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Ricardo Alonso González (May 9, 1928 July 3, 1995),
was the dominant male tennis player in the world during the late 1950s and
early 1960s, under the name Pancho Gonzales.
Gonzales' parents, Manuel Antonio González and Carmen
Alire, migrated from Chihuahua, Mexico to the US in the early 1900s. Gonzales
was born in Los Angeles, the eldest of 7 children. He had a troubled adolescence
and taught himself to play tennis with no encouragement from the exclusively
white, and predominantly upper-class, tennis establishment of 1940s Los Angeles.
As an unknown 20-year-old, Gonzales unexpectedly won the
United States Championships at Forest Hills in 1948. He repeated this feat
the next year, and then turned professional. He was badly beaten in his first
year on the professional tour by the reigning king of professional tennis,
Jack Kramer, and withdrew from the public eye. He won some professional tournaments,
however, defeating his old nemesis Kramer in the process, and by 1953 he
was the dominant player in the professional ranks.
Gonzales was a dominant player for about a dozen years, beating
tennis greats such as Frank Sedgman, Ken Rosewall, Lew Hoad, Tony Trabert,
Mal Anderson, and Ashley Cooper on a regular basis. In that 12-year period,
he won the United States Professional Championship 8 times and the Wembley
professional title in London 4 times; and beat, in head-to-head tours, all
of the best amateurs who turned pro.
Gonzales played as a professional before the Open era of
tennis began in 1968 and was therefore ineligible to compete at the Grand
Slam events between 1949 (when he turned pro) and 1968. When Open tennis
began, Gonzales was in his 40s, but continued to win the occasional tournament,
beating the best players in the world, including Rod Laver, Stan Smith, John
Newcombe, Roy Emerson, and Jimmy Connors, all of whom were 15 to 20 years
younger. He is the oldest player to have ever won a professional tournament,
winning the Des Moines Open over 24-year-old Georges Goven when he was three
months shy of his 44th birthday.
He was known for his fiery will to win, his cannonball serve,
and his all-conquering net game, a combination so potent that the rules on
the professional tour were briefly changed in the 1950s to prohibit him from
advancing to the net immediately after serving. He won even so, and the rules
were changed back. In 1971, when he was 43 and Jimmy Connors was 19, he beat
the young baseliner by playing from the baseline at the Pacific Southwest
Open.
Gonzales married six times (twice to actress Madelyn Darrow),
and had seven children. His last wife, Rita, is the sister of tennis great
Andre Agassi. Gonzales died, nearly broke and almost friendless, in a tiny
house near the Las Vegas airport. Andre Agassi paid for his funeral.
Gonzales was inducted into the International Tennis Hall
of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1968.
Grand Slam Tournament wins:
United States Championships:
Men's Singles champion - 1948, 1949
Wimbledon:
Men's Doubles champion - 1949
French Championships:
Men's Doubles champion - 1949
Professional World Singles Tournament wins:
Wembley, England
Singles champion - 1950, 1951, 1952, 1956
Singles runner-up - 1953
United States Professional Championship
Singles champion - 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959,
1961
Singles runner-up - 1951, 1952, 1964
French Professional Championship
Singles runner-up - 1953, 1956, 1961
Professional tour results:
1949-1950 - Jack Kramer beat Gonzales 96 matches to 27
1954 - Gonzales beat Frank Sedgman 30-21 and Pancho Segura
30-21 in a series of round-robin matches
1955-1956 - Gonzales beat Tony Trabert 74-27
1957 - Gonzales beat Ken Rosewall 50-26
1958 - Gonzales beat Lew Hoad 51-36
1959 - Gonzales beat Mal Anderson, Ashley Cooper, and Hoad
in round-robin matches
1959-1960 - Gonzales beat Alex Olmedo, Segura, and Rosewall
in round-robin matches
1961 - Gonzales was the major winner in a tour that included
Butch Buchholz, Barry MacKay, Andres Gimeno, Hoad, Olmedo, Sedgman, Trabert,
and Cooper.
Davis Cup:
Member of the US Davis Cup winning team in 1949 (won two
singles rubbers in the final against Australia).
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