat Gonzales in straight sets 123 Gonzales continued to play in the occasional tournament in his 40s He could also occasionally beat the clear number one player in the world Rod Laver Their most famous meeting was a US 10 000 winner take all match before a crowd of 14 761 in Madison Square Garden in January 1970 Coming just after the Australian had completed a calendar year sweep of the Grand Slams the 41 year old Gonzales beat Laver in five sets 124 1971 edit In spite of the fact that Gonzales was still known as a serve and volley player in 1971 when he was 43 and Jimmy Connors was 19 he beat the great young baseliner by playing him from the baseline at the Pacific Southwest Open 125 Around this time Gonzales relocated to Las Vegas to be the Tennis Director at Caesars Palace and he hired Chuck Pate his childhood friend to run the Pro Shop 1972 edit In 1972 Gonzales became the oldest player to have ever won a professional tournament winning the 1972 Des Moines Open which was part of the USLTA Indoor Circuit over 24 year old Georges Goven when he was three months shy of his 44th birthday 126 In June 1972 Gonzales reached the semifinals of the Queen s Club Championships at age 44 and was leading by a set against John Paish when he was disqualified by the tournament referee after an argument over the replacement of a linesman 127 128 1973 edit At South Orange in August Gonzales beat John Lloyd Sandy Mayer and Paul Gerken all players more than twenty years younger than himself before losing in the semifinals to Vijay Amritraj 129 Gonzales made his final Grand Slam singles appearance losing in round one of the US Open to Tom Okker In September Gonzales lost in the second round of the Pacific southwest championships in Los Angeles to Jimmy Connors 130 Personal and family life editGonzalez s parents Manuel Antonio Gonzalez and Carmen Alire Alonso migrated from the Mexican state of Chihuahua to the U S in the early 1900s Gonzalez was born in 1928 the eldest of seven children Kramer writes that Gorgo was not the poor Mexican American that people assumed He didn t come from a wealthy family but from a stable middle class background probably a lot like mine He had a great mother and there was always a warm feeling of family loyalty If anything he might have been spoiled as a kid It s a shame he suffered discrimination because of his Mexican heritage However according to other sources Gonzales s father worked as a house painter and he along with his six siblings were raised in a working class neighborhood In his autobiography Gonzalez states We had few luxuries at our house Food wasn t abundant but it was simple and filling and we never went hungry Our clothes were just clothes inexpensive but clean 131 Gonzalez had a long scar across his left cheek that according to his autobiography some members of the mass media of the 1940s attributed to his being a Mexican American pachuco and hence involved in knife fights It was one more slur that embittered Gonzalez towards the media in general The scar was actually the result of a prosaic street accident in 1935 when he was seven years old He pushed a scooter too fast ran into a passing car and had his cheek gashed open by its door handle He spent two weeks in the hospital as a result 132 Gonzales was referred to as either Richard or Ricardo by his friends and family As the child of working class Hispanic parents young Richard was well aware of the social prejudices of his day He reportedly disliked the nickname Pancho as it was a common derogatory term used against Mexican Americans at the time 133 In the Hispanic community the name Pancho is traditionally only given to individuals whose first name is Francisco as was the case with Gonzales tennis rival Pancho Segura Gonzales reportedly was haunted by race issues throughout his life Six months before he died he told his brother Ralph that he should have taken the offer of the Mexican government in 1948 to give up his U S citizenship and play for Mexico His bitterness at how he had been treated by his American WASP colleagues on the tour stayed with him all his life 134 Although his surname was properly spelled Gonzalez during most of his playing career he was known as Gonzales It was only towards the end of his life that the Spanish language spelling began to be used regularly Gonzales became a television commentator for ABC a rare presence at tournaments Described as an adequate but unmotivated commentator Gonzales would issue thoughtful comments often magnanimous occasionally harsh always candid on contemporary pros 9 For decades Gonzales had made US 75 000 a year from an endorsement contract with Spalding for racquets and balls but was unable to get along with the company personnel Finally in 1981 after nearly 30 years Spalding refused to renew the contract He had also been the Tennis Director and Tournament Director at Caesars Palace on the Las Vegas Strip for 16 years another lucrative job In 1985 he was fired after refusing to give playing lessons to the wife of his boss 23 As S L Price wrote about Gonzales in a 2002 Sports Illustrated article There was no more perfect match than Pancho and Vegas both dark and disreputable both hard and mean and impossible to ignore Gonzales married and divorced six times and had nine children he wed his childhood sweetheart Henrietta Pedrin on March 23 1948 they had three children He married actress and Miss Rheingold of 1958 Madelyn Darrow sister of Barbara Darrow twice they had three children including twin girls 135 He married his dental hygienist Betty in Beverly Hills and had one daughter His last wife Rita is the elder sister of Andre Agassi and they had one son According to Price s article Rita s father Mike Agassi hated Gonzales so much that he considered having him killed 136 Gonzales had coached the young Rita until she had rebelled against her father s 5 000 balls a day regimen and first moved in with then married on March 31 1984 the much older Gonzales Years before Mike Agassi already a tennis fanatic had once served as a linesman for one of Gonzales s professional matches in Chicago Gonzales had upbraided Agassi so severely for perceived miscalls that Agassi walked away and sat in the stands 137 Kramer says that Gonzales never seemed to get along with his various wives although this never stopped him from getting married Segura once said You know the nicest thing Gorgo ever says to his wives is Shut up Following a ten month battle with stomach cancer Gonzales died on July 3 1995 at the Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas at the age of 67 in poverty and estranged from his ex wives and children except for Rita and their son Skylar 138 Andre Agassi paid for his funeral 139 Gonzales played tennis with the actor Robert Redford while Redford was growing up 140 Assessment and Tennis legacy editIn his professional career Gonzales won the United States Professional Championship nine times including twice in the same year a unique achievement in tennis history He won the USPLTA version of the U S Pro in L A in 1954 and the Cleveland U S Pro version another eight times the Wembley professional title in London four times and the Tournament of Champions three times 1957 Forest Hills 1958 Forest Hills 1959 Sydney White City the Los Angeles Masters three times 1956 1957 1959 the U S Professional Indoor three times 1950 Philadelphia 1952 Philadelphia 1964 White Plains plus beating in seven head to head pro tours all of the best amateurs who turned pro During this time Gonzales was known for his fiery will to win his cannonball serve and his outstanding net game a combination so potent that the rules on the 1960 professional tour were briefly changed to prohibit him from advancing to the net immediately after serving Under the new rules the returned serve had to bounce before the server could make his own first shot thereby keeping Gonzales from playing his usual serve and volley game He won even so and the rules were changed back Kramer also tried moving the service line to a yard behind the baseline once again Gonzales won in spite of the change 141 Most of Gonzales s career as a professional took place before the start of the Open era of tennis and he was therefore ineligible to compete at the Grand Slam events between the end of 1949 when he turned pro and the start of the open era in April 1968 As has been observed about other great players such as Rod Laver Gonzales almost certainly would have won a number of additional Grand Slam titles had he been permitted to compete in those tournaments during that 18 year period Jack Kramer for instance has speculated in an article about the theoretical champions of Forest Hills and Wimbledon that Gonzales would have won an additional 12 titles in those two tournaments alone 142 From 1952 through 1961 Gonzales was considered the best of this time period with some saying he had taken the crown from Bill Tilden as the best of all time 143 Gonzales has been rated one of the greatest in the history of the sport 144 He was ranked the world No 1 tennis player in some rankings from 1952 to 1961 145 The Tennis Hall of Fame says Gonzales rose to the world No 1 ranking holding that lofty perch from 1952 to 1960 36 Other sources state that Gonzales was world number one for an eight year period 146 147 148 The tennis rankings of that era were composed by tennis writers promoters and players Only in 1946 1959 1960 and 1964 to 1968 was there a point system based on tournament series to provide a No 1 ranking for professional play Gonzales was the No 1 money winner on the American portion of the 1965 season Gonzales was runner up for the combined WCT NTL professional tours championship final in 1968 losing the final at Madison Square Garden to Tony Roche Gonzalez was reported to be the first tennis player to earn a half million dollars in career prize money 149 150 151 By mid 1965 he had earned US 740 000 excluding income from product endorsements appearances and lessons 152 According to his autobiography Gonzales stood 6 feet 3 inches 1 91 m and weighed 183 pounds 83 kg by the time he was 19 years old 153 Other sources generally credit him as being an inch or two shorter but in any case he would enjoy a clear advantage in height over a number of his most prominent rivals particularly Pancho Segura Ken Rosewall and Rod Laver all of whom were at least 5 or 6 inches shorter Tony Trabert who was badly beaten by Gonzales on their 101 match tour and who disliked him intensely saying I appreciated his tennis ability but I never came to respect him as a person 154 he nevertheless told the Los Angeles Times that Gonzales is the greatest natural athlete tennis has ever known The way he can move that 6 foot 3 inch frame of his around the court is almost unbelievable He s just like a big cat Pancho s reflexes and reactions are God given talents He can be moving in one direction and in the split second it takes him to see that the ball is hit to his weak side he s able to throw his physical mechanism in reverse and get to the ball in time to reach it with his racket 155 The flamboyant Gussie Moran who briefly toured with the Gonzales group said that watching Gonzales was like seeing a god patrolling his personal heaven 23 Arthur Ashe called Gonzales the only idol he ever had 156 Allen Fox said Pancho Gonzales was if not the best player of all time certainly one of the best 157 In a 1972 article about an imaginary tournament among the all time greats Gene Scott had the fourth seeded Gonzales upsetting Bill Tilden in the semifinals and then using his serve to beat Rod Laver in the finals 158 159 Tennis commentator journalist and author Bud Collins the editor of The History of Tennis 2016 is guarded He writes that Gonzales was probably as good as anyone who ever played the game if not better However he also states that Rod Laver would be known as possibly the greatest player ever and calls Bill Tilden perhaps the greatest player of them all 160 In 1978 Ellsworth Vines ranked his all time top 10 in Tennis Myth and Method and rated Gonzales number three behind Budge and Kramer 161 Jack Kramer on the other hand who became a world class player in 1940 and then beat Gonzales badly in the latter s first year as a professional has stated that he believes that although Gonzales was better than either Laver or Sampras 162 he was not as good as either Ellsworth Vines or Don Budge Kramer who had a long and frequently bitter relationship with Gonzales rates him only as one of the four players who are second to Budge and Vines in his estimation b Kramer also stated that Bobby Riggs would have beaten Gonzales on a regular basis and he ranked Riggs above Gonzales stating On a long tour I m sure he would have beaten Gonzales Bobby was too quick he had too much control for Pancho Jack Kramer wrote that although Laver was absolutely unbeatable for a year or two late in the 1960s a careful comparison could be made between Laver and the somewhat older Gonzales and that Kramer is positive that Gonzales could have beaten Laver regularly 164 165 Kramer sees as evidence of Gonzales s superiority over Laver the fact that Gonzales defeated Laver in a five set match before 14 761 spectators in New York s Madison Square Garden in January 1970 when Gonzales was 41 years old and Laver was still considered the world No 1 player 166 On the other hand Gonzales was still a top ten player when this match occurred and Laver subsequently won the tournament event played there beating Gonzales in a straight sets semifinal During the span of seven years that they faced each other Laver was 26 32 and Gonzales was 36 42 years old While the peak of Laver was in the late 60s the peak of Gonzales was in the mid to late 50s Gonzales had a great longevity that made possible this rivalry However the overall record could be biased in favor of Laver because of the difference of ten years between them For the 1964 season Gonzales held a head to head edge over Laver In 2007 after Gonzales and Hoad were both dead Kramer gave a higher assessment of both players rating them among the top five players of all time chronologically Vines Budge Gonzales Hoad and Federer Kramer had expressed a competitive relationship with both Gonzales and Hoad during his years as tour manager but time had mellowed his assessment of them Early in 1986 Inside Tennis a magazine published in Northern California devoted parts of four issues to a lengthy article called Tournament of the Century an imaginary tournament to determine the greatest of all time They asked 37 tennis notables such as Kramer Budge Perry and Riggs and observers such as Bud Collins c to list the ten greatest players in order Twenty five players in all were named by the 37 experts in their lists of the ten best The magazine then ranked them in descending order by total number of points assigned The top eight players in overall points with their number of first place votes were Rod Laver 9 John McEnroe 3 Don Budge 4 Jack Kramer 5 Bjorn Borg 6 Pancho Gonzales 1 Bill Tilden 6 and Lew Hoad 1 Gonzales was ranked the sixth best player with only Allen Fox casting a vote for him as the greatest of all time 167 In the early years of the 21st century Sidney Wood compiled his list of the Greatest Players of All Time later published posthumously in a memoir The Wimbledon final that never was and other tennis tales from a bygone era Wood first entered Wimbledon in 1927 and won the title in 1931 From that time on through to the late 1970s doubles only towards the end I was privileged to compete against virtually every top player in the world said Wood Wood ranked Gonzales number four behind Budge Kramer and Tilden 168 In the Tennis Channel series The 100 Greatest of All Time in 2012 Gonzales was ranked the 22nd greatest male tennis player of all time just behind his longtime tennis rivals Lew Hoad 19th and Jack Kramer 21st and just ahead of Lacoste 23rd and Djokovic 24th In 2014 Frank Sedgman ranked Gonzales number four behind Jack Kramer Roger Federer and Rod Laver in his greatest male tennis players of all time list in his autobiography Game Sedge and Match 169 After his death a Sports Illustrated article stated If earth was on the line in a tennis match the man you want serving to save humankind would be Ricardo Alonso Gonzales 6 Longtime tennis commentator Bud Collins echoed it in 2006 If I had to choose someone to play for my life it would be Pancho Gonzales 170 Hoad was Gonzales s toughest opponent on grass with Hoad holding a 21 to 14 60 lifetime edge although Gonzales held a lifetime head to head edge against Rosewall on grass of 24 to 14 63 Gonzales held a lifetime edge over Hoad overall at 104 78 57 171 Gonzales s lifetime edge over Rosewall was 117 87 57 172 In head to head world championship tours Gonzales led Hoad 64 to 51 56 and led Rosewall 70 to 31 70 Honors editGonzales was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame at Newport in 1968 California State University Los Angeles named their Tennis Center the Rosie Casals Pancho Gonzalez Tennis Center in 2013 173 Performance timeline for major tournaments editMain article Pancho Gonzales career statistics 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 Career SR Career W L Career Win Grand Slam tournaments Amateur Professional Open Era 2 17 44 15 75 1947 1948 1949 1950 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973Australian A A A Unable to compete 3R A A A A 0 1 2 1 67 French A A SF Unable to compete SF A A A A A 0 2 9 2 82 Wimbledon A A 4R Unable to compete 3R 4R A 2R 2R A 0 5 10 5 67 U S 2R W W Unable to compete QF 4R 3R 3R 1R 1R 2 9 23 7 77 Pro Slam tournaments Professional 13 27 65 14 82 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967U S Pro A A RU F W W W W W W W W A W A QF F SF A A 9 14 36 5 88 French Pro NH F NH SF A A F A A SF A A A 0 4 7 4 64 Wembley Pro W W W F NH W SF SF A A SF A A SF A A A 4 9 22 5 81 Major finals editGrand Slam tournaments edit Singles 2 2 titles edit Result Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1948 U S Championships Grass nbsp Eric Sturgess 6 2 6 3 14 12Win 1949 U S Championships Grass nbsp Ted Schroeder 16 18 2 6 6 1 6 2 6 4Doubles 2 2 titles edit Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents ScoreWin 1949 French Championships Grass nbsp Frank Parker nbsp Eustace Fannin nbsp Eric Sturgess 6 3 8 6 5 7 6 3Win 1949 Wimbledon Grass nbsp Frank Parker nbsp Gardnar Mulloy nbsp Ted Schroeder 6 4 6 4 6 2Pro Slam tournaments edit Singles 19 13 titles 6 runner ups edit Result Year Championship Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1950 Wembley Pro Indoor nbsp Welby Van Horn 6 3 6 3 6 2Loss 1951 U S Pro Grass nbsp Pancho Segura 3 6 4 6 2 6Win 1951 Wembley Pro Indoor nbsp Pancho Segura 6 2 6 2 2 6 6 4Loss 1952 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Pancho Segura 6 3 4 6 6 3 4 6 0 6Win 1952 Wembley Pro Indoor nbsp Jack Kramer 3 6 3 6 6 2 6 4 7 5Win 1953 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Don Budge 4 6 6 4 7 5 6 2Loss 1953 Wembley Pro Indoor nbsp Frank Sedgman 1 6 2 6 2 6Win 1954 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Frank Sedgman 6 3 9 7 3 6 6 2Win 1954 U S Pro Cement nbsp Pancho Segura 6 4 4 6 2 6 6 2 6 4Win 1955 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Pancho Segura 21 16 19 21 21 8 20 22 21 19Win 1956 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Pancho Segura 21 15 13 21 21 14 22 20Loss 1956 French Pro Clay nbsp Tony Trabert 3 6 6 4 7 5 6 8 2 6Win 1956 Wembley Pro Indoor nbsp Frank Sedgman 4 6 11 9 11 9 9 7Win 1957 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Pancho Segura 6 3 3 6 7 5 6 1Win 1958 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Lew Hoad 3 6 4 6 14 12 6 1 6 4Win 1959 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Lew Hoad 6 4 6 2 6 4Win 1961 U S Pro Indoor nbsp Frank Sedgman 6 3 7 5Loss 1961 French Pro Clay nbsp Ken Rosewall 6 2 4 6 3 6 6 8Loss 1964 U S Pro Grass nbsp Rod Laver 6 4 3 6 5 7 4 6References editNotes edit Segura was the defending champion from that version of the U S Pro last held in 1951 at Forest Hills 47 there was also the Cleveland US Pro described as such in contemporary press reports and by Jack Kramer and Pancho Gonzales in their autobiographies It was also approved by the Professional Players Association of Tennis PPAT in the early 1950 s 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 The 1951 U S Pro at Forest Hills was the previous time before the 1954 L A Tennis Club U S Pro that the winner was awarded the Benrus Cup 47 The Cup was under the jurisdiction of the USPLTA 58 59 The Cleveland promoter Jack March had applied to the USPLTA an organisation of teaching professionals in 1952 for their sanction of the Cleveland tournament as the U S Pro but was not successful and would use the term International Pro and from 1953 World Pro for his Cleveland tournament 60 61 62 The 1954 U S Pro at L A would be the only occasion where Gonzales was awarded the USPLTA s Benrus Cup The Cleveland World Pro Championships awarded different trophies the Pilsner of Cleveland Trophy from 1951 to 1958 the Leisy Brewing Trophy in 1959 and the Pepsi Cola Trophy from 1960 to 1964 Jack March reportedly warned of legal action against Kramer in 1960 to maintain the Cleveland tournament s exclusive rights to the World Pro Tennis Championships title name 63 Kramer had been using the title World s Professional Championship of Tennis to describe his own tours in his brochures Kramer changed his brochures to World Series for the 1961 pro tour March would continue to bill the Cleveland event as World Pro until its final installment in 1964 In his 1979 autobiography Kramer considered the best ever to have been either Don Budge for consistent play or Ellsworth Vines at the height of his game The next four best were chronologically Bill Tilden Fred Perry Bobby Riggs and Pancho Gonzales After these six came the second echelon of Rod Laver Lew Hoad Ken Rosewall Gottfried von Cramm Ted Schroeder Jack Crawford Pancho Segura Frank Sedgman Tony Trabert John Newcombe Arthur Ashe Stan Smith Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors He felt unable to rank Henri Cochet and Rene Lacoste accurately but felt they were among the very best 163 The 37 were Vijay Amritraj Arthur Ashe Lennart Bergelin Bjorn Borg s coach Nick Bollettieri Norm Brooks Don Budge Nick Carter Bud Collins Allison Danzig Donald Dell Cliff Drysdale Allen Fox John Gardiner Dick Gould Slew Hester Bill Jacobsen Alan King Jack Kramer Art Larsen Rod Laver Bob Lutz Barry MacKay Marty Mulligan Yannick Noah Manuel Orantes Charlie Pasarell Fred Perry Whitney Reed Bobby Riggs Vic Seixas Stan Smith Bill Talbert Eliot Teltscher Ted Tinling Tony Trabert Dennis Van der Meer Erik van Dillen Citations edit a b Pancho Gonzales Career match record thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved September 22 2021 a b c BROMWICH RANKED 6th The Daily Telegraph Vol XIII no 174 Australia October 11 1948 p 11 Retrieved November 22 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Frank Sedgman Rated Fifth The Age No 29 503 Victoria Australia November 17 1949 p 14 Retrieved November 26 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Australian is 3rd on world tennis table North Eastern Courier Vol 24 no 1359 Western Australia November 4 1949 p 8 MODERN WEEKLY News Magazine Retrieved November 22 2021 via National Library of Australia Pancho Gonzales Tennis Hall of Fame profile tennisfame com a b Richard Pancho Gonzales International Tennis Hall of Fame Retrieved June 17 2017 Cy Rice 1959 Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales A S Barnes and Co p 26 ASIN B000F79V9Y Cy Rice 1959 Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales A S Barnes and Co p various pages ASIN B000F79V9Y a b c Joel Drucker September 26 2008 Irascible Gonzales s resolve to win came at a price ESPN Retrieved May 23 2011 The Natural Remembering Pancho Gonzalez tennisnow com Bercow 2014 p 61 Gonzales forces Mulloy to 5 sets The Daily News New York September 9 1947 via newspapers com Register Los Angeles Times September 28 1947 via newspapers com Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as Told to Cy Rice 1959 Irascible Gonzalez s resolve to win came at a price espn co uk September 23 2008 Bud Collins Modern Encyclopedia of Tennis 1994 p 594 Register The Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph June 12 1949 via newspapers com Historical dictionary of tennis John Grasso 2011 The Game My 40 Years in Tennis 1979 Jack Kramer with Frank Deford ISBN 0 399 12336 9 page 177 Pancho tops Ted Todd trips Moran Los Angeles Times February 14 1949 p 53 Tennis Magazine on page 330 of The Tennis Book Edited by Michael Bartlett and Bob Gillen The Game Jack Kramer with Frank Deford 1981 Andre Deutsch edition p 199 200 a b c d e The Lone Wolf by S L Price Sports Illustrated June 26 2002 McCauley 2000 p 195 a b c Bercow 2014 p 65 Register The Evening Standard Uniontown March 28 1951 via newspapers com Register Philadelphia Inquirer March 29 1951 via newspapers com Register Detroit Free Press July 5 1951 via newspapers com Little Pancho The Life of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura Caroline Seebohm 2009 The history of Professional Tennis Joe McCauley 2000 Register San Francisco Examiner March 30 1952 via newspapers com Register Los Angeles Times April 21 1952 via newspapers com Register The Guardian August 4 1952 via newspapers com Register The Guardian September 27 1952 via newspapers com Register The Pittsburgh Press June 8 1952 via newspapers com a b Tennis Hall of Fame bio Retrieved April 21 2020 Register Arizona Republic August 13 1952 via Newspapers com World Tennis June 1953 Register The Guardian November 21 1953 via newspapers com Register The Age November 24 1953 via newspapers com Tennis de France February 1954 volume 10 P 3 4 5 March Jack July 1953 Gonzales Wins Pro Title World Tennis Vol 1 no 2 New York p 31 Register Brisbane Courier Mail October 31 1953 via Trove Sedgman and Gonzales win Los Angeles Times May 2 1954 p 13 part II a b McCauley 2000 p 64 Register Los Angeles Times June 14 1954 via newspapers com a b L A Times 11 May 1954 p 58 The Game Jack Kramer with Frank Deford 1981 Andre Deutsch edition p 205 Register The Philadelphia Inquirer December 20 1953 via newspapers com Harold E Donohue July 1956 Pancho Gonzales Mixed Up Champion Pageant p 112 Register Corpus Christi Caller Times March 12 1953 via newspapers com Register The Philadelphia Inquirer April 4 1953 via newspapers com Register The Tampa Tribune April 11 1953 via newspapers com Register The Philadelphia Inquirer December 27 1953 via newspapers com Register The Times Shreveport February 16 1956 via newspapers com Register Star Press Muncie March 18 1957 via newspapers com Man with a racket The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales 1959 p 111 Pancho Gonzales given top seeding for pro net tourney Segura second Los Angeles Times June 2 1954 p 2 part IV Gonzales scores gruelling 5 set victory over Segura Los Angeles Times June 14 1954 p 4 part IV The Racquet Professional Lawn Tennis Association News February 1952 New York Times 4 May 1958 Sports section P 2 Sports Illustrated 16 April 1956 https vault si com vault 1956 04 16 tennis talk World Tennis Feb 1960 McCauley 2000 pp 201 202 McCauley 2000 p 202 Gonzales tops The Akron Beacon Journal December 22 1954 p 34 via Newspapers com A committee of the International Professional Tennis Association today ranked Richard Pancho Gonzales of Los Angeles at the top of its ratings Winner of the world professional championship here last Summer Gonzales beat out Francisco Pancho Segura second place in the ratings Australia s Frank Sedgman was third The History of Professional Tennis Joe McCauley a b Prescott Sullivan December 15 1955 Loser of Trabert Gonzales Pro tennis series will be out in cold San Francisco Examiner pp 9 10 Section II The Game Jack Kramer with Frank Deford 1981 Andre Deutsch edition Jerry Magee October 18 2005 Legend ignored The San Diego Union Tribune signonsandiego com Retrieved May 23 2011 L A Times 30 July 1956 McCauley P 204 Register The Tribune Scranton September 17 1956 Archived from the original on June 14 2021 via newspapers com Register The Philadelphia Inquirer September 30 1956 Archived from the original on June 14 2021 via newspapers com The Daily Mail London 1 October 1956 McCauley 2000 pp 66 Le soir Belgian newspaper 26 January 1956 p 8 McCauley 2000 pp 72 Register The News and Observer Raleigh April 28 1957 via newspapers com Man with a racket The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as told to Cy Rice 1959 p 174 Man with a racket The autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as told to Cy Rice 1959 p 175 The Age 11 January 1958 All information about the Australian tour with Rosewall is from The Game My 40 Years in Tennis pages 225 228 Cleveland Plain Dealer 20 December 1957 Times have changed The Sydney Morning Herald October 27 1957 p 32 Retrieved January 26 2022 via Google News Archive Register The Courier Journal Louisville January 5 1958 via newspapers com Tennis Myth and Method 1978 Ellsworth Vines and Gene Vier ISBN 9780670696659 page 52 The Sports Patrol Great Falls Tribune May 4 1960 p 15 Tennis Lead to Gonzales Aussie Hoad Blames Conditions for Losses Pancho Changed Tactics The Baltimore Sun April 3 1958 p 16 Paul Menton April 21 1958 Sportopics The Evening Sun p 26 Charles Johnson May 8 1958 Lowdown on Sports The Minneapolis Star p 73 Ed Collins April 29 1958 Gonzales Outlasts Hoad in Corning Match Star Gazette p 16 Sedgman Win Sports The Sydney Morning Herald January 30 1958 via Google News McCauley 2000 pp 88 The Press Christchurch 6 March 1959 p 6 Sportsman s notebook Register The Daily Reporter Dover June 1 1959 via newspapers com Register Utrechtsch Nieuwsblad Netherlands June 2 1959 via hetutrechtsarchief nl Register Gazette de Lausanne June 3 1959 via letempsarchives ch Register Oakland Tribune January 8 1960 via newspapers com Register The Bristol Daily Courier January 12 1960 via newspapers com Register The Boston Globe January 27 1960 via newspapers com a b McCauley 2000 p 97 World Tennis February 1960 Around the World p 45 Big Pancho Blasts Two Rivals at Center New Gonzales Rosewall Delight Fandom Herald Statesman Yonkers New York February 15 1960 via Fulton New York Postcards Register The Courier Journal Louisville April 16 1960 via newspapers com McCauley 2000 p 104 Register The Boston Globe May 4 1961 via newspapers com A Legend Dies On The Court Sports Illustrated July 8 1963 via vault si com A Legend Dies On The Court Sports Illustrated July 8 1963 via vault si com Game Set and Match The Tennis Boom of the 1960s and 70s by Herbert Warren Wind 1979 McCauley p 231 Register The Journal News White Plains June 1 1964 via newspapers com Gonzalez Rallies to Beat Rosewall in 5 Set Pro Net Final The New York Times June 1 1964 Butch Buchholz World Tennis Dec 1964 Rod Humphries January 24 1965 Veteran takes singles The Sydney Morning Herald p 62 Register The Boston Globe July 20 1965 via newspapers com Register Daily News New York February 27 1966 p 37 via newspapers com Mark Cox Association of Tennis Professionals ATP Register The Journal News White Plains June 6 1968 via newspapers com McCauley 2000 P 156 Frank Riley November December 2003 The 10 Greatest Matches of the Open Era Tennis TennisForum Retrieved May 23 2011 Gonzales going again Evening Independent September 29 1969 p 4C John Barrett ed 1977 World of Tennis Yearbook 1971 Jane s Information p 142 ISBN 978 0 354 09011 7 Los Angeles Times 24 January 1970 Register Daily News Post Monrovia September 27 1971 via newspapers com Register The Philadelphia Inquirer February 7 1972 via newspapers com Gonzalez Is Disqualified In Court By Woman Referee Spartanburg Herald Journal AP June 23 1972 p A6 Bea Seal The Telegraph February 1 2011 Richard Pancho Gonzales 1973 Player Activity atptour com Richard Pancho Gonzales 1973 Player Activity atptour com Cy Rice 1959 Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales A S Barnes and Co p 33 ASIN B000F79V9Y How Did Pancho Gonzales Gain His Facial Scar June 29 2021 Retrieved October 5 2023 Hispanic Magazine com Nov 2006 The Latin Forum Archived October 15 2007 at the Wayback Machine Little Pancho The Life of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura Seebohm Caroline 9780803220416 p 101 Clemens Samuel March 31 2023 Top Models Sequoia Press p 18 ISBN 9798889921806 The Lone Wolf Sports Illustrated June 24 2002 via vault si com The Lone Wolf Sports Illustrated June 24 2002 via vault si com Amdur Neil July 5 1995 Pancho Gonzalez U S Tennis Champion Dies at 67 New York Times Seebohn Caroline 2009 Little Pancho The Life Of Tennis Legend Pancho Segura U of Nebraska Press pp 174 etc ISBN 9780803220416 Inside Tennis and the Sundance Kid Archived from the original on January 3 2011 Retrieved March 11 2012 Kramer Jack 1981 The Game First ed London Andre Deutsch p 244 ISBN 0233973079 The Game Jack Kramer with Frank Deford 1981 Andre Deutsch edition p 238 239 Honoring Gonzalez and his legacy New York Times September 5 2009 Retrieved May 17 2020 Pancho Gonzalez Top 10 Men s Tennis Players of All Time Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on September 18 2010 Retrieved June 10 2017 Ernie Reed October 21 1961 Pancho Gonzales calls it quits Press release UPI The natural Tennis Now Retrieved May 13 2020 USTA scholarship grant paperwork PDF Retrieved May 13 2020 McDougall Chris 2011 Arthur Ashe Tennis Great amp Civil Rights Leader ABDO Publishing p 27 Shirley Povich April 14 1961 This Morning The Washington Post p D1 Bill Lee February 1 1961 With Malice Toward None Hartford Courant p 3 Ayala Went Pro to Quit Tennis The Spokesman Review September 24 1961 p 20 Mel Durslag May 19 1965 Tamed Pancho Faces Young Tigers The Philadelphia Inquirer p 49 via Newspapers com Cy Rice 1959 Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales A S Barnes and Co p 21 ASIN B000F79V9Y McCauley 2000 p 68 Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as Told to Cy Rice 1959 page 129 The Lone Wolf Sports Illustrated June 24 2002 Richard Pancho Gonzales Possibly the greatest of them all Tennis Week 1972 Ira Berkow July 31 1998 Sports of the times Laver s Strength No Weakness The New York Times Collins Bud 2016 The Bud Collins History of Tennis 3rd ed New York New Chapter Press pp 617 618 639 691 692 ISBN 978 1 937559 38 0 Tennis Myth and Method Ellsworth Vines amp Gene Vier 1978 Viking Press p 6 The Lone Wolf Sports Illustrated June 24 2002 Kramer Jack 1981 The Game My 40 Years in Tennis London Deutsch pp 43 45 ISBN 978 0233973074 The Game Jack Kramer with Frank Deford 1981 Andre Deutsch edition p 45 Bercow 2014 p 64 Register Los Angeles Times January 24 1970 Archived from the original on June 14 2021 via newspapers com Inside Tennis magazine 1986 Analyzing the Greatest Players of All Time World Tennis Magazine December 16 2011 Frank Sedgman names Jack Kramer and Roger Federer in front of Rod Laver in best ever list heraldsun com Top Five Men s Tennis Stars of All Time NBC Sports Archived from the original on October 15 2006 Retrieved June 17 2017 Gonzales Hoad H2H thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved June 26 2019 Gonzales Rosewall H2H thetennisbase com Tennis Base Retrieved June 26 2019 Cal State L A breaks ground on Rosie Casals Pancho Gonzales Tennis Center Pasadena Star News May 6 2014 Sources editTennis Myth and Method 1978 Ellsworth Vines and Gene Vier ISBN 9780670696659 Kramer Jack 1981 The Game My 40 Years in Tennis London Deutsch ISBN 0233973079 McCauley Joe 2000 The History of Professional Tennis Windsor The Short Run Book Company Limited Man with a Racket The Autobiography of Pancho Gonzales as Told to Cy Rice 1959 The Tennis Book 1981 Edited by Michael Bartlett and Bob Gillen ISBN 0 87795 344 9 The Lone Wolf by S L Price Sports Illustrated June 26 2002 World of Tennis Yearbook 1971 1971 by John Barrett London Seebohm Caroline 2009 Little Pancho Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 2041 6 Bercow John 2014 Tennis Maestros London Biteback Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 84954 512 9 External links editPancho Gonzales at the International Tennis Hall of Fame nbsp Pancho Gonzales at the Association of Tennis Professionals nbsp Pancho Gonzales at the International Tennis Federation nbsp Pancho Gonzales at the Davis Cup nbsp Pancho Gonzales at IMDb Image of tennis players Tony Trabert and Pancho Gonzales with Beans Reardon at Bond Club luncheon in Los Angeles California 1955 Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive Collection 1429 UCLA Library Special Collections Charles E Young Research Library University of California Los Angeles 1 Portal nbsp Tennis Tennis players Tony Trabert and Pancho Gonzales with Beans Reardon at Bond Club luncheon in Los Angeles Calif 1955 UCLA Library Digital Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pancho Gonzales amp oldid 1186745572, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.