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Lewis Alan ("Lew") Hoad (23 November 1934 in Glebe, New South Wales, Australia – 3 July 1994 in
Fuengirola, Spain) was a champion tennis player. In his 1979
autobiography, Jack
Kramer, the long-time tennis promoter and great player himself,
ranks Hoad as one of the 21 best players of all time.[1] For
five straight years, beginning in 1952, he was ranked in the World
Top Ten for amateurs, reaching the No. 1 spot in 1956.
Biography
Hoad (second from left) profiled in a magazine spread in the early
1950s discussing young and rising Australian sportspeople
With his movie-star good looks, powerful physique, and outgoing
personality, Hoad became a tennis icon in the 1950s. As Kramer
says,
"Everybody loved Hoad, even
Pancho Gonzales. They should put that
on Lew's tombstone as the ultimate praise for the man.... Even when
Hoad was clobbering Gonzales, Gorgo wanted his respect and
friendship."
Strength played an important part of Hoad's game, as he often
drove for winners rather than rallying and waiting for the right
opportunity. Although he assaulted his opponents, he also had the
skill to win the French
Championships on the slower clay court. According to Kramer,
"Hoad had the loosest game of any good kid I ever saw. There was
absolutely no pattern to his game.... He was the only player I ever
saw who could stand six or seven feet behind the baseline and snap
the ball back hard, crosscourt. He'd try for winners off
everything, off great serves, off tricky short balls, off low
volleys. He hit hard overspin drives, and there was no way you
could ever get him to temporize on important points."
Hoad was a member of the Australian team that between 1952 and
1956 won the Davis Cup
four times. He is often remembered for his match as a 19-year-old
amateur in the 1953 Davis Cup against the great United States
champion Tony
Trabert. In a titanic struggle, Hoad defeated Trabert by a
score of 13-11, 6–3, 3–6, 2–6, 7–5 to help his country retain the
Cup.
In 1956 he won the first three stages of the Grand
Slam tennis tournaments and was favored to win the fourth and
then turn professional for a lucrative contract offered by Jack
Kramer. In a significant upset, however, he lost to fellow
Australian Ken
Rosewall in the United States Championship at Forest Hills.
Fresh from his victory over Hoad, it was Ken Rosewall who signed
the professional contract and went on to spend the new year as the
regular victim of Pancho Gonzales on the pro tour. At a time when
only amateur players were allowed to compete in the four national
championships, Hoad finally turned professional after winning his
second successive Wimbledon singles title in 1957.
His first year as a pro was a series of head-to-head matches
with the reigning king of professional tennis, Pancho Gonzales.
Hoad won 18 of the first 27 matches, but Gonzales surged back to
finally defeat Hoad by 51 matches to 36. Gonzales, whom some
consider to be the greatest tennis player of all time, always
maintained that Hoad was the toughest, most skillful adversary that
he had ever faced. "He was the only guy who, if I was playing my
best tennis, could still beat me," said Gonzales in a 1995
New York Times interview. "I think
his game was the best game ever. Better than mine. He was capable
of making more shots than anybody. His two volleys were great. His
overhead was enormous. He had the most natural tennis mind with the
most natural tennis physique."
Kramer, however, clearly has mixed feelings about Hoad's
ability. In spite of calling him one of the 21 best players of all
time, he also writes that "when you sum Hoad up, you have to say
that he was overrated. He might have been the best, but day-to-day,
week-to-week, he was the most inconsistent of all the top players."
When Kramer was thirty-seven, and a part-time player, he played a
number of matches against Hoad just after the Australian had turned
professional. "I actually beat him thirteen matches to twelve. That
was because he just didn't give a damn when he played me.... It was
the same thing with Segura, and Lew lost a majority of his
matches to Segoo.... He wanted to beat Kenny, and he did. Remember
now, Hoad lost 13-12 to me while Rosewall beat me 22-4, but Hoad
turned it around and won two-thirds of his matches against
Rosewall."
Back problems plagued Hoad throughout his career and forced his
retirement from the tennis tour in the mid 1960s. Kramer compares
Hoad to another great player, Ellsworth Vines. "Both were very strong
guys. Both succeeded at a very young age.... Also, both were very
lazy guys. Vines lost interest in tennis (for golf) before he was
thirty, and Hoad never appeared to be very interested. Despite
their great natural ability, neither put up the outstanding records
that they were capable of. Unfortunately, the latter was largely
true because both had physical problems."
In retirement, Hoad moved to Fuengirola, Spain, near Málaga, where he and his
tennis-playing wife, Jenny Staley, operated a tennis resort for
more than thirty years entertaining personal friends such as actors
Sean Connery, Kirk Douglas, and Charlton
Heston.
Lew Hoad was battling leukemia and waiting for a bone marrow
donor when, in his weakened condition, he died of a heart attack in
1994 at the age of 59. A book co-written with Jack Pollard and
titled The Lew Hoad Story was published in 1958. In 2003,
Pollard teamed up with his widow, Jenny, to write My Life With
Lew.
Hoad was inducted into the International Tennis Hall
of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1980.
Grand Slam
finals
Singles: 5
(4-1)
- Wins (4)
| Year |
Championship |
Opponent in Final |
Score in Final |
| 1956 |
Australian
Championships |
Ken Rosewall |
6–4, 3–6, 6–4, 7–5 |
| 1956 |
French
Championships |
Sven Davidson |
6–4, 8–6, 6–3 |
| 1956 |
Wimbledon |
Ken Rosewall |
6–2, 4–6, 7–5, 6–4 |
| 1957 |
Wimbledon |
Ashley
Cooper |
6–2, 6–1, 6–2 |
- Runner-ups (1)
| Year |
Championship |
Opponent in Final |
Score in Final |
| 1956 |
U.S. Championships |
Ken Rosewall |
4–6, 6–2, 6–3, 6–3 |
Grand
Slam doubles finals
Wins
(6)
Notes
- ^
Kramer considered the best player 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.
References
External
links