Ken McGregor: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:McGregor_and_Rosewall_1952.jpg|140px|left|thumb|Ken McGregor (right) with [[Ken Rosewall]] in 1952]] | [[Image:McGregor_and_Rosewall_1952.jpg|140px|left|thumb|Ken McGregor (right) with [[Ken Rosewall]] in 1952]] | ||
At 6'3", McGregor had a powerful serve and overhead. [[Ellsworth Vines]], an even great player, wrote of him: "He was the same height as Pancho Gonzales, faster, moved as well and could jump higher, and once he got to the net he was difficult to pass because of his prehensile reach. The handsome Aussie had the most extraordinary overhead of all time."<ref>''The History of Professional Tennis'', Joe McCauley, page 60.</ref> In his 1979 autobiography, Kramer wrote that "McGregor was one of the weakest players but one of the nicest guys who ever played for me in the pros. As nearly as I could tell, all he wanted to do was save up some money, go back Down Under and play Australian-rules football, which in fact, he played better than he did tennis. And that's what he did."<ref> | At 6'3", McGregor had a powerful serve and overhead. [[Ellsworth Vines]], an even great player, wrote of him: "He was the same height as Pancho Gonzales, faster, moved as well and could jump higher, and once he got to the net he was difficult to pass because of his prehensile reach. The handsome Aussie had the most extraordinary overhead of all time."<ref>''The History of Professional Tennis'', Joe McCauley, page 60.</ref> In his 1979 autobiography, Kramer wrote that "McGregor was one of the weakest players but one of the nicest guys who ever played for me in the pros. As nearly as I could tell, all he wanted to do was save up some money, go back Down Under and play Australian-rules football, which in fact, he played better than he did tennis. And that's what he did."<ref>''The Game, My 40 Years in Tennis'', by Jack Kramer with Frank Deford, page 180</ref> | ||
Returning to Australia from his days as a touring tennis pro, McGregor tried to have himself reinstated as an amateur tennis player but was refused. He then opened a sporting goods store and played parts of five seasons with the West Adelaide football team in the main section of the South Australian competition. Playing in 52 games, he was a member of their Grand Final matches in 1954, 1956, and 1958. | Returning to Australia from his days as a touring tennis pro, McGregor tried to have himself reinstated as an amateur tennis player but was refused. He then opened a sporting goods store and played parts of five seasons with the West Adelaide football team in the main section of the South Australian competition. Playing in 52 games, he was a member of their Grand Final matches in 1954, 1956, and 1958. |
Revision as of 15:36, 8 June 2011
Kenneth Bruce McGregor (June 2, 1929, Adelaide, Australia – December 1, 2007, Myrtle Bank, Australia) was an Australian tennis player who won the Men's Singles of the Australian Open in 1952. He and his longtime partner, Frank Sedgman, are generally considered to be one of the greatest doubles teams of all time. In 1951 and 1952 they won seven consecutive Grand Slam doubles titles, a feat that has never been matched. At the end of 1952 Jack Kramer induced both Sedgman and McGregor to turn professional, where his success was much more limited. In the 1952-1953 tour against Pancho Segura, which served as the warm-up event to the Kramer-Sedgman headline match, McGregor was beaten by the little Ecuadorian-American 71 matches to 25, losing the first 12 matches. The following year, 1953–1954, in an Australian tour with Segura, Sedgman, and Pancho Gonzales, he was beaten by Gonzales 15 matches to 0.[1] Gonzales was just on the threshold of becoming the greatest player in the world for the rest of the decade.
As a youth, McGregor was a fine all-round athlete, excelling in cricket, Australian-rules football, and tennis. Harry Hopkins, the face of the Australian Davis Cup team for many years, induced him to devote himself exclusively to tennis, and as an amateur he was near the very top of game. Besides winning the Australian championship, he lost the 1951 Wimbledon finals to Dick Savitt and played on three winning Davis Cup teams. By beating the favored Sedgman in the 1952 Australian tournament, he deprived Sedgman of the opportunity to win the coveted Grand Slam of tennis—Sedgman subsequently went on that year to win the three final events. In 1952 he and Sedgman were heavily favored to win their eighth Grand Slam doubles tournament in a row but were shocked in the finals of the United States Open by the pick-up team of the Australian Mervyn Rose and the American Vic Seixas, two men who had never before played together.
At 6'3", McGregor had a powerful serve and overhead. Ellsworth Vines, an even great player, wrote of him: "He was the same height as Pancho Gonzales, faster, moved as well and could jump higher, and once he got to the net he was difficult to pass because of his prehensile reach. The handsome Aussie had the most extraordinary overhead of all time."[2] In his 1979 autobiography, Kramer wrote that "McGregor was one of the weakest players but one of the nicest guys who ever played for me in the pros. As nearly as I could tell, all he wanted to do was save up some money, go back Down Under and play Australian-rules football, which in fact, he played better than he did tennis. And that's what he did."[3]
Returning to Australia from his days as a touring tennis pro, McGregor tried to have himself reinstated as an amateur tennis player but was refused. He then opened a sporting goods store and played parts of five seasons with the West Adelaide football team in the main section of the South Australian competition. Playing in 52 games, he was a member of their Grand Final matches in 1954, 1956, and 1958.
McGregor was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1999.