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77-522: The International Tennis Federation (ITF) designates a World Champion each year based on its own majority opinion of performances throughout the year, emphasizing the Grand Slam tournaments, and also considering team events such as the Davis Cup and Fed Cup . Men's and women's singles champions were first named in 1978; the title is now also awarded for doubles, wheelchair, and junior players. It

154-467: A 1987 newspaper article by saying "Borg and I were fire and ice. We were just entirely different people on and off the court." Nastase was another rival in Connors's prime. Though six years older than Connors, Nastase won eleven of their first twelve meetings. However, Connors then won eleven of their final fifteen meetings to trail Nastase 12-15. The two would team up to win the doubles championships at

231-589: A calendar year. He chose not to participate in the season-ending Masters Cup between the top eight players of the world and was not eligible for the World Championship Tennis (WCT) finals because he did not compete in the WCT's regular tournaments. Connors finished 1974 at the top of ATP Point Rankings. He also was the recipient of the Martini and Rossi Award, voted for by a panel of journalists and

308-725: A contract to play World Team Tennis (WTT) for the Baltimore Banners . Connors was seeking to enter the French Open, but the ATP and French officials opposed WTT because of scheduling conflicts. Just before the start of Wimbledon 1975 the British press reported that Riordan had filed lawsuits claiming damages against Arthur Ashe and ATP secretary Bob Briner. Ashe had criticised Connors in a letter as “seemingly unpatriotic” for playing lucrative ‘challenge’ matches, rather than joining

385-444: A final with Chris Evert , and accumulated 16 doubles titles during his career. At a time when most other tennis pros played with wooden rackets, Connors used the " Wilson T2000" steel racket, which utilized a method for stringing that had been devised and patented by Lacoste in 1953. He played with this chrome tubular steel racket until 1984, when most other pros had shifted to new racket technologies, materials, and designs. At

462-424: A five-sets match in the third round of the French Open against Michael Chang , the 1989 champion. Connors walked off the court, after hitting a service-return winner against Chang on the first point of the fifth set, having just levelled the match by winning the fourth. Connors recuperated and made an improbable run to the 1991 US Open semifinals which he later said were "the best 11 days of my tennis career". In

539-543: A grotesque manner and his fans would go wild or groan in disapproval—did not help his approval rating. During the early part of his career, Connors frequently argued with umpires, linesmen, the players union, Davis Cup officials and other players. He was even booed at Wimbledon —a rare show of disapproval there—for snubbing the Parade of Champions on the first day of the Centenary in 1977." His brash behavior both on and off

616-467: A lack of size with determination." Of his own competitive nature Connors has said, "[T]here's always somebody out there who's willing to push it that extra inch, or mile, and that was me. (Laughter) I didn't care if it took me 30 minutes or five hours. If you beat me, you had to be the best, or the best you had that day. But that was my passion for the game. If I won, I won, and if I lost, well, I didn't take it so well." His on-court antics, designed to get

693-551: A match everybody dreams will happen and he played one of those matches you hope you have only one time in your career.” Connors pushed sixth-seeded Andre Agassi to five sets in the quarterfinals before losing. He ended 1989 ranked 14 in the world. Connors' career seemed to be at an end in 1990, when he played only three tournament matches and lost all three, dropping to No. 936 in the world rankings. However, after surgery on his deteriorating left wrist, he came back to play 14 tournaments in 1991. An ailing back forced him to retire from

770-648: A newspaper article in 1987 by saying "We went at it on and off the court. That was because we were fire and fire, we were so similar. Still are." Connors defeated another of the next generation of tennis stars, Ivan Lendl, in the 1982 US Open final and soon regained the No. 1 ranking. Connors had a tour record of 13–22 against Lendl, but Lendl is eight years younger than Connors and had a losing record against Connors until he won their last 17 matches from 1984 through 1992, after Connors's prime. Head to head in major championship finals, Connors defeated Lendl in both meetings, winning

847-641: A star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame . In his 1979 autobiography, tennis promoter and Grand Slam winning player Jack Kramer ranked Connors as one of the 21 best players of all time. Because of his fiery competitiveness and acrimonious relationships with a number of peers, he has been likened to baseball player Pete Rose . In 1983, Fred Perry ranked the greatest male players of all time and put them in to two categories, before World War II and after. Perry's modern best behind Laver: "Borg, McEnroe, Connors, Hoad, Jack Kramer, John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall, Manuel Santana". In

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924-443: A then-record 160 consecutive weeks from 1974 to 1977 and a career total of 268 weeks. By virtue of his long and prolific career, Connors still holds three prominent Open Era men's singles records : 109 titles, 1,557 matches played, and 1,274 match wins. His titles include eight major singles titles (a joint Open Era record five US Opens , two Wimbledons , one Australian Open ) and three year-end championships . In 1974, he became

1001-497: A total of 268 weeks during his career. Connors relinquished his initial grip (160 weeks) on the No. 1 ranking for only one week, from August 23 to 30, 1977, before resuming as No. 1 for another 84 weeks. From 1979 to 1981, Connors lost in the semifinals of the three top Grand Slam events every time except the 1981 French Open, where he lost in the quarterfinals. He reached the semifinals at the Masters in 1979 and 1980, but he did win

1078-539: A total of 31 times and the quarterfinals or better a total of 41 times, despite entering the Australian Open Men's Singles only twice and not entering the French Open Men's Singles for five of his peak career years. The 31 semifinals stood as a record until surpassed by Roger Federer at Wimbledon 2012. The 41 quarterfinals remained a record until Roger Federer surpassed it at Wimbledon 2014. Connors

1155-583: Is sometimes named the "ITF Player of the Year" award, alluding to similar other year-end awards in tennis. The ITF's constitution states that no tennis tournament can be designated the "World Championships" without unanimous consent of the ITF Council. There is currently no such tournament. The constitution also states: The opinion of the Board of Directors is taken to be equivalent to the majority opinions of

1232-543: The 1973 U.S. Pro Singles, defeating Arthur Ashe in a five-set final, one of 11 tournaments Connors won that year. In 1974, Connors was the dominant player. He had a 93–4 record that year and won 15 tournaments of the 21 he entered, including three of the four Grand Slam singles titles. Connors won the Australian Open , which began in late December 1973 and concluded on January 1, 1974 , defeating Phil Dent in four sets. He beat Ken Rosewall in straight sets in

1309-545: The 1980 WCT Finals , Connors defeated the defending champion, John McEnroe. In 1982, at age 29, Connors was back in the Wimbledon singles final, where he faced McEnroe, who by then was established firmly as the world's top player. Connors recovered from being three points away from defeat in a fourth-set tie-break (at 3–4) to win the match, 3–6, 6–3, 6–7, 7–6, 6–4, and claimed his second Wimbledon title, eight years after his first. Although Connors's tour record against McEnroe

1386-430: The 1982 and 1983 US Open. Connors described his rivalry with Lendl in a newspaper article in 1987 by saying "Lendl and I didn’t get along, and I won a lot early. He’s won a lot later." In 1974, Connors and Riordan began filing lawsuits against the ATP and its president, Arthur Ashe , for allegedly restricting his freedom in the game. The lawsuits stemmed from the French Open banning Connors in 1974 after he had signed

1463-588: The Jacksonville Open , quickly followed by his second at Roanoke, third at Queen's Club, fourth at Columbus, fifth at Cincinnati and sixth at Albany. Connors was acquiring a reputation as a maverick in 1972 when he refused to join the newly formed Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP), the union that was embraced by most male professional players, in order to play in and dominate a series of smaller tournaments organized by Bill Riordan, his manager. However, Connors played in other tournaments and won

1540-479: The Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri , and was raised Catholic . During his childhood he was coached and trained by his mother and grandmother. He played in his first U.S. Championship, the U.S. boys' 11-and-under of 1961, when he was nine years old. Connors's mother, Gloria, took him to Southern California to be coached by Pancho Segura , starting at age 16, in 1968. But she remained part of

1617-688: The Tokyo Indoor in October 1983, Connors switched to a new mid-size graphite racket, the Wilson ProStaff , that had been designed especially for him and he used it on the 1984 tour. But 1985 again found Connors playing with the T2000. In 1987, he finally switched to a graphite racket when he signed a contract with Slazenger to play their Panther Pro Ceramic. In 1990, Connors signed with Estusa. Connors used lead tape which he would wind around

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1694-467: The 1973 Wimbledon and the 1975 US Open. Orantes upset Connors in the final of the 1975 US Open , but Connors was 12 wins and 3 losses overall against Orantes in tour events. On the other hand, Vilas wore down Connors in the final of the 1977 US Open and was much more competitive in all of their meetings. Connors was able to manage only a 5–4 record against Vilas in tour events. In 1975, Connors won two highly touted "Challenge Matches", both arranged by

1771-416: The 1978 and 1982 choices being particularly clear cut in favor of Borg (1978) and Connors (1982). Nadal won in 2022, despite Alcaraz being the year-end number 1; Nadal won two Grand Slam titles, while Alcaraz failed to reach the semi-final stage in three of four Grand Slams. The women's panel initially featured three former women's champions, Margaret Court , Margaret duPont and Ann Jones . Althea Gibson

1848-525: The 1985 panel had four: Budge, Perry, Hoad, and Tony Trabert . When Ivan Lendl was chosen as champion for 1985, the panel's announcement was accompanied with a rebuke for Lendl's criticism of some tournaments and his refusal to play in the Davis Cup. Perry and Trabert were on the 1986 panel, with performances outside the Grand Slams taken into consideration. The 1990 designation of Lendl as champion

1925-676: The 4 Grand Slams (DNP the Australian Open, 1st round loss at Wimbledon) to justify their decision and Djokovic's consistent results across all four Grand Slams (1 title, 2 runner-ups, 1 SF), Davis Cup (led Serbia to final, won 7/7 singles rubbers) and the ATP World Tour Finals (won title). Other instances when the ITF choices differed from the ATP rankings are 1978 ( Jimmy Connors ), 1982 (McEnroe), 1989 (Lendl), and 2022 ( Carlos Alcaraz ). None of these were controversial, with

2002-466: The ATP No. 1 ranking at the end of the year, the ATP and most tennis authorities rated Borg, who also won the French Open, as the player of the year. Connors reached the ATP world No. 1 ranking on July 29, 1974, and held it for 160 consecutive weeks, a record until it was surpassed by Roger Federer on February 26, 2007. He was the year-end No. 1 player from 1974 through 1978 and held the No. 1 ranking for

2079-409: The ATP website, with Newcombe winning the first two meetings on grass (1973 US Open quarterfinal and 1975 Australian Open final) and Connors winning the last four on indoor carpet (WCT Aetna World Cup 1976 and 1978) and hard courts (1978 Sydney Indoor quarterfinal and 1979 Hong Kong round of 16). Connors won all three meetings with Rod Laver in tour events, all when Laver was at least 37 years old. In

2156-524: The Australian Open again. He won nine of the tournaments he entered achieving an 82–8 record. While he earned enough points to retain the ATP No. 1 ranking the entire year and was ranked number one by Rino Tommasi, all other tennis authorities, including the ATP, named Arthur Ashe, who solidly defeated Connors at Wimbledon, as the Player of the Year. He once again did not participate in the Masters Cup or

2233-510: The ITF announced that the quad wheelchair tennis division is to be recognised in its annual list of ITF World Champions. In 1996, the Philippe Chatrier Award was introduced, honouring individuals or organisations who have made outstanding contributions to tennis globally, both on and off the court. The award is considered to be the ITF's highest accolade and is named after the former French tennis player Philippe Chatrier, who

2310-662: The Riordan company and televised nationally by CBS Sports from Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada . The first match, in February and billed as $ 100,000 ($ 566,234 today) winner-takes-all, was against 36 year old Laver. Connors won that match in four sets. In April, Connors met Newcombe in a match billed as a $ 250,000 winner-takes-all. Connors won the match in four sets. Connors ended his business relationship with Riordan later in 1975. Connors played Newcombe six matches listed on

2387-484: The U.S. Davis Cup team and Briner had called Riordan, a “nihilist”. Connors dropped Riordan (and the lawsuits) in November 1975. At Wimbledon in 1977, he declined to participate in a parade of former champions to celebrate the tournament's centenary, choosing instead to practice in the grounds with Ilie Nastase while the parade took place. In 2000, he also declined to join a gathering of 58 former champions held to mark

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2464-459: The US Open. In 1983, Connors, McEnroe and Lendl traded the No. 1 ranking several times. Connors won the US Open for a record fifth time beating Lendl in the final in four sets, where he "blunted Lendl's power with defensive strength and spectacular volleys". It was his 100th tournament victory and fourth of the year. He finished the year as the No. 3 ranked player. In 1984 Connors had made both

2541-517: The WCT Finals in 1980. He was generally ranked third in the world those years. He won eight tournaments in 1979, six in 1980 and four in 1981. In 1982, Connors experienced a resurgence as he defeated John McEnroe in five close sets "that varied from boringly slow to fiercely brilliant" to win the Wimbledon final. Connors beat Ivan Lendl in the US Open final when Lendl was unable to cope "with Connors' penetrating, sharply-angled groundstrokes into

2618-490: The WCT Finals. In 1976 Connors lost in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon to Roscoe Tanner. At the US Open , Connors captured the title once again (defeating Björn Borg). After the match, Borg said “it was a very good match. It was the best Jimmy has ever played against me. He hit everything on the lines, everything in the corners. I couldn't do anything. Usually, you play like that for one and a half sets and start missing. But he

2695-529: The Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.150 via cp1114 cp1114, Varnish XID 933269580 Upstream caches: cp1114 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 08:35:42 GMT Jimmy Connors James Scott Connors (born September 2, 1952) is an American former world No. 1 tennis player. He held the top Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) ranking for

2772-444: The Wimbledon final. Connors defeated Borg in the US Open final (played on hardcourt for the inaugural time). The Los Angeles Times described the match by saying "Connors played smashingly, as he has all tournament, pressuring Borg from the start. Yet Borg looked nothing like the broad-shouldered, power-hitting Swede who dominated Connors in straight sets at Wimbledon." Borg was suffering from an infected callous on his thumb but said "it

2849-451: The Year. In 1977, an injured Connors lost in the Wimbledon finals to Borg 6–4 in the fifth set and in the US Open finals to Guillermo Vilas, but Connors captured both the Masters, beating Borg, and the WCT Finals. While holding onto the ATP No. 1 ranking, World Tennis Magazine and most tennis authorities ranked Borg or Vilas No. 1 with Connors rated as No. 3 behind Borg. He won eight tournaments this year. In 1978, Borg defeated Connors in

2926-436: The corners, or his net-charging attacks". After the US Open, Connors reclaimed the ATP No. 1 ranking. He also reached the semifinal of the Masters Cup and won five other tournaments for a total of seven. After trading the number-one ranking back and forth with McEnroe, he finished the year ranked No. 2 in points earned, but he was named Player of the Year by the ATP and was ITF World Champion due to his victories at Wimbledon and

3003-464: The court earned him a reputation as the brat of the tennis world. Tennis commentator Bud Collins nicknamed Connors the "Brash Basher of Belleville" after the St Louis suburb where he grew up. Connors himself thrived on the energy of the crowd, positive or negative, and manipulated and exploited it to his advantage in many of the greatest matches of his career. Connors was taught to hit the ball on

3080-430: The crowd as you are preparing for your serve. If that’s his idea of winning... I think it’s ridiculous what he’s doing." Connors lost in the semifinals to Mal Washington. He beat 20 year old world No. 12, Wayne Ferreira, to reach the quarterfinals at Indianapolis, before losing to Boris Becker. Connors participated in his last major tournament, in the 1992 US Open, where he beat 22 year old Jaime Oncins in straight sets in

3157-410: The crowd involved, both helped and hurt his play. Schwartz said, "While tennis fans enjoyed Connors's gritty style and his never-say-die attitude, they often were shocked by his antics. His sometimes vulgar on-court behavior—like giving the finger to a linesman after disagreeing with a call or strutting about the court with the tennis racket handle between his legs; sometimes he would yank on the handle in

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3234-469: The final of Wimbledon losing six games. He allowed Rosewall just two games in the US Open final in the most one-sided men's singles final in the tournament's history. "From the moment I took the court and hit the first ball, I felt I was gliding. I was on a cloud. It was a terrific feeling” said Connors afterwards. Connors did not participate in the French Open during his peak years (1974–78), as he

3311-544: The finals of Wimbledon and the WCT finals with semifinal appearances at the French Open, the US Open, and the Masters Cup. He won five tournaments and finished the year as the No. 2 ranked player after McEnroe. In 1985, he made the semifinals of the three majors he entered and finished No. 4 for the year, a ranking he would again obtain in 1987, at the age of 35. In the fourth round of the 1987 Wimbledon Championships , Connors defeated Mikael Pernfors , ten years his junior, in five sets from two sets down and having trailed 1–4 in

3388-519: The first round on his 40th birthday, before losing to Lendl (then ranked No. 7) in four sets, in the second round. In September 1992, Connors played Martina Navratilova in the third Battle of the Sexes tennis match at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada . Connors was allowed only one serve per point and Navratilova was allowed to hit into half the doubles court. Connors won, 7–5, 6–2 and won an estimated $ 1 million. In February 1993, Connors reached

3465-405: The first round, Connors was two sets and 3-0 down against Patrick McEnroe before winning in five sets. He then had straight sets wins over Michiel Schapers and 10th seed Karel Novacek. In the fourth round, on his 39th birthday, he defeated 24-year-old Aaron Krickstein in five sets, in 4 hours and 41 minutes, coming back from a 2–5 deficit in the final set. Connors then defeated Paul Haarhuis in

3542-630: The last 16, where he was described by the Los Angeles Times as the "Cinderfella of tennis" and "the kid with a magic wand for a backhand". In 1971, Connors won the NCAA singles title as a Freshman while attending UCLA and attained All-American status. He reached his first ATP Tour finals at Columbus (losing to Tom Gorman) and Los Angeles (beating newly-crowned US Open champion Stan Smith before losing to 43 year old Pancho Gonzales). Connors turned professional in 1972 and won his first tournament,

3619-483: The members of the Board. It also states: The boys' and girls' singles and doubles titles prior to 2003 were awarded based on world ranking. Since then singles and doubles rankings have been combined in a single award each for boys and for girls. The world champion accolade has been extended by the ITF to wheelchair tennis players of the Men's and Women's division since 1991 and also based on world ranking. In November 2017,

3696-403: The men's doubles titles at Wimbledon in 1973 and the US Open in 1975). Connors has won more matches (1,274) than any other male professional tennis player in the open era. His career win–loss record was 1,274–283 for a winning percentage of 82.4. He played 398 tournaments, a record until Fabrice Santoro overtook it in 2008. In Grand Slam Singles events, Connors reached the semifinals or better

3773-530: The millennium. In his 2013 autobiography, Connors blamed his missing the 1977 parade on the All England Club for not letting his doctor onto the grounds so that Connors could try on a customized splint for a thumb injury. Connors explained that this necessitated his rushing to meet the doctor at the entrance to the grounds, and then convincing Nastase to help him try out the splint on a practice court. By Connors' account, he then rushed to Centre Court for

3850-494: The modern era of power tennis, Connors' style of play has often been cited as highly influential, especially in the development of the flat backhand. Larry Schwartz on ESPN.com said about Connors, "His biggest weapons were an indomitable spirit, a two-handed backhand and the best service return in the game. It is difficult to say which was more instrumental in Connors becoming a champion. ... Though smaller than most of his competitors, Connors didn't let it bother him, making up for

3927-532: The pace off the ball, giving Connors only soft junk shots (dinks, drop shots, and lobs) to hit. In an era when the serve and volley was the norm, Björn Borg excepted, Connors was one of the few players to hit the ball flat, low, and predominantly from the baseline. Connors hit his forehand with a semi-Western grip and with little net clearance. Contemporaries such as Arthur Ashe and commentators such as Joel Drucker characterized his forehand as his greatest weakness, especially on extreme pressure points, as it lacked

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4004-477: The parade, but was too late. Connors also irritated sponsors and tennis officials by shunning the end-of-year Masters championship from 1974 through 1976. However, he entered this round-robin competition in 1977 when it moved to New York City. Although Connors lost a celebrated late-night match to Vilas, he took the title by defeating Borg in the final. In a semi final of a tournament at Boca Raton in February 1986 against Ivan Lendl, Connors protested what he said

4081-438: The quarterfinals in four sets after Haarhuis had served for a two sets to love lead. He lost to Jim Courier in the semifinals, in straight sets. 22 years later, ESPN aired a documentary commemorating Connors's run. In 1992, Connors beat world No. 3, Michael Stich, at Memphis. Afterwards Stich accused Connors of being "very unfair on the court,” saying "he talks to the crowd between your first and second serves and he talks to

4158-1143: The quarterfinals of the Halle event in Germany. Connors lost this quarterfinal in straight sets to Marc Rosset . His last match on the ATP Tour came in April 1996, when he lost in three sets to Richey Reneberg in Atlanta. Connors endorsed Converse but wore Nike Air Tech Challenge IV low's at one time. Prominent contemporary players with Connors included Phil Dent , Brian Gottfried , Raul Ramírez , Harold Solomon , Dick Stockton , Roscoe Tanner , and Guillermo Vilas . His prominent older opponents included Pancho Gonzales , Ken Rosewall , Rod Laver , Arthur Ashe , John Newcombe , Ilie Năstase , Stan Smith and Manuel Orantes . His prominent younger opponents included Vitas Gerulaitis , Björn Borg , John McEnroe , Ivan Lendl , Stefan Edberg , Boris Becker and Andre Agassi . During his best years of 1974 through 1978, Connors

4235-531: The racket head to provide the proper "feel" for his style of game. Connors did commentary with NBC-TV in 1990 and 1991, during its coverage of the French Open and Wimbledon tournaments. During the Wimbledon tournaments of 2005, 2006, and 2007, Connors commentated for the BBC alongside John McEnroe (among others), providing moments of heated discussion between two former archrivals. Connors returned to BBC commentary at Wimbledon in 2014. Connors has also served as

4312-449: The rise by his teaching-pro mother, Gloria Connors, a technique he used to defeat the opposition in the early years of his career. Gloria sent her son to Southern California to work with Pancho Segura at the age of 16. Segura advanced Connors' game of hitting the ball on the rise which enabled Connors to reflect the power and velocity of his opponents back at them. In the 1975 Wimbledon final, Arthur Ashe countered this strategy by taking

4389-434: The safety margin of hard forehands hit with topspin. His serve, while accurate and capable, was never a great weapon for him as it did not reach the velocity and power of his opponents. His lack of a dominating serve and net game, combined with his individualist style and maverick tendencies, meant that he was not as successful in doubles as he was in singles, although he did win Grand Slam titles with Ilie Năstase , reached

4466-533: The second man in the Open Era to win three major titles in a calendar year, and was not permitted to participate in the fourth, the French Open . Connors finished year end number one in the ATP rankings from 1974 to 1978. In 1982, he won both Wimbledon and the US Open and was ATP Player of the Year and ITF World Champion. He retired in 1996 at the age of 43. Connors grew up in East St. Louis, Illinois , just across

4543-723: The semifinals of the San Francisco tournament, beating Richard Matuszewski, Bryan Shelton (in an ill-tempered match in which Shelton afterwards accused Connors of disrupting his concentration by stalling, yelling obscenities and playing to the crowd) and 21 year old Chuck Adams, before retiring against Brad Gilbert due to bone spurs in his right foot. However, this would not be the end of his playing career. As late as June 1995, three months shy of his 43rd birthday, Connors beat 22 year old Sébastien Lareau , in straight sets, and 27 year old Martin Sinner , in straight sets, to progress to

4620-868: The team as his coach and manager. He and his brother, John "Johnny" Connors, attended St. Phillip's grade school. Connors won the Junior Orange Bowl in both the 12- and the 14-year categories, and is one of only nine tennis players to win the Junior Orange Bowl championship twice in its 70-year history. In August 1970, Connors recorded his first match win in the first round of the Haverford tournament, beating Jean-Baptiste Chanfreau. In his first US Open, Connors lost in round one to Mark Cox . At Pacific Southwest Open in Los Angeles, he defeated Roy Emerson before losing to Clark Graebner in

4697-677: The third set and 0–3 in the fourth set. In July 1988, Connors ended a four-year title drought by winning the Sovran Bank Tennis Classic in Washington, D.C. It was the 106th title of his career. Connors had played in 56 tournaments and lost 11 finals since his previous victory in the Tokyo Indoors against Lendl in October 1984. He also won the title at Toulouse. In 1989, Connors won the final tournaments of his career at Toulouse (beating his old rival McEnroe, who

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4774-488: Was 14–20 McEnroe is 6½ years younger than Connors and had a losing record against Connors until he won 12 out of their last 14 meetings. Head to head in major championship finals, they split their two meetings, Connors winning the 1982 Wimbledon in five sets, and McEnroe winning the 1984 Wimbledon in straight sets. McEnroe won six of their nine meetings in Grand Slam events. Connors described his rivalry with McEnroe in

4851-479: Was Lendl's better average performance in the Grand Slams that made the difference. The choice to award Djokovic the ITF World Champion of 2013 over Nadal was unexpected. Nadal finished the year ranked #1 and with more Grand Slams (2 to 1), more Masters titles (5 to 3), and more tournament titles (10 to 7). Similar to the situation with Edberg in 1990, the ITF cited Nadal's failure to win a match at 2 of

4928-481: Was President of the governing body between 1977 and 1991. The ITF World Champions Dinner takes place annually to honour the previous year's champions, who are presented with a trophy, but not any monetary prize. The dinner was held during the French Open up until 2022, but since 2023 has been held during Wimbledon. For 2020 there were no ITF World Champion awards given due to the COVID-19 pandemic . The tennis season

5005-496: Was a bad line call in the sixth game of the fifth set that gave Lendl a 3-2, 40-0 lead. Umpire Jeremy Shales, after imposing a 15-second warning, gave Connors a code-of-conduct warning for delay of game. Connors then was penalized a point giving Lendl the game and making the fifth-set score 4-2 for Lendl. Connors continued to protest and refused to play. He then was given a game penalty, making it 5-2 for Lendl. After supervisor Ken Farrar had failed to persuade Connors to continue play, he

5082-508: Was a member through the early 1980s. ITF world champions for women differed from the WTA year-end rankings the following years: 1978 ( Martina Navratilova ), 1994 ( Steffi Graf ), 2001 ( Lindsay Davenport ), 2004 ( Lindsay Davenport ), 2005 ( Lindsay Davenport ), 2011 ( Caroline Wozniacki ), 2012 ( Victoria Azarenka ), 2017 ( Simona Halep ), 2023 ( Iga Swiatek ). International Tennis Federation Too Many Requests If you report this error to

5159-682: Was a surprise. That year, the Association of Tennis Professionals named Stefan Edberg its "Player of The Year", in accordance with the ATP rankings , while Tennis Magazine (France) ranked Edberg first, Andre Agassi second, and Lendl third. Tennis also suggested the ITF was punishing Edberg for denigrating the Grand Slam Cup tournament it had introduced. The ITF panel, of Perry, Trabert, and Frank Sedgman , called it "the toughest decision any of us can remember having to make", and stated it

5236-470: Was banned from playing by the event in 1974 due to his association with World Team Tennis (WTT). and in the other four years chose not to participate. His exclusion from the French Open denied him the opportunity to become the second male player of the Open era, after Rod Laver , to win all four major singles titles in a calendar year. Connors is one of thirteen men to win three or more major singles titles in

5313-634: Was challenged the most by Borg, with twelve matches on tour during that time frame. Borg won only four of those meetings, but two of those wins were in the Wimbledon finals of 1977 and 1978 . Connors lost his stranglehold on the top ranking to Borg in early 1979 and wound up with an official tour record of 8 wins and 15 losses against Borg as Borg was four years younger and won the last ten times they met. Head to head in major championship finals, they split their four meetings, Borg winning two Wimbledons ( 1977 and 1978 ) and Connors winning two US Opens ( 1976 and 1978 ). Connors described his rivalry with Borg in

5390-401: Was defaulted. Connors insisted that he did not quit the match. Connors told reporters the next week at Palm Springs. "I didn't quit, I was defaulted. I take full credit, good or bad, for what I've done. If I'm suspended, I'll just go home and ride my horses. I was standing up for the rights of players. I'll tell you, if a lot of guys could afford it, they would do it. I did it because I thought it

5467-404: Was little bit tender earlier today, but it did not bother me during the match. Jimmy was just too good today." Connors reached the final of the US Open in five straight years from 1974 through 1978, winning three times with each win being on a different surface ( 1974 on grass, 1976 on clay and 1978 on hard). Connors won ten tournaments in 1978, including the U.S. Pro Indoor. While he retained

5544-438: Was ranked world No. 1 by Rex Bellamy, Tennis Magazine (U.S.), Rino Tommasi, World Tennis , Bud Collins, Judith Elian and Lance Tingay. In 1975, Connors reached the finals of Wimbledon (losing to Arthur Ashe), the US Open (losing to Manuel Orantes) and Australia (losing to John Newcombe), but he did not win any of them, although his loss to Newcombe was close as Connors lost 9–7 in a fourth set tiebreak. He never played in

5621-498: Was right." A month after the incident, the Men’s International Professional Tennis Council decided that Connors would be banned for 10 weeks and fined $ 20,000 (in addition to $ 5,000 imposed on the day of the match). Connors is often considered among the greatest tennis players in the history of the sport. Connors won a male open era record 109 singles titles. He also won 16 doubles titles (including

5698-415: Was suspended for about 5 months for both the female and the male tennis players. The first men's panel in 1978 had three members, Don Budge , Fred Perry , and Lew Hoad , who attended the season's Grand Slam events at ITF expense to inform their choice. The 1983 panel split two to one between John McEnroe (votes of Budge and Perry) and Mats Wilander (vote of Hoad). The 1984 panel had five members, while

5775-482: Was the only player to win the US Open on three different surfaces: grass , clay , and hard . He was also the first male tennis player to win Grand Slam singles titles on three different surfaces: grass (1974), clay (1976), and hard (1978). Connors was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1998 and Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Hall of Fame in 1986. He also has

5852-478: Was then ranked No. 4 in the world) and Tel Aviv. He still holds the Open era record with 109 men's singles titles. At the 1989 US Open, Connors defeated the third seed (and future two-time champion) Stefan Edberg , in straight sets in the fourth round, in a match in which Connors accumulated fines of $ 2,250 for three code violations, was penalized a game in the second set and was one more code violation from being defaulted. Afterwards Connors said "I went out and played

5929-474: Was very consistent." He won 12 events, including the U.S. Pro Indoor in Philadelphia, Palm Springs and Las Vegas, he achieved a record of 90–8 and defeated Borg all four times they played. He was ranked No. 1 by the ATP for the entire year and was ranked number one by World Tennis, Tennis Magazine (U.S.), Bud Collins, Lance Tingay, John Barrett, and Tommasi. The ATP named Björn Borg as its Player of

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