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Bill Tilden  (1893 - 1953)

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The Arena of Masculinity by Brian Pronger

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Big Bill Tilden : The Triumphs and the TragedyBig Bill Tilden : The Triumphs and the Tragedy by Frank Deford, Bud Collins  

William T. Tilden II dominated the courts during the 1920s. For seven years in a row, he never lost a significant match. Flamboyant both in public and private, Tilden was eventually arrested — and shunned — for his homosexuality. He died penniless and alone, years before his election into the tennis Hall of Fame.

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Also available:
Tilden and Tennis in the Twenties   

Bill Tilden and the Classical Vision

From Tennis One:  Theories of the Game

by Kim Shanley

How big was William "Big Bill" Tilden? In the 1920's and 1930's, Bill Tilden was to tennis what Babe Ruth was to baseball. From 1920 to 1926, he won six straight U.S. Championships (the equivalent of today's US Open). He won it for a seventh time in 1929, which still stands as a record (remember Jimmy Connors only won five US Open titles). Although he didn't play in every Wimbledon during his prime years (for a variety of reasons including being banned as professional tennis journalist), he won three Wimbledon crowns. As an amateur from 1912-30, he won 138 of 192 tournaments, and had a match record of 907-62--an unbelievable .936 percent winning percentage.

Unlike most champions who can perform great athletic feats but can't articulate how they or others perform them, Tilden was an accomplished tennis journalist and author who could explain the entire spectrum of physical, mental, and emotional attributes that made a great tennis champion. Three of his books, "How to Play Better Tennis," "The Art of Lawn Tennis," and "Match Play and the Spin of the Ball," define the classic tennis vision of Bill Tilden...

  

Bill Tilden Biography

From Encarta

Excerpt:

American tennis player, who dominated the sport during the 1920s with his powerful style of play. Tilden was born William Tatem Tilden II in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and educated at the University of Pennsylvania. He won the United States national singles championship in 1920 and successfully defended the title five successive times. From 1920 to 1930 he was a member of the American Davis Cup team and led the team to seven consecutive victories (1920-1926). Tilden won the Wimbledon singles championship in 1920, 1921, and 1930. In 1929 he regained the U.S. singles championship and also won the singles championships of Switzerland and the Netherlands...

  

Tilden Brought Theatrics to Tennis

By Ron Borges, Special to ESPN.com

Excerpt:

Not even Bill Tilden's penchant for self-destruction was enough for anyone to challenge his place in tennis history. Through glorious triumph and inglorious tragedy, Tilden remained Big Bill.

Of all his remarkable feats none can surpass this: In 1950, during an era of closed minds, the Red scare and sexual conservatism, Big Bill Tilden was overwhelmingly voted the greatest tennis player of the first half of the 20th century in an Associated Press poll only six weeks after being released from prison for the second time on a conviction of having fondled and made unwanted advances to a teenage boy...

  

Bill Tilden Biography

From the Knitting Circle

Excerpt:

Born 1893, in Philadelphia, USA; died 5th. June, 1953, in Hollywood, Los Angeles, USA.

American tennis player. Generally called Bill Tilden, but also known as Big Bill and Gentleman Bill Tilden.

Born into a wealthy Philadelphia family and developed late, winning his first major title at Wimbledon in 1920 at the age of 27.

The first American to win at Wimbledon, and during the 1920s he remained undefeated in any major match for seven years. His ten victories in national men's singles (three at Wimbledon and seven in the US) during 1920 to 1930 set a record until Roy Emerson achieved twelve victories during 1961 to 1967. Bill Tilden's writing in The Art of Tennis is still regarded as authoritative.

When his homosexuality became better known he was ostracized from the tennis world and was banned from the most prestigious tennis courts...

  

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