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Sport

How to win a grand slam, by a kosher hero

July 4, 2008 14:43

By

Danny Caro,

Danny Caro

3 min read

It is almost 57 years to the day that Dick Savitt won Wimbledon. In doing so he remains the only Jewish player to have won the men’s singles title.

Since then, Israeli Andy Ram has won the mixed doubles while Jesse Levine won the junior doubles crown in 2005. But Savitt is in a league of his own and, considered by experts to be the greatest baseline player of his generation, he reached the heights without having a single tennis lesson in his 12-year career.

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Born in Bayonne, New Jersey, he won Wimbledon five months after lifting the Australian Open in 1951, aged 24, and went on to win a double gold at the 1961 Maccabiah Games.

He retired a year after his Wimbledon success following an internal political row in the American Davis Cup team which drained his enthusiasm.

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